Seismic characterization of geothermal sedimentary reservoirs: A field example from the Copenhagen area, Denmark

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Abstract

We have seismically characterized a Triassic-Jurassic deep geothermal sandstone reservoir north of Copenhagen, onshore Denmark. A suite of regional geophysical measurements, including prestack seismic data and well logs, was integrated with geologic information to obtain facies and reservoir property predictions in a Bayesian framework. The applied workflow combined a facies-dependent calibrated rock-physics model with a simultaneous amplitude-variation-with-offset seismic inversion. The results suggest that certain sandstone distributions are potential aquifers within the target interval, which appear reasonable based on the geologic properties. However, prediction accuracy suffers from a restricted data foundation and should, therefore, only be considered as an indicator of potential aquifers. Despite these issues, the results demonstrate new possibilities for future seismic reservoir characterization and rock-physics modeling for exploration purposes, derisking, and the exploitation of geothermal energy as a green and sustainable energy resource.

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Bredesen, K., Dalgaard, E., Mathiesen, A., Rasmussen, R., & Balling, N. (2020). Seismic characterization of geothermal sedimentary reservoirs: A field example from the Copenhagen area, Denmark. Interpretation, 8(2), T275–T291. https://doi.org/10.1190/INT-2019-0184.1

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