Deploying Coiled Tubing Using the Low Head Method of Well Control

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ben Talbot
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Seng Wei Jong ◽  
Yee Tzen Yong ◽  
Yusri Azizan ◽  
Richard Hampson ◽  
Rudzaifi Adizamri Hj Abd Rani ◽  
...  

Abstract Production decline caused by sand ingress was observed on 2 offshore oil wells in Brunei waters. Both wells were completed with a sub-horizontal openhole gravel pack and were subsequently shut in as the produced sand would likely cause damage to the surface facilities. In an offshore environment with limited workspace, crane capacity and wells with low reservoir pressures, it was decided to intervene the wells using a catenary coiled tubing (CT) vessel. The intervention required was to clean out the sand build up in the wells and install thru-tubing (TT) sand screens along the entire gravel packed screen section. Nitrified clean out was necessary due to low reservoir pressures while using a specialized jetting nozzle to optimize turbulence and lift along the deviated section. In addition, a knockout pot was utilized to filter and accommodate the large quantity of sand returned. The long sections of screens required could not be accommodated inside the PCE stack resulting in the need for the operation to be conducted as an open hole deployment using nippleless plug and fluid weight as well control barrier. A portable modular crane was also installed to assist the deployment of long screen sections prior to RIH with CT. Further challenges that needed to be addressed were the emergency measures. As the operation was to be conducted using the catenary system, the requirement for an emergency disconnect between the vessel and platform during the long cleanout operations and open hole deployment needed to be considered as a necessary contingency. Additional shear seal BOPs, and emergency deployment bars were also prepared to ensure that the operation could be conducted safely and successfully.


2008 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Lowell Egbert ◽  
Halcombe Augustus Kendall

2021 ◽  
Vol 73 (06) ◽  
pp. 42-43
Author(s):  
Chris Carpenter

This article, written by JPT Technology Editor Chris Carpenter, contains highlights of paper SPE 204403, “Development of Low-Force Shear Blades for High-Strength Coiled Tubing,” by Scott Sherman, Nexus Energy Technologies, prepared for the 2021 SPE/ICoTA Virtual Well Intervention Conference, 22–25 March. The paper has not been peer reviewed. As coiled tubing (CT) grades have evolved during the past 20 years and wall thicknesses have increased, the resulting force required to shear coil has more than doubled. An industry need existed to develop a shear blade for blowout preventers (BOPs) that could cut high-strength CT using legacy pressure-control equipment already in use. The paper describes the iterative process of development of a novel shear blade able to cut high-strength CT with 50% of the normal shear force. Objective The objective of the work detailed in the complete paper was to develop a novel CT-shearing system capable of cutting high-strength heavy-wall CT with reduced hydraulic pressures. Considering that CT will continue to evolve in terms of yield strength, the goal of the study was to future-proof BOPs wherever possible to protect customers from the liability of obsolete equipment. The authors write that, ultimately, BOPs will need to cut 175-grade CT strings with a 7-mm wall thickness with 103 MPa of wellbore pressure and less than 17.2 MPa hydraulic pressure. Development Process Initially, the following five options were considered: - Larger-diameter cylinders. This seemingly simple option, which would generate more shear force, was ruled out because the implementation would not be backward-compatible with existing well-control equipment and the larger cylinder volume would result in slower cycle times. - Boosted actuators. These could double shear force while maintaining piston diameter. While this solution is simple, theoretically, these actuators require twice as much hydraulic fluid from the accumulator to function. This results in a closing time that is nearly double that of a nonboosted actuator. - Pressure-balanced actuators. With this option, hydraulic forces would not need to overcome the forces related to wellbore pressure in addition to providing sufficient force to shear CT. These actuators do increase the amount of shear force available to cut CT when used on high-pressure wells. However, they increase complexity, cost, and weight and could result in trapped wellbore fluids within the actuator that could lead to corrosion-related issues. - Increasing hydraulic pressure to a given set of rams using a pressure multiplier for the shear rams or a similar system. This solution was deemed unsuitable because the hydraulics of most BOPs are designed for 150% of their rated pressure. Doubling the hydraulic pressure available to the BOP could damage the hydraulic cylinders and associated actuators, resulting in a catastrophic well-control situation. - Modifying shear blade geometry to reduce the shear force needed to cut CT using existing equipment. This was selected as the most-logical approach because the modified shear blades could be retrofitted into existing BOPs. Furthermore, this solution would not require modification to existing wellsite equipment such as accumulator skids and would not increase the weight or size of the BOP stack.


2002 ◽  
Vol 17 (04) ◽  
pp. 241-250
Author(s):  
Alexander Sas-Jaworsky ◽  
Ali Ghalambor
Keyword(s):  

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