Formation mechanism, geological characteristics and development strategy of nonmarine shale oil in China

Abstract As an important type of “conventional–unconventional orderly accumulation”, shale oil is mature oil stored in organic-rich shales with nano-scale pores. This paper analyzes and summarizes elementary petroleum geological issues concerning continental shale oil in China, including sedimentary environment, reservoir space, geochemical features and accumulation mechanism. Mainly deposited in semi-deep to deep lake environment, shale rich in organic matter usually coexists with other lithologies in laminated texture, and micron to nano-scale pores and microfractures serve as primary reservoir space. Favorable shale mainly has type I and II A kerogens with a R o of 0.7%–2.0%, TOC more than 2.0%, and effective thickness of over 10 m. The evolution of shale pores and retained accumulation pattern of shale oil are figured out. Reservoir space, brittleness, viscosity, pressure, retained quantity are key parameters in the “core” area evaluation of shale oil. Continuously accumulated in the center of lake basins, continental shale oil resources in China are about 30×10 8 –60×10 8 t by preliminary prediction. Volume fracturing in horizontal wells, reformation of natural fractures, and man-made reservoir by injecting coarse grains are some of the key technologies for shale oil production. A three step development road for shale oil is put forward, speeding up study on “shale oil prospective area”, stepping up selection of “core areas”, and expanding “test areas”. By learning from marine shale breakthroughs in North America, continental shale oil industrialization is likely to kick off in China.

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