Representative dip section across the deepwater Douala–Rio Muni Basin showing key stratigraphic boundaries and the structural influence of the Cameroon Volcanic Line (CVL). Seismic data courtesy of Geoex MCG.
Africa
Oil & Gas

New modelling study reveals a petroleum system overlying oceanic crust offshore Equatorial Guinea

New insights into a frontier basin: Douala-Rio Muni Basin

The deepwater Douala-Rio Muni Basin (DRMB) is a non-volcanic, Mes­ozoic-Cenozoic rifted pas­sive margin located offshore in Equatorial Guinea (EG), West Africa. Commercial oil and gas fields have been dis­covered on the shelf and slope of EG include the Ceiba and Okume fields, charged by Lower Cretaceous source rocks on thinned, continen­tal crust, or the Zafiro and Alen-Aseng fields, which are charged by Paleogene source rocks that overlie oceanic crust of Aptian age. In com­parison, the deepwater re­gion of the DRMB east of the Cameroon Volcanic Line (CVL) has yet to yield any major discoveries.

Our analysis of seismic, gravity, magnetic, and geo­chemical data, was integrated in a full-lithosphere 3D basin model, revealing a mature, potentially prolific Creta­ceous petroleum system ex­tending across oceanic crust, with its potential influenced but not handicapped by the higher thermal history of the adjacent CVL.

Full lithosphere models to predict the heat flow

Our study area is located east of the CVL, a 1,700 km long linear chain of volcanic ori­gin ranging in age from the Eocene to the present. The CVL has influenced the crus­tal, stratigraphic, and ther­mal structure of the Gulf of Guinea since its origin in the Paleogene. We combine five 3D seismic surveys covering approximately 7,600 km² (provided by Geoex MCG, along with 2D seismic lines, regional well data provid­ed by Viridien Group), and gravity and magnetic surveys to create a full-lithosphere model. A newly developed gravity inversion technique enabled us to improve the accuracy of the depth to the Moho and the Lithosphere – Asthenosphere Boundary (LAB), revealing zones of mantle upwelling and in­creased thermal gradients be­neath the deepwater region. These thermal anomalies closely align with the elon­gated, deep-rooted magmat­ic activity along the CVL and are a critical factor in assess­ing hydrocarbon generation in the deepwater area.

Figure 1A: Detailed map of the study area showing exploration and production blocks, exploration wells, and the distribution of oil and gas seeps in the deepwater Douala–Rio Muni Basin (DRMB). 3D models completed using the software ExCaliber are shown for the area of interest (AOI). COB, Continental-oceanic boundary. B: Corrected bottom hole temperatures (BHTs) plotted as ΔT versus depth below mudline, illustrating regional geothermal gradient trends. Well data shown in Figure 1 were provided courtesy of CGG Services (UK) Ltd (part of the Viridien Group). For data access and licensing of the Viridien GeoVerseTM database, contact GeoVerse.Support@viridiengroup.com.

Seismic clues to reservoir and seal potential

Seismic interpretation al­lowed the extraction of key attributes (RMS, sweetness) to identify deepwater fans and play fairways within the Albian-Campanian interval. In particular, the Santoni­an-Campanian channelized turbidites and basin-floor fans capped by thick mud­stone packages form stacked reservoir-seal pairs. In several areas, these systems are folded or uplifted as a result of vol­canic doming along the CVL. Such structural overprints also create combination traps as a potential drilling target.

Source rock potential of the region

Rock-Eval pyrolysis data from exploration wells on the shelf and upper slope of Cameroon and Equatorial Guinea (e.g., Campo R-1, Kribi E-1), combined with deepwater reference sites (e.g., DSDP 530A), allowed us to characterise and mod­el source rock potential and compare it with the conju­gate rifted margin in the Ser­gipe area of northeastern Bra­zil. The resulting source rock characterisation indicates that the Albian and Cenomani­an-Turonian intervals are the primary Cretaceous source rocks in the deepwater area of the DRMB.

These organic-rich, ma­rine clay-rich mudrocks typ­ically contain over 2 % total organic carbon, with Hydro­gen Index values between 200 and 400 mg HC/g TOC. Thermal restoration indi­cates original HI values in the 300 – 600 range, as observed for prolific conjugate ana­logues in the Sergipe Basin of Brazil. Seismic data show stratigraphic continuity be­tween drilled source rocks on the shelf and slope to predict­ed source rocks in the deep­water area of the DRMB.

Figure 2: Seismic interpretation of potential reservoir intervals in the Albian–Cenomanian section. A: Structural map of a surface interpreted at the base of the Santonian-Campanian turbidite complex. B: RMS attribute map extracted along the Albian–Cenomanian surface, highlighting localized high-amplitude anomalies interpreted as potential sand-rich turbidite systems within a predominantly fine-grained, deepwater setting. C-D: Seismic interpretation of potential reservoir intervals within the Albian–Cenomanian section. A: Dip and strike seismic lines showing attribute responses (e.g., RMS) and highlighting depositional geometries of turbidite systems within the interval. Seismic data courtesy of Geoex MCG. For data access and licensing, please contact Geoex MCG at www.geoexmcg.com.

Hydrocarbon generation on oceanic crust

Our basin models were calibrated using corrected bottom-hole temperatures (BHTs) from regional wells and 1D pseudowells, which constrained the burial histo­ry, maturation, and oil and gas expulsion of the area. The results indicate a consistent southwest-to-northeast in­crease in the thermal stress gradient, aligning with the lithospheric structure of the CVL and a larger sedimen­tary input entering the basin along a NE – SW trend. This northeastward rise in the thermal gradient is support­ed by exploration data from the Jaca-1, Ceiba, Zafiro, and Alen-Aseng fields over a distance of 600 km.

The deepwater source rock intervals are present within the transitional zone from oil to gas-condensate expulsion windows across the study area. 3D models con­firm significant oil and gas generation, with the north­eastern sectors exhibiting more advanced maturation and potentially higher gas-oil ratio (GOR) accumulations. This proposed direction­al trend to the northeast of higher gas-oil ratios fits with the production at the Zafiro and Alen-Aseng fields.

Significance of the eg petroleum system

By integrating seismic, ge­ophysical, geochemical, and thermal modeling, this study proposes a working Cretaceous petroleum sys­tem developed above oce­anic crust of Aptian age.

Given the presence of hydrocarbon seeps on São Tomé and Príncipe and shows in the Jaca-1 well drilled in 2023, the DRMB’s deepwater sector east of the CVL provides a promising exploration tar­get. The next steps include constraining the thermal and crustal framework and identifying the optimal trap and migration pathways.

The implications of this study go beyond Equato­rial Guinea. The DRMB shares a similar history of rifting and depositional history with its conjugate in the Sergipe-Pernambuco Basin of northeast Brazil. Insights from our research can guide deepwater ex­ploration approaches in both regions of the South Atlantic, especially in fron­tier oceanic areas that are often overlooked.

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