Modeling In-situ tectonic stress state and maximum horizontal stress azimuth in the Central Algerian Sahara – A geomechanical study from El Agreb, El Gassi and Hassi Messaoud fields
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Date
2021
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Journal ISSN
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Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
Central Algerian Sahara hosts many prolific hydrocarbon accumulations in the Paleozoic successions. In this
work a contemporary stress field of the Saharan platform has been evaluated using the dataset from recently
drilled wells in El Agreb, El Gassi and Hassi Messaoud fields. A pore fluid pressure gradient of 0.56 PSI/feet is
interpreted from the in-situ measurements in the Paleozoic reservoir units. Vertical stress (Sv) modeled from the
bulk-density data indicates an average of 1.02 PSI/feet gradient. Rock elastic property-based approach is
employed to model the magnitudes of minimum (Shmin) and maximum horizontal stress (SHmax) components,
which were calibrated with leak off test/minifrac and breakout widths, respectively. Paleozoic stress profiles
reveal Shmin/Sv range of 0.74–0.84, while SHmax/Sv varies between 1.1 and 1.33. Subsurface stress distribution
indicates that the present-day stress field in the Saharan platform is principally strike-slip faulting (SHmax > Sv >
Shmin). A cumulative 1490 m of B-D quality wellbore breakouts, inferred from the acoustic image logs, suggest a
NW-SE/WNW-ESE SHmax orientation, which is parallel to the absolute African plate motion and Africa-Eurasia
plate convergence direction, implying ridge push force to be the dominant contributor to the tectonic stress
field. Mean SHmax orientation shows slightly anticlockwise rotation (126◦N to 144◦N) from south (El Agreb) to
north (Hassi Messaoud field). Inferences are discussed regarding the fault slip potential and hydrocarbon
reservoir development.
Description
Keywords
In-situ stresses, Maximum horizontal stress, Stress orientation, Image logs, Breakouts, Saharan Algeria
