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reservoirdruk

Reservoirdruk, or reservoir pressure, is the pressure within a hydrocarbon reservoir. It reflects the pressure state of the pore fluids in the reservoir rock and is typically expressed in bar, megapascals (MPa), or pounds per square inch (psi). The initial formation pressure is often high due to confinement of fluids under temperature and lithology, and it varies with depth, rock properties, and whether the reservoir is oil, gas, or condensate-dominated.

Reservoir pressure is a primary driving force for fluid flow toward wells. It governs production rates, water

Measurement and estimation of reservoir pressure involve downhole pressure gauges, wireline pressure tests, and pressure transient

In field practice, managing reservoir pressure is essential for maximizing ultimate recovery and controlling issues such

influx,
gas
cap
movement,
and
the
overall
recovery
strategy.
As
production
continues,
the
pressure
declines
as
fluids
are
produced
and
the
reservoir
approaches
a
new
pressure
balance.
Maintaining
favorable
pressure
through
methods
such
as
water
flooding,
gas
injection,
or
other
enhanced
oil
recovery
techniques
can
help
sustain
throughput
and
delay
productivity
declines.
analysis.
Initial
formation
pressure
is
often
estimated
from
early
tests,
logging
data,
and
analog
fields.
Pressure
data
feed
into
material
balance,
decline-curve
analysis,
and
reservoir
simulations
to
estimate
recoverable
reserves
and
optimize
field
development
planning.
as
early
water
breakthrough
and
coning.
The
concept
is
central
to
reservoir
engineering,
well
planning,
and
production
forecasting,
and
it
also
informs
decisions
about
artificial
lift,
injection
strategies,
and
abandonment
timing.