Insight

Venus in Namibia: learnings from low permeability analogues in global ultra-deepwater

Get this report*

$1,300

You can pay by card or invoice

For details on how your data is used and stored, see our Privacy Notice.
 

- FAQs about online orders
- Find out more about subscriptions

*Please note that this report only includes an Excel data file if this is indicated in "What's included" below

TotalEnergies is progressing the development of its giant Venus oil discovery in Namibia, targeting FID in H1 2026. This is despite highly complex reservoir conditions in water depths of around 3,000 metres. Venus’s reservoir is very low permeability; below the conventional threshold for commercial production in ultra- deepwater. The discovery is rescued by its light oil (45 °API) and its thick reservoir section. Globally, commercial low permeability reservoirs in ultra-deepwater are rare but do exist. Lens subsurface discovery enabled us to identify and analyse low permeability analogues within the outboard ultra-deepwater US Gulf of Mexico. The Paleogene fields of St. Malo, Julia, and Jack all house low-permeability primary reservoirs and have demonstrated that commercial flow rates can be achieved.

Table of contents

Tables and charts

This report includes the following images and tables:

  • Venus and US GoM (GoA) Ultra-deepwater Paleogene analogues
  • Permeability vs oil recovery factors within Venus and US GoM (GoA) Paleogene analogue reservoirs
  • EUR per well (mmboe) vs Oil Gravity
  • Number of proposed and drilled development wells with EUR for commercial low permeability analogues

What's included

This report contains:

  • Document

    Venus in Namibia: learnings from low permeability analogues in global ultra-deepwater

    PDF 995.09 KB