Engineered Solution Helps Tackle Tricky Shale Gas Cementing Challenge in HP/HT to Deliver Good Cement Bond Across Shale Section Located in Western India

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
DV Chandrashekar ◽  
Mikhil Dange ◽  
Animesh Kumar ◽  
Devesh Bhaisora

Abstract In a world where energy is a major concern, the revolution of shale gas globally has triggered a potential shift in thinking about production and consumption that no one would have expected. The enormous shale gas resources identified today are becoming game changers in many developing countries. The booming economy of India is seeing a significant increase in its energy demand, with industries establishing new footprints in the western region of the country. Operators are venturing into deeper and harsher conditions (HP/HT environments) to tap those resources. Even though shale gas is now found globally, it is still described as an unconventional source of hydrocarbons. This is because the extraction of shale gas is tricky and challenging. To unlock the unconventional gas reservoir most of the wells are horizontally drilled and hydraulically fractured. This process has a strong impact on cement bonding across the section. Firstly, the cement needs to provide an effective barrier in the annulus around the casing, which has been horizontally placed. Secondly, cement has to withstand various mechanical loads during hydraulic fracturing and ultimately over the life of the well. The present study covers the Navagam field located in the Ahmedabad block of North Cambay Basin. Cambay Basin is bounded on its eastern and western sides by basin-margin faults and extends south into the offshore Gulf of Cambay, limiting its onshore area to 7,900 mi2. The operator's western asset had already deployed its resources on evaluating the data to assess the potential shale gas in the Navagam block in the Cambay Basin. This paper highlights successful cement placement in an unconventional shale gas reservoir in onshore western India. It was crucial to understand why early exploration wells in the area resulted in poor initial zonal isolation in order to refine the asset development model for future wells. Based on these models, a mechanically modified resilient cement system was engineered. Subsequent exploration wells were then cemented with the resilient cement system to allow for dependable zonal isolation of reservoir bands permitting the accurate determination of discrete reservoir geomechanical properties within the overall reservoir target.

2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Heath Williams ◽  
Deepak Kumar Khatri ◽  
Roger F. Keese ◽  
Sylvaine Le Roy-Delage ◽  
Justin Martin Roye ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chen Mingzhong ◽  
Qian Bing ◽  
Ou Zhilin ◽  
Zhang juncheng ◽  
Jiang Hai ◽  
...  

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