Exploiting the Cooper Basin: conventional lessons and appropriate analogues to guide an unconventional future

2018 ◽  
Vol 58 (1) ◽  
pp. 339
Author(s):  
Brenton Richards ◽  
Alexander Côté

Over the past decade, there has been a paradigm shift in the exploitation strategy in North American tight gas plays from vertical to horizontal wells. This shift has yet to occur in Australia. The Cooper Basin has vast amounts of contingent and prospective tight gas resources that have yet to be unlocked commercially. These resources continue to be developed primarily with hydraulic fracture stimulated vertical wells. Operators have yet to challenge the status quo and test the Cooper Basin tight gas potential with a drilled, completed and tested horizontal well. There are many advantages to horizontal well developments, from the ability to target a specific high graded reservoir unit to increased capital efficiency. Operators need to break away from convention and take a new approach to Cooper Basin tight gas exploration and development in the quest to demonstrate commerciality. A review of the inherent challenges in Cooper Basin gas field developments and the current exploitation strategies employed in analogous tight gas plays have been integrated to produce a pragmatic workflow to identify potential reservoir units that would benefit from a change in development strategy.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raed Mohamed Elmohammady ◽  
Mostafa Mahrous Ali ◽  
Hassan Elsayed Salem

Abstract Reservoir development in Safa Formation requires a lot of vertical wells in order to exploit the gas reserve in the formation which means high cost is needed because the heterogeneity in the formation is noticed due to sandstone is pinched out in different locations of the reservoir. So, vertical well may be sweep from limited area of the reservoir that make safa formation has less priority for new activities. Form all of that the plan was drilling horizontal wells with long horizontal section to recover great volume of gas from reservoir. In addition to reduction in number of drilling vertical wells in the reservoir. In contrast, the major constrains is the small thickness of reservoir that make drilling horizontal section is very difficult. The main characteristics of safa formation is non continuous sandstone in the whole reservoir with great heterogeneity that not controlled by any points in the reservoir for the distribution of sandstone. In addition, there are a lot of locations in safa formation that include lean intervals which have kaolinite, elite that are not capable for produce from sand. In other hand, there is another constrains beside the discontinuity of sand production is the heterogeneity of permeability properties of reservoir that change in wide range across the reservoir with minimum range of 0.01 md and increase in some locations to reach 100 md. From all of the previous, it is a big challenge in drilling horizontal wells with long horizontal section in thin reservoir thickness in order to access the best reservoir permeability and optimize the number of drilling wells based on this concept. This paper will discuss case study of unlock and development long horizontal section in gas reservoir characterized by its tightness. The main goal of this horizontal well to recover ultimate gas reserve from safa formation by horizontal section reached to 2000 meter with a challenge because it is abnormal to drill this large horizontal section in western desert of Egypt in reservoir thickness range from 5 meter to 30 meter as prognosis from other offset wells in case of there is no pitchout of the sandstone. After Drilling of first horizontal well, the results were unexpected because the well penetrates a large horizontal section of sandstone in safa formation. This section reached to around 1750 meter with average reservoir permeability between 10 – 20 md and the reservoir porosity about 13% with good hydrocarbon saturation that changes along this section from 75% to 80%. So, this well put on production with very stable gas production rate 20 MMSCFD. In this paper will discuss in details the different challenge that faced to unlock this tight gas reservoir and will discuss the performance of horizontal well production. In this paper will discuss the first horizontal well in safa formation and the longest horizontal section in western desert of Egypt in tight gas formation that has a lot of challenges and risks are faced. After success the concept of horizontal well in heterogeneous reservoir, the next plan is the development of this reservoir using several horizontal wells to recover the ultimate recovery of gas from safa formation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 329 ◽  
pp. 01013
Author(s):  
Linqing Liu ◽  
Shuo Zhai ◽  
HaiTao Li ◽  
Jing Wang

Hydraulic fracturing horizontal well is the key technology of tight gas development. After fracturing, the gas well shows the characteristics of great difference in production energy and many factors affecting production capacity. Therefore, taking 10 fractured horizontal wells in JQ gas field in Sichuan Basin as an example, comprehensively considering the influence of geological and engineering factors, and based on the statistical analysis of gas well productivity and the laws of various index parameters, 17 geological and engineering parameters were selected, and the main factors controlling productivity were studied by grey correlation method. The results show that the tight gas fracturing horizontal well can obtain high production, which is jointly determined by geological and engineering factors. The five main control factors affecting the productivity of tight gas fracturing horizontal well are as follows: proppant type, preflush, ϕ·h. Sand volume and reservoir volume.


2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin Bate ◽  
Mauricio Lane ◽  
Alexey Moiseenkov ◽  
Sergey Nadezhdin

Abstract Appraisal drilling of a recently discovered Cambrian-aged gas field in Oman is indicating that the field may have significant amounts of gas locked in a challenging deep, hot, and highly pressured reservoir environment. The low porosity and permeability values of the Amin reservoir allow the classification of the reservoir as a tight gas sand. The variability of reservoir properties, both spatially and vertically, makes it difficult to standardize perforation and fracture stimulation design which, in turn, complicates delineation of a development plan for the project. One of the difficulties relates to uncertainty in vertical propagation of hydraulic fractures. Fracture height based on evaluation of radioactive tracer logs indicates that vertical barriers to fracture propagation may relate to specific geologic zones in the reservoir. The mapping of the reservoir zones into undeveloped areas of the field would allow selection of primary and secondary production targets based on the specific physical properties of the individual zones. To assume that no barrier to fracture propagation exists between separate production units may lead to attempts to stimulate them synchronously, which would be disadvantageous for several reasons, such as premature screenouts and incomplete coverage of gas-bearing layers. Reserves booking and allocation can also be jeopardized should the fractures propagate into undesired zones.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andreas Briner ◽  
Sergey Nadezhdin ◽  
Sergio Tessari ◽  
Jeroen Smit ◽  
Yazeed Busaidi ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Feng Wang ◽  
Yingan Zhang ◽  
Guangyu Liu ◽  
Zhaopeng Zhu ◽  
Biansheng Li ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marc Edmund Langford ◽  
George Douglas Westera ◽  
Brian Holland ◽  
Bogdan Bocaneala ◽  
Mark Robert Norris

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