Recent North Sea experience in formation evaluation of horizontal wells.

1991 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. White
2003 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 557-561 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Carter ◽  
J. Heale

AbstractThis paper updates the earlier account of the Forties Field detailed in Geological Society Memoir 14 (Wills 1991), and gives a brief description of the Brimmond Field, a small Eocene accumulation overlying Forties (Fig. 1).The Forties Field is located 180 km ENE of Aberdeen. It was discovered in 1970 by well 21/10-1 which encountered 119 m of oil bearing Paleocene sands at a depth of 2131 m sub-sea. A five well appraisal programme confirmed the presence of a major discovery including an extension into Block 22/6 to the southeast. Oil-in-place was estimated to be 4600 MMSTB with recoverable reserves of 1800 MM STB. The field was brought onto production in September 1975. Plateau production of 500 MBOD was reached in 1978, declining from 1981 to 77 MBOD in 1999.In September 1992 a programme of infill drilling commenced, which continues today. The earlier infill targets were identified using 3D seismic acquired in 1988. Acquisition of a further 3D survey in 1996 has allowed the infill drilling programme to continue with new seismic imaging of lithology, fluids and saturation changes. The performance of the 1997 drilling showed that high step-out and new technology wells, including multi-lateral and horizontal wells, did not deliver significantly better targets than drilling in previous years.In line with smaller targets, and in the current oil price environment, low cost technology is being developed through the 1999 drilling programme. Through Tubing Rotary Drilling (TTRD) is currently seen as the most promising way of achieving a step


Author(s):  
Maciej Kozlowski ◽  
◽  
Diptaroop Chakraborty ◽  
Venkat Jambunathan ◽  
Peyton Lowrey ◽  
...  

The Alvheim Field in the Norwegian North Sea was discovered in 1998. Two wells were drilled in 2018 in the Gekko structure to confirm oil column height and to evaluate reservoir quality in the Heimdal Formation. A comprehensive wireline logging program, including NMR and formation testing, was optimized to reduce formation evaluation uncertainty. Evaluating fluid properties, oil column height, and reservoir quality were primary objectives. Well A was first drilled on the south of the structure, followed by Well B on the north of the structure. Reservoir quality encountered in both wells was very good, and a project to develop these resources is currently in the selection phase. Formation evaluation uncertainty encompassing pore geometry distribution, permeability, reservoir quality, and hydrocarbon identification are mitigated by studying the nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) log response. NMR fluid typing has been widely used in the oil industry since the 1990s. NMR fluid typing today is a combination of the contrast of spin relaxation time T1, the spin-spin relaxation time T2 (T1T2), and the diffusivity (T2D) of formation fluids (Chen et al., 2016). NMR fluid typing can be obtained from a continuous log and/or stationary log measurements. This paper showcases excellent, textbook-quality NMR data, as well as the integration of NMR data in the petrophysical workflow. High-confidence fluid properties and fluid contacts are determined. This paper also highlights a comparison of NMR data acquired in stationary vs. continuous depth-based log modes in both wells. The continuous log data quality is equivalent to stationary data, implying continuous log data quality is sufficient for reliable NMR fluid properties evaluation without depending on time-consuming stationary NMR measurements. Reducing logging operations rig time is very advantageous in the North Sea, where drilling rig operations cost is high, and enhanced rig time management is constantly required.


2005 ◽  
Vol 8 (05) ◽  
pp. 445-451
Author(s):  
Huanwen Cui ◽  
Yannong Dong ◽  
Shekhar Sinha ◽  
Rintu Kalita ◽  
Younes Jalali

Summary A method is presented for estimating the distribution of a parameter related to the productivity index along the length of a liner-completed horizontal well, using measurements of well flowing pressure at multiple points along the path of flow in the wellbore. This is the concept of near-wellbore diagnosis with multipoint pressure measurements, which in principle can be made with fiber-optic sensors. The deployment mechanism of the sensors is not modeled in this study, although the temperature version of such sensors has been deployed in horizontal wells on an extended-tail-pipe or stinger completion. (The temperature sensors also have been deployed in horizontal wells with sand-screen completions, in direct contact with the formation, but that configuration is not investigated in this study.) The parameter that is estimated is known in reservoir-simulation terminology as the connection factor (CF), which represents the hydraulic coupling or connectivity between the reservoir and the wellbore (between formation gridblocks and well segments). Parameter CF has units of md-ft, similar to flow capacity, or productivity index multiplied by viscosity. Specifically, the parameter is directly proportional to the geometric mean of the permeability perpendicular to the horizontal axis of the well and is inversely related to skin. No attempts are made in this study to estimate these parameters individually, which may require recourse to other methods of well diagnosis(e.g., dynamic formation testing, transient analysis, and production logging). The method applies to flow under constant-rate conditions and yields estimates of the CF, which represents the quality of the formation in the vicinity of the well and the integrity of the completion along the well trajectory. The quality of the inversion is determined by the spatial density and accuracy of the multipoint measurements. Inversion quality also depends on knowledge of the wellbore hydraulic characteristics and the relative permeability characteristics of the formation. The basic configuration investigated in this study consists of a five-node pressure array in a 2,000-fthorizontal well experiencing a total pressure drop of approximately 60 psi when produced at 10,000 STB/D. A reasonable estimate of the distribution of the parametric group CF is obtained even when allowing for measurement drift and errors in liner roughness and relative permeability exponent. Also, the inversion can be rendered insensitive to knowledge of the far-field permeability through a scaling technique. Therefore, good estimates of the near-wellbore CF profile can be obtained with uncertain knowledge of the reservoir permeability field. This is important because the technique can be applied not only to early-time but also to late-time data. The application of the multipoint pressure method is illustrated through a series of examples, and its potential for near-wellbore formation evaluation for horizontal wells is described. Introduction Horizontal wells can be diagnosed on the basis of information derived from openhole and cased-hole surveys. These include petrophysical logs, dynamic formation testers, production logging, and pressure-transient testing. With the advent of permanent sensing technologies and the development of methods of production-data inversion or history matching, a new form of cased-hole diagnosis can be envisaged, with improved spatial and temporal coverage and without the need for in-well intervention and interruption of production. The impact of such methods on reservoir-scale characterization can also be significant. There are two main preconditions for the development of such a methodology, one concerning sensing technology and the other concerning interpretation methodology. Permanent sensing technology has made great progress during the last decade, with the development of single-point and distributed measurements that can be deployed with the completion (pressure, flow rate, and distributed temperature). However, these systems are typically developed as stand alone measurement units and do not enjoy the required degree of integration. Current modeling methods, however, can be used to provide an incentive for such integration. The well-diagnosis problem is decoupled in our investigation into diagnosis of flow condition in the wellbore and diagnosis of near-wellbore formation characteristics. (By "near-wellbore," we mean the wellbore gridblock scale.)This is partly to adhere to the conventional demarcation between production logging and dynamic formation evaluation and partly to show the natural consequence of the mathematical problem. Basically, the wellbore-diagnosis problem (determination of flux distribution, as in production logging) can treat the formation simply as a boundary condition, but the formation-evaluation problem cannot do the same (i.e., treat the wellbore interface as a boundary condition) because evaluation is based on measurements made inside the wellbore. Thus, both the wellbore and the formation have to betaken into account. (Sensors that are in direct contact with the formation, as mentioned in the Summary, are emerging.8 Therefore, the evolution of this problem is to be expected.) In this study, the permanent or in-situ analog of dynamic formation evaluation is investigated. The in-situ analog of production logging is investigated in a parallel study.


2020 ◽  
Vol 52 (1) ◽  
pp. 151-162 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ian Dredge ◽  
Gary Marsden

AbstractThe Cygnus Field is located in Blocks 44/11a and 44/12a of the UK Southern North Sea. The field was first discovered in 1988 as a tight lower Leman Sandstone Formation gas discovery by well 44/12- 1. After the licences had sat idle for several years, GDF Britain (now Neptune E&P UK Ltd) appraised the field from 2006 to 2010. During the appraisal phase, the lower Leman Sandstone was found to be of better quality than first discovered and the gas-bearing lower Ketch Member reservoir was also encountered. The field development was sanctioned in 2012.The field has been developed from two wellhead platforms targeting Leman Sandstone and Ketch Member reservoirs. Five main fault blocks have been developed, with two wells in each fault block planned in the field development plan. The wells are long horizontal wells completed with stand-alone sand screens. At the time of writing, the production plateau is 320 MMscfgd (266 MMscfgd when third-party constraints apply), producing from nine wells with the final production well to be drilled.


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