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Monthly Meeting - "Reservoir Implications of Desiccation in Unconventional Reservoirs" presented by Stacy McWhorter

Virtual
Where: Zoom
Cost: $10
If you’d like to attend virtually, please pay with a credit card below and use the email address where you would like Zoom login details sent.

Zoom Meeting
$10.00
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In-Person
Where: The Petroleum Club of Shreveport, 15th floor
Cost: $20, Children 10 and under $8
If you’d like a seat, kindly use the form below to make your reservation by the preceding Friday.

We encourage members to invite guests, spouses, and friends to any of our meetings.

Biography

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Stacy McWhorter graduated from Grantham University with a BS in Engineering Management Technology and a Master’s in Business Administration. She joined Core Laboratories in 2007 and currently serves as General Manager of Integrated Reservoir Solutions & US Geosciences. She has worked in numerous positions that span the understanding of laboratory data from data generation, quality control, and data synthesis, modeling and applications. Most recently, she has worked on the integration of multidisciplinary datasets to understand the prospectivity of producing fields and formations. She is the principal investigator in understanding desiccation in mudstones and its impact on completion and production. She has managed a highly technical staff and worked on the implementation of numerous software suites in the pursuit of multidisciplinary data analysis, such as having an active role in development of the RAPID database management system and the RAPIDZoom Ultra High Resolution virtual petrography. She has industry-recognized technical expertise in geochemical controls on mudstone properties and applications of this knowledge to reservoir characterization and exploitation.

Abstract

While investigating organic-rich shales, operators noted an increase in hydrocarbon production and a decrease in water production after well shut-in in some formations and basins. This is contradictory to conventional reservoir expectations following a shut-in. Investigation of this phenomenon was undertaken as a part of various joint industry projects conducted by Core Laboratories, and a working model for the mechanism of clay desiccation and enhanced production through well shut-in was developed and has been verified by some operators. This talk is designed to discuss common questions about desiccation and soaking, such as how to identify soaking candidates and methods for quantifying the benefits.