The regular monitoring of the relative position of a sequence of radioactive bullets shot through the well of a vertical borehole can provide in-situ measurements of deep rock compaction. Developed in the '70s, this technology has experienced a growing interest in the '90s, but in recent years, its use and relevance in land subsidence management above producing hydrocarbon reservoirs have been often debated. The present communication analyses the state of the art of the radioactive marker technique and provides a critical review on the role that these measurements might play in the future evolution of land subsidence monitoring and modelling.
The Radioactive Marker Technique (RMT) was first introduced in the '70s to monitor the ongoing reservoir compaction during the exploitation of the Groningen gas field, the Netherlands (de Loos, 1973). After the initial promising applications, RMT experienced several technological improvements in the '90s and '00s and was used in a number of hydrocarbon fields worldwide, such as in the North Sea (Menghini, 1989), Gulf of Mexico (de Kock et al., 1998), and Northern Adriatic Sea (Ferronato et al., 2003). This technique consists in the regular monitoring of the relative position of a number of weakly radioactive bullets located at fixed intervals along a vertical, generally non-productive well (Fig. 1, Macini and Mesini, 2002). The most recent technological developments of the logging tool, currently managed by Schlumberger, allow for a nominal accuracy of the compaction measurements of 1 mm over a 10 m spacing.
In principle, the main objective of the RMT application in producing fields is twofold: (i) measuring the amount of reservoir compaction directly connected to hydrocarbon extraction activities, and (ii) estimating the mechanical properties of the reservoir rock to improve the quality of the subsidence modelling predictions. In recent years, however, the development of alternative cheaper techniques for such aims and the intrinsic RMT technological limitations, which can sometimes prevent from obtaining the expected outcome, have raised some concerns on the use of radioactive markers.
The present work provides a review of the status of the current RMT implementation and critically discusses its role and evolution in the next future. On one hand, the RMT competitiveness with respect to other promising techniques to monitor deep compaction, such as fiber optics, seems to be progressively decreasing as far as the temporal and spatial resolution is concerned.
On the other hand, the recent huge development of accurate subsidence monitoring strategies, e.g., InSAR and GPS, and numerical methods to derive the rock compressibility by inverse modelling, e.g,, Data Assimilation algorithms, can partially reduce the need of deep compaction measurements. Finally, the experience acquired over almost 30 years of extensive RMT use in the Northern Adriatic basin suggests a progressive decay of the compaction measurement quality, with late data generally affected by a larger uncertainty and a significant noise.
The first RMT installation worldwide dates back to 1973 in the Groningen
field, the Netherlands. At that time, the main issue was the accurate
monitoring of land subsidence in highly vulnerable areas. The idea was to
identify the deep reservoir compaction in order to derive the related
vertical motion of the ground surface. It was soon realized, however, that
the nominal accuracy of 1 mm over a 10 m compacting rock spacing was hard to
obtain in practice. To cope with this difficulty, new algorithms for the
radioactive signal analysis were introduced, leading to a more accurate
marker detection (Mobach and Gussinklo, 1994). In the late '80s and early
'90s, there was a growing interest in RMT, with applications in the Ekofisk
and Valhall chalk fields, North Sea (Menghini, 1989), Champion oil field,
offshore Brunei (Schmitt, 1996), and Gulf of Mexico (de Kock et al., 1998).
The implementation in the chalk fields of the North Sea was particularly
interesting. As it is well-known, the Ekofisk field was characterized by a
very significant compaction, with important subsidence values affecting the
offshore platform. Although
The Radioactive Marker Technique.
In the '90s, RMT has been implemented in a number of gas fields located in the Northern Adriatic sedimentary basin, Italy (Macini and Mesini, 2002). By distinction with previous applications, the Northern Adriatic reservoirs, buried at a depth ranging from 1000 to 4500 m, are characterized by a multi-pay structure of alternating sand and clay formations, with a thickness of the mineralized layers varying from dozens of meters to a few centimetres. In-situ compaction measurements led to compressibility estimates of the reservoir rock that proved appreciably lower than those provided by lab tests on core samples (Cassiani and Zoccatelli, 2000), but generally more consistent with the measured land subsidence. Then, the RMT results were used to develop a hysteretic compressibility law for the sedimentary rock at the basin-scale (Baù et al., 2002), which was later supported by other experimental data (Hueckel et al., 2005; Ferronato et al., 2013). As new compaction data became available in time, however, the statistical dispersion of the compressibility estimates unexpectedly grew, with no benefits for the confidence interval of the compressibility law developed in the early '00s. Such an occurrence was related to a progressive decay in the quality of the detected RMT measurements and a number of studies were devoted to investigate this behaviour, e.g., Ferronato et al. (2004, 2007), Macini et al. (2006).
More recently, no other scientific publication on RMT is available.
Compaction monitoring is currently ongoing only in Groningen, Ekofisk and
Northern Adriatic. A recent technical report from NAM (Kole, 2015) analyses
the condition of the marker-equipped boreholes in the Groningen field. The
report notices that only 3 out of 8 wells are still used for monitoring
purposes, but the quality of the collected data is progressively declining.
The current accuracy does not exceed 5 mm over a 10 m spacing, observing
that
The problems in the RMT use can be classified into two categories: (1) in-situ data collection; (2) data interpretation and use. Problems in class 1 mainly affect the quality of the recorded data, reducing the expected accuracy. Such difficulties can be usually addressed by improving the acquisition technology. By distinction, problems in class 2 basically concern the role that RMT measurements may play in modern computational geomechanics for land subsidence monitoring and prediction.
RMT surveys are carried out with the aid of the Formation Subsidence Monitoring Tool (FSMT) by Schlumberger. The last variant of this tool consists of a bar of stainless steel equipped with 8 gamma-ray sensors, located in two groups about 10.5 m apart (Fig. 2).
The FSMT logging tool.
The main technical problems affecting the record quality are as follows.
RMT compaction data are filtered by a statistical analysis and excluded from the records if they do not satisfy strict acceptability tolerances (Mobach and Gussinklo, 2004). Nonetheless, they can present a large statistical dispersion (Baù et al., 2002). The correct interpretation of the collected data is strictly related to their role in the reservoir development. The main motivations for measuring the deep rock compaction are twofold: (i) subsidence monitoring, and (ii) reservoir rock mechanical characterization.
RMT was originally introduced for subsidence monitoring purposes. In the
'70s and '80s, it was particularly attractive for monitoring offshore fields
or increasing the frequency of measurements with respect to the traditional
spirit leveling. Most of these motivations, however, are no longer valid
today, because of the development of satellite techniques, such as GPS and
InSAR, which allow for an accurate subsidence monitoring with a high
frequency in both time and space at a relatively low cost. Nevertheless, the
knowledge of deep rock compaction can still be of interest, even if more as
a contribution to the calibration of numerical models rather than as a
direct subsidence monitoring. The use of RMT compaction measurements for an
in-situ rock mechanical characterization is still a matter of great
interest. To this aim, however, a number of conditions should be satisfied,
in order to avoid misleading interpretations:
The rock compaction can be directly related to the vertical uniaxial
compressibility (Baù et al., 2002) in the hypothesis of oedometric
conditions. If other mechanisms are important, such as arch effect,
three-dimensional deformation or poro-elastic coupling, RMT data may lead to
a compressibility underestimation; Even if oedometric conditions are satisfied, the compressibility can be
correctly deduced from RMT data by an accurate knowledge of the vertical
effective stress acting in the monitored interval. This can be easily
obtained from the pore pressure values only under some conditions, such as
constant total stress, incompressible grains or absence of significant
mechanical heterogeneities; RMT data allow for estimating the average compressibility between two points
in the A critical issue is the marker location with respect to the actual
lithological stratigraphy. The presence of undepleted layers, which could
also expand, could give rise to inconsistent data, e.g., expansions with a
pore pressure decline; Possible rate-dependent processes cannot be detected by the RMT analysis and
could lead to significant underestimates of the actual rock stiffness.
For these reasons, the rock mechanical characterization derived from marker
data has been often the object of debates within the scientific community in
the last years.
The analysis developed in this work reveals that the RMT methodology for deep compaction monitoring appears to move towards a rapid decline. After the developments in the '80s and '90s, with the RMT implementation in the Netherlands, Brunei, North Sea, Gulf of Mexico and Italy, the oil and gas market has experienced a strong demand contraction for such a technology, which has been abandoned by some major service companies, such as Halliburton and Western Atlas. Currently, deep compaction by RMT is monitored regularly only where land subsidence is felt as a major environmental hazard, such as in some fields of the Northern Adriatic, Italy, and in few chalk reservoirs of the North Sea where compaction can take on extremely significant values, i.e., a minimal percentage of potential market of hydrocarbon reservoirs worldwide. For these reasons, the only service company currently operating with radioactive markers is Schlumberger and no significant technological innovations are under development in this field.
The motivations leading to this situation appear to be only marginally
related to the technical difficulties connected with the RMT implementation
and the data collection. Most of these difficulties, such as those depending
on the irregular FSMT movement along the borehole, the accurate detection of
the actual marker position or the reservoir temperature and pressure
conditions, have been successfully addressed, and often solved, with the aid
of technological advances on the recording tool and the analysis software.
Rather, the limited investments on this technology and its abandonment by
the major oil companies worldwide appear to be mainly related to the debate
on the actual role and importance that these in-situ measurements might play
in the economic and environmental management of a producing hydrocarbon
reservoir. In particular:
As a methodology for land subsidence monitoring, like it was originally
conceived, the RMT appears to be more expensive, less accurate, less
informative and less reliable than other modern techniques used for
recording the land motion, such as GPS or InSAR; As in-situ measurements used for the deep rock mechanical characterization,
RMT compaction data require several assumptions, which are rarely satisfied
in real-world installations. In particular, the most unfavourable situations
are those characterized by a pronounced lithological layering and
three-dimensional deformation, which are often encountered, for example, in
the Northern Adriatic basin (Ferronato et al., 2003). This can limit the RMT
relevance for an effective rock mechanical characterization.
Nonetheless, it is hard to conclude that deep compaction measurements are of
no interest at all. In the modern computational simulation of land
subsidence, they can provide additional pieces of information that
contribute to the development of more accurate and reliable predictions. The
current trends in the numerical modelling of land subsidence advocate the
use of non-deterministic approaches, where the realizations are constrained
by the available measurements, and the increase of the number of
observations in time and space leads to a progressive uncertainty reduction.
For instance, such stochastic approaches can rely on the application of
proper data assimilation techniques, which can lead to the development of a
novel methodological approach for land subsidence prediction (van
Thienen-Visser and Fokker, 2017; Gazzola et al., 2019). In this sense, where
already available, RMT measurements can provide a useful contribution to
better condition the model outcome (Zoccarato et al., 2018).
It appears unlikely, however, that radioactive markers will be installed for future reservoir developments, especially in basins where RMT is already present and other more convenient land motion monitoring techniques are available. Anyway, the experience acquired over the last 25 years in the Northern Adriatic suggests that, to be effective, FSMT surveys should be scheduled yearly in the initial 5 to 10 years from the installation, when the signal is good and a large pressure variation is usually experienced, and every 3 to 5 years afterward, when pressure changes are smaller and the signal weaker.
All the data used for this work are available in the bibliographic references: Baù et al. (2002), Cassiani and Zoccatelli (2000), De Kock et al. (1998), Ferronato et al. (2003, 2004, 2007), Kole (2015), Macini and Mesini (2002), Menghini (1989), Mobach and Gussinklo (1994).
All authors have equally contributed to the bibliographic research. MF and PT wrote the paper.
The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.
This article is part of the special issue “TISOLS: the Tenth International Symposium On Land Subsidence – living with subsidence”. It is a result of the Tenth International Symposium on Land Subsidence, Delft, the Netherlands, 17–21 May 2021.