A Gas Well Dewatering Pump for 2 3/8-in. Production Tubing

2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenneth Sears
Keyword(s):  
Gas Well ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aurelio Marcano Avila ◽  
Abimbola Raji ◽  
Renny Ottolina ◽  
Jose Jimenez

Abstract In the UAE, an Operator needed to perform a completion change out in a gas well, where the existing completion has been installed for over 30 years. Logging operations had revealed several leaks point in the production tubing due to corrosion. To rectify the situation, a Hydraulic Workover (HWO) Unit was proposed integrating a punch ram in the Blowout Preventer (BOP) Configuration to manage the bleed off of potential pressure trapped between the isolated sections of the completion at surface. This document describes how the highly corroded completion tubing with eleven retrievable plugs set in a live gas well was recovered. The HWO Unit was modified so that one of the cavities in the BOP stack was dressed with customized punch rams for five inch pipe, with the objective of allowing control of any potential leaks due to plug failure. The pressure relief operation could then be completed by means of punching the tubing in the controlled environment that a Stripping BOP Stack provides. This paper compiles the details of the BOP configuration and operating procedures to recover the completion by stripping out of the well and operating the punch rams with the snubbing unit. This includes the pre-job preparation required for a successful operation and the overall design with where to locate the collars and plugs for an accurate punch, and how to confirm that the plugs are holding the pressure to continue retrieving the next completion section. In the end, a safe operation was completed with zero incidents or down time allowing the intervention to continue to the next stage of recompleting the well and putting it back to production. The customer was able to get the well back to production with an alternative solution to what was initially considered, representing a significant cost and time saving.


2021 ◽  
pp. 76-89
Author(s):  
V. A. Ogai ◽  
N. G. Musakaev ◽  
A. Yu. Yushkov ◽  
V. O. Dovbysh ◽  
M. A. Vasilev

The issue of operation water-cut and "self-kills" wells is one of major aspects in gas production. One of the methods of solving this problem is the introduction of foaming agent into the well. The effectiveness of these technologies requires a theoretical and experimental study of gas-liquid flow with surfactants. We have analyzed existing works and have found out that experimental research in this area was carried out at atmospheric pressure. At the same time, the pressure in the well varies with the length of the wellbore and can affect the properties of foaming agent. The article presents a description of a facility for the study of gas-liquid flows with foaming agents at different pressure values. A method of conducting experiments on the facility, simulating a section of the production tubing of a vertical gas well, has been developed. The relations allowing calculating the volume contents of the phases in the gas-liquid flow with surfactants are proposed.


1974 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 176
Author(s):  
K. Dumbrell

Magellan Petroleum (N.T.) Pty Ltd's Palm Valley -2 was spudded in on 21st December 1969 and reached total depth of 6559 feet on 2nd February 1970. The well was completed as a gas well after flowing at the rate of 69.7 MMCF per day during testing.Hole and casing sizes were: 26 in. (20 in.) 31 ft; 17½ in. (13⅜ in.) 431 ft; 12¼ in. (9⅝ in.) 4225 ft; 8½ in. (7 in.) 6057 ft. The rig used was a National 100 and in addition to 6 in. O.D. and 8 in. O.D. drill collars 3 x 11 in O.D. and 6 x 9¼ in. O.D. were run for drilling down to 4225 feet.Compressed air was used as the circulating medium. The air equipment major components comprised: -2 Ingersoll Rand 1500 cfm primary compressors1 Ingersoll Rand 1500 psi booster compressor1 12 in.−3000 psi Shaffer rotating BOP.15 Rock bits were used in the drilling of Palm Valley −2. Substantial water was encountered while drilling through the Mereeinie Sandstone which is a major aquifer of the region.The 7 in. casing was set at 6057 ft and drilling below this point to total depth (6559 ft) was carried out with 2⅞ in. production tubing, 4¾ in. drill collars in conjunction with OTIS N nipple, XO sliding-door sleeve and X landing nipple. This string was used as a combination drill out/production assembly and was left in the hole as a completion string after removing the sliding sleeve with the wire line. A Cameron LDO 2⅞ in. control head was installed prior to drilling out the 7 in. shoe.The use of air as a circulating medium on Palm Valley −2 clearly demonstrated the economic and operational advantages of this drilling method. There are undoubtedly other favourable geological areas in Australia where this drilling and completion procedure could be adopted to great advantage.


2020 ◽  
Vol 39 (6) ◽  
pp. 8823-8830
Author(s):  
Jiafeng Li ◽  
Hui Hu ◽  
Xiang Li ◽  
Qian Jin ◽  
Tianhao Huang

Under the influence of COVID-19, the economic benefits of shale gas development are greatly affected. With the large-scale development and utilization of shale gas in China, it is increasingly important to assess the economic impact of shale gas development. Therefore, this paper proposes a method for predicting the production of shale gas reservoirs, and uses back propagation (BP) neural network to nonlinearly fit reservoir reconstruction data to obtain shale gas well production forecasting models. Experiments show that compared with the traditional BP neural network, the proposed method can effectively improve the accuracy and stability of the prediction. There is a nonlinear correlation between reservoir reconstruction data and gas well production, which does not apply to traditional linear prediction methods


2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammed Jasem Al-Saeedi ◽  
Fayez Abdulrahman Al Fayez ◽  
Dakhil Rasheed Al Enezi ◽  
mahesh sounderrajan ◽  
Mishary Najeeb Al-Mudhaf ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
Gas Well ◽  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document