Heavy Oil Development: Summary of Sand Control and Well Completion Strategies Used with Multilateral Applications

Author(s):  
Travis W. Cavender
2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ye Huimin ◽  
Mauricio Patarroyo ◽  
Carlos Alberto Perez Moreno ◽  
Nicolas Lopez

2011 ◽  
Vol 383-390 ◽  
pp. 4911-4915
Author(s):  
Ding Feng ◽  
Guan Jun Xu ◽  
Yuan Hua Zhou ◽  
Hong Zhang ◽  
Xiao Fei Chang ◽  
...  

The metering and controlling of down hole flow has became an important and indispensable technology in the development of oil field as well as the intelligent oilfield technology, the correlative data which measured by them can provide a reliable theoretical basis for the production and management of the oil-field. Develops a new flow measurement device which can adapt to the complex down hole environment is very important. This paper emphasis on the composition of the data acquisition system about flow test in the down hole, including the design of data acquisition system, the application of bus, the selected of core chip and the design of software, and super-induce some collecting data that get in the test, determining the most value information, as well as making a more rapid response to the oil deposit management, gets up a significant guiding sense to the heavy oil development and the intelligent well completion.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mahmoud Reda ◽  
Abdulaziz Erhama ◽  
Kerry Henderson ◽  
Yousef Al-Mulla ◽  
Tamadhor AlMuhanna

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nadiah Kamaruddin ◽  
Nurfuzaini A Karim ◽  
M Ariff Naufal Hasmin ◽  
Sunanda Magna Bela ◽  
Latief Riyanto ◽  
...  

Abstract Field A is a mature hydrocarbon-producing field located in eastern Malaysia that began producing in 1968. Comprised of multistacked reservoirs at heights ranging from 4,000 to 8,000 ft, they are predominantly unconsolidated, requiring sand exclusion from the start. Most wells in this field were completed using internal gravel packing (IGP) of the main reservoir, and particularly in shallower reservoirs. With these shallower reservoirs continuously targeted as good potential candidates, identifying a sustainable sand control solution is essential. Conventional sand control methods, namely IGP, are normally a primary choice for completion; however, this method can be costly, which requires justification during challenging economic times. To combat these challenges, a sand consolidation system using resin was selected as a primary completion method, opposed to a conventional IGP system. Chemical sand consolidation treatments provide in situ sand influx control by treating the incompetent formation around the wellbore itself. The initial plan was to perform sand consolidation followed by a screenless fracturing treatment; however, upon drilling the targeted zone and observing its proximity to a water zone, fracturing was stopped. With three of eight zones in this well requiring sand control, a pinpoint solution was delivered in stages by means of a pump through with a packer system [retrievable test treat squeeze (RTTS)] at the highest possible accuracy, thus ensuring treatment placement efficiency. The zones were also distanced from one another, requiring zonal isolation (i.e., mechanical isolation, such as bridge plugs, was not an option) as treatments were deployed. While there was a major challenge in terms of mobilization planning to complete this well during the peak of a movement control order (MCO) in Malaysia, optimal operations lead to a long-term sand control solution. Well unloading and test results upon well completion provided excellent results, highlighting good production rates with zero sand production. The groundwork processes of candidate identification down to the execution of sand consolidation and temporary isolation between zones are discussed. Technology is compared in terms of resin fluid system types. Laboratory testing on the core samples illustrates how the chemical consolidation process physically manifests. This is used to substantiate the field designs, execution plan, initial results, follow-up, lessons learned, and best practices used to maximize the life of a sand-free producer well. This success story illustrates potential opportunity in using sand consolidation as a primary method in the future.


Author(s):  
D.R. Fair ◽  
C.L. Trudell ◽  
T.J. Boone ◽  
G.R. Scott ◽  
B.C. Speirs

2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ahmad Aladasani ◽  
Saeed Salehi ◽  
Runar Nygaard ◽  
Baojun Bai

2010 ◽  
Vol 50 (1) ◽  
pp. 623 ◽  
Author(s):  
Khalil Rahman ◽  
Abbas Khaksar ◽  
Toby Kayes

Mitigation of sand production is increasingly becoming an important and challenging issue in the petroleum industry. This is because the increasing demand for oil and gas resources is forcing the industry to expand its production operations in more challenging unconsolidated reservoir rocks and depleted sandstones with more complex well completion architecture. A sand production prediction study is now often an integral part of an overall field development planning study to see if and when sand production will be an issue over the life of the field. The appropriate type of sand control measures and a cost-effective sand management strategy are adopted for the field depending on timing and the severity of predicted sand production. This paper presents a geomechanical modelling approach that integrates production or flow tests history with information from drilling data, well logs and rock mechanics tests. The approach has been applied to three fields in the Australasia region, all with different geological settings. The studies resulted in recommendations for three different well completion and sand control approaches. This highlights that there is no unique solution for sand production problems, and that a robust geomechanical model is capable of finding a field-specific solution considering in-situ stresses, rock strength, well trajectory, reservoir depletion, drawdown and perforation strategy. The approach results in cost-effective decision making for appropriate well/perforation trajectory, completion type (e.g. cased hole, openhole or liner completion), drawdown control or delayed sand control installation. This type of timely decision making often turns what may be perceived as an economically marginal field development scenario into a profitable project. This paper presents three case studies to provide well engineers with guidelines to understanding the principles and overall workflow involved in sand production prediction and minimisation of sand production risk by optimising completion type.


2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tg Rasidi Tg Othman ◽  
M Izzat A Rahman ◽  
M Medhat El Emam ◽  
Anis Salwa Ramli ◽  
Shahida Sulleh ◽  
...  

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