Technology Focus: Extended-Reach and Complex Wells (May 2021)

2021 ◽  
Vol 73 (05) ◽  
pp. 58-58
Author(s):  
Chris Carpenter

In selecting papers for this feature, reviewer Stéphane Menand of Helmerich and Payne has identified a trio of papers that investigates new approaches toward familiar issues encountered when drilling complex well types. Whether considering the customization of drilling approaches in Middle Eastern carbonate reservoirs, implementing a collaborative work flow in tackling high-tortuosity wells offshore Western Australia, or researching the ability of a fibrous material to effect hole cleaning as opposed to polymeric sweeps, the authors of these papers understand that technical expertise may not be completely realized if it is not applied to problems in original ways. In carbonate reservoirs, the goal of drilling extended-reach wells is set against the geological makeup of such formations, the complexity of which adds significant uncertainty to geosteering and well placement. The authors of paper SPE 203335 develop a work flow that makes possible the customization of drilling scenarios through an emphasis on mechanical specific energy, as well as the use of an optimized borehole-assembly design. The work flow helped deliver what the authors write is the longest well in the Middle East offshore Abu Dhabi. In a similar vein, the authors of paper SPE 202251 describe a challenging scenario involving an ultraextended-reach well in a mature field offshore Western Australia. The project overcame shallow water depth and a high tortuosity requirement by implementing an integrated plan that used a reservoir-mapping-while-drilling service. The authors stress that this technology, coupled with active collaboration between specialists, town, and rig site, allowed the project to achieve the desired oil-column thickness with zero collision incidents. Highly deviated wells often face problems resulting from ineffective hole cleaning. Paper SPE 203147 studies the properties of a fibrous material when compared with the hole-cleaning performance of common polymeric pills. The authors write that the fibrous material proved effective, in part because of a unique characteristic in which a spiderweb-like network of fibers is created that does not allow cuttings to settle easily in complex wells. In addition, the material is environmentally friendly. All three papers approach well- established problems in the critical industry sector of extended-reach drilling with innovation and confidence. Enjoy the papers and be sure to search SPE’s OnePetro online library for more fresh approaches to the technical challenges posed by these well types. Recommended additional reading at OnePetro: www.onepetro.org. SPE 196410 - Analysis of Friction-Reduction System During Drilling Operation at a High-Inclination Well on Field X by Rizqiana Mudhoffar, Tanri Abeng University, et al. SPE 197257 - Successful Management of Collision Risk in an Extended-Reach Well by Manchukarn Naknaka, Mubadala Petroleum, et al. SPE 202730 - Challenges in Drilling and Completion of Extended-Reach-Drilling Wells With Landing Point Departure of More Than 10,000 ft in Light/Slim Casing Design by Nitheesh Kumar Unnikrishnan, Abu Dhabi National Oil Company, et al.

2021 ◽  
Vol 73 (09) ◽  
pp. 48-49
Author(s):  
Chris Carpenter

This article, written by JPT Technology Editor Chris Carpenter, contains highlights of paper SPE 203152, “Generative Well-Pattern Design Applied to a Giant Mature Field Leads to the Identification of Major Drilling Expenditure Reduction Opportunities,” by Maddalen Lepphaille, Total; Arthur Thenon, Modis; and Pierre Bergey, Total, et al., prepared for the 2020 Abu Dhabi International Petroleum Exhibition and Conference, Abu Dhabi, held virtually 9–12 November. The paper has not been peer reviewed. A generative well-pattern-design (GWPD) work flow was benchmarked against traditional manual designs to leverage three reservoir-development planning opportunities applicable to a giant mature Middle Eastern carbonate field. People remained central in ensuring efficient problem setup and exploration guidance, but the work flow proved able to identify substantially better patterns than the traditional approach for each of the opportunities at the cost of only a few hundred simulations. GWPD Overview The work flow used to tackle the different problems of this study, which the authors call the GWPD “well-improvement scheme” (WISH), consists of the following steps. Each step is detailed in the complete paper. 1. Definition of design space 2. Constraint of design space 3. Qualification of design space 4. Nondominated sorting (a specific ranking of all of the cells of the con-strained design space according to the value of their quality indicators) 5. Candidate design investigation 6. Investigation of preferred designs 7. Optimization of preferred design GWPD Application Context. The application study was con-ducted at the beginning of the industrialization of WISH, a proprietary software tool dedicated to GWPD. The authors call the work flow GWPD-WISH. In the studied oil field, more than 400 oil producers and water- or gas-injector strings have been drilled from approximately 100 platforms in a series of reservoirs. The study focused upon two specific reservoirs holding most of the field reserves. These reservoirs are developed with peripheral water injection and gas injection into the gas cap. According to the latest development plan, hundreds of wells will be drilled during the next 40 years in order to maintain a production plateau. The context was deemed favorable because a 3D gridded dynamic reservoir model was available, the geology and development history defined a large and complex design problem, and large liquid hydrocarbon reserves were thought to remain. While the software and method used enables considering an ensemble of realizations capturing reservoir uncertainties, only a single history-matched realization of the model was available. Consequently, the study did not deal with reservoir uncertainties.


2021 ◽  
Vol 73 (05) ◽  
pp. 63-64
Author(s):  
Chris Carpenter

This article, written by JPT Technology Editor Chris Carpenter, contains highlights of paper SPE 203147, “Investigating Hole-Cleaning Fibers’ Mechanism To Improve Cutting Carrying Capacity and Comparing Their Effectiveness With Common Polymeric Pills,” by Mohammad Saeed Karimi Rad, Mojtaba Kalhor Mohammadi, SPE, and Kourosh Tahmasbi Nowtarki, International Drilling Fluids, prepared for the 2020 Abu Dhabi International Petroleum Exhibition and Conference, Abu Dhabi, held virtually 9–12 November. The paper has not been peer reviewed. Hole cleaning in deviated wells is more challenging than in vertical wells because of the boycott effect or the eccentricity of the drillpipe. Poor hole cleaning can result in problems such as borehole packoff or excessive equivalent circulating density. The complete paper investigates a specialized fibrous material (Fiber 1) for hole-cleaning characteristics. The primary goal is to identify significant mechanisms of hole-cleaning fibers and their merits compared with polymeric high-viscosity pills. Hole-Cleaning Indices Based on a review of the literature, most effective parameters regarding hole cleaning in different well types were investigated. These parameters can be classified into the following five categories: - Well design (e.g., hole angle, drillpipe eccentricity, well trajectory) - Drilling-fluid properties (e.g., gel strength, mud weight) - Formation properties (e.g., lithology, cutting specific gravity, cuttings size and shape) - Hydraulic optimizations (e.g., flow regime, nozzle size, number of nozzles) - Drilling practices (e.g., drillpipe rotation speed, wellbore tortuosity, bit type, rate of penetration, pump rate) In this research, rheological parameters and parameters of the Herschel-Bulkley rheological model are considered to be optimization inputs to increase hole-cleaning efficiency of commonly used pills in drilling operations. The complete paper offers a detailed discussion of both the importance of flow regime and the role of the Herschel-Bulkley rheological model in reaching a better prognosis of drilling-fluid behavior at low shear rates. The properties of the fibrous hole-cleaning agent used in the complete paper are provided in Table 1. Test Method Two series of tests were performed. The medium of the first series is drilling water, with the goal of evaluating the efficiency of Fiber 1 in fresh pills. The second series of tests was per-formed with a simple polymeric mud as a medium common in drilling operations. Formulations and rheological properties of both test series are provided in Tables 4 and 5 of the complete paper, respectively.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abdelhak Ladmia ◽  
Abdulla Bakheet Al Katheeri ◽  
Graham F. J. Edmonstone ◽  
Sami Al Saadi ◽  
Eric Deblais ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nada Abou Sayed ◽  
Reena Shrestha ◽  
Hemanta Kumar Sarma ◽  
Nabeela Al Kindy ◽  
Muhammad Haroun ◽  
...  

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