화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of Petroleum Geology, Vol.27, No.4, 321-333, 2004
The Gibraltar discovery, northern Llanos Foothills, Colombia: Case history of an exploration success ina frontier area
Ecopetrol's recent Gibraltar discovery was made in a previously little known area of the northern Lianos foothills of the Eastern Cordillera of Colombia. The structure at Gibraltar is complex and comprises a thrust stock with which are associated hangingwall anticlines providing four-way closures (or three-way against a sealing fault).The Gibraltar-I well was originally drilled by Occidental in 2002.According to Ecopetrol's subsequent structural reinterpretation, this well penetrated the back limb of a fault propagation fold.This structural model was confirmed with a sidetrack well which penetrated the Palaeocene Barco Formation and demonstrated the presence of light hydrocarbons. A second objective of well re-entry at Gibraltar was to investigate the Eocene Mirador Formation, a major reservoir unit elsewhere in the Lianos foothills, in case of missed or bypassed pay.Tests of the Mirador Formation verified the presence of high quality 57degrees API degree condensate that flowed at a rate of 690 barrels per day together with 44 million cubic feet of rich gas per day. The success at Gibraltar will hopefully encourage further exploration developments in this remote and structurally-complex region.