The giant Cano Limon field, Llanos basin, Colombia
- Occidental International Exploration and Production Co., Bakersfield, CA (USA)
The giant Cano Limon field was discovered in July 1983. The discovery was the culmination of a 3-yr exploration effort by Occidental involving 4000 km of dynamite seismic, 20 stratigraphic tests from 396 to 1,067 m deep, and 12 exploratory wells. Prior to Oxy's entering the area, there had been 61 exploratory wells drilled with meager results, namely two fields with total reserves of about 20 million bbl of light oil and one field with reserves of 90 million bbl of 13.6{degree} API oil-none of which were commercial. The Llanos basin was known for its abundant excellent reservoir sandstones and opinions varied as to whether there was adequate source rock. The major problem had been defining traps. Except for the very young folding along the Andean front, the known structural traps were sparse and subtle. Most of the exploration had been done in the western part of the basin near the basin deep or in the Andean foothills. Occidental took a very large acreage position east of the area of past exploration efforts and found an exception to the small fault closures known elsewhere in the basin. This exception, the Cano Limon area, is dominated by major early Tertiary northeast-southwest strike-slip faulting. Concurrent folding in combination with fault sealing formed the Cano Limon field and other much smaller fields in the area. The Cano Limon field, encompassing 3,570 ha, contains an estimated 1.8 billion bbl of oil in place, of which 1.6 billion bbl are expected to be recovered with the very strong natural water drive. The bulk of the oil is in deltaic sandstones of the Eocene Mirador formation with additional reservoirs in the Upper Cretaceous. The average porosity of the Mirador is about 25%, the permeability is about 5 d, and water saturation is about 23%. Individual well flow rates have exceeded 20,000 BOPD. The average oil gravity is 29.5{degree} API, with a GOR of 8 ft3/bbl and sulfur content of 0.41%. Current production is about 230,000 bbl/day.
- OSTI ID:
- 6129506
- Report Number(s):
- CONF-9010204--
- Journal Information:
- AAPG Bulletin (American Association of Petroleum Geologists); (USA), Journal Name: AAPG Bulletin (American Association of Petroleum Geologists); (USA) Vol. 74:9; ISSN 0149-1423; ISSN AABUD
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
Similar Records
Geology of supergiant Cano Limon field and Llanos basin, Colombia
Cano Limon reservoir properties suggest high recovery factor
Related Subjects
020200* -- Petroleum-- Reserves
Geology
& Exploration
58 GEOSCIENCES
580000 -- Geosciences
CENOZOIC ERA
COLOMBIA
CRETACEOUS PERIOD
EXPLORATION
GEOLOGIC AGES
GEOLOGIC DEPOSITS
GEOLOGIC FAULTS
GEOLOGIC FORMATIONS
GEOLOGIC FRACTURES
GEOLOGIC STRUCTURES
GEOLOGIC TRAPS
GEOLOGY
GEOPHYSICAL SURVEYS
LATIN AMERICA
MESOZOIC ERA
MINERAL RESOURCES
OIL FIELDS
PERMEABILITY
PETROLEUM DEPOSITS
POROSITY
PRODUCTION
RESERVES
RESERVOIR ROCK
RESOURCES
ROCKS
SANDSTONES
SEDIMENTARY BASINS
SEDIMENTARY ROCKS
SEISMIC SURVEYS
SOUTH AMERICA
SURVEYS
TERTIARY PERIOD