Formation damage near the wellbore reduces permeability and limits well productivity, with its effect commonly quantified by the skin factor. This parameter can strongly influence both the technical performance and the economic feasibility of oil recovery projects. In Brazilian pre-salt carbonate reservoirs, acidizing is widely applied, often conducted immediately after well completion. However, the long-term production and economic implications of these treatments remain insufficiently quantified. In this study, synthetic carbonate reservoir models were constructed using porosity and permeability profiles derived from well data representative of pre-salt conditions. Ten models with flow capacities ranging from 3000 to 130,000 mD·m were simulated over 30 years of water injection, considering skin factors from −3 to +20. The results show that wells with flow capacities below 10,000 mD·m exhibited the strongest response to stimulation, achieving up to 35% higher cumulative oil recovery and more than a 100% increase in net present value (NPV) compared with unstimulated cases. For flow capacity values between 10,000 and 40,000 mD·m, production and economic improvements were marginal, with NPV differences typically within 10%. At higher flow capacity (>60,000 mD·m), the stimulation response became negligible, with NPV variations below 0.1%. These findings demonstrate that stimulation effectiveness is primarily governed by reservoir flow capacity. The integrated reservoir–economic evaluation framework developed in this study provides quantitative guidance for optimizing acidizing strategies in carbonate systems representative of deepwater pre-salt environments.
Araújo et al. (Mon,) studied this question.