{"title":"多功能团队在阿布扎比近海创下延伸航程纪录","authors":"C. Carpenter","doi":"10.2118/0524-0094-jpt","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"\n \n This article, written by JPT Technology Editor Chris Carpenter, contains highlights of paper SPE 216326, “Longest Extended-Reach-Drilling Well Worldwide Drilled in Middle East, Offshore Abu Dhabi, UAE,” by Marah Mohamad Alabed, Naser Salah Alsuwaidi, and Jamie Scott Duguid, SPE, ADNOC, et al. The paper has not been peer reviewed.\n \n \n \n The complete paper describes the engineering design and operational practices that supported the setting of a new extended-reach world record in a mature carbonate field offshore Abu Dhabi. This accomplishment reduces the carbon footprint of the development, allows acquisition of reservoir data earlier in the development plan, and accelerates production while reducing costs. This extended-reach development program is a strong example of what can be accomplished when a multifunctional team cultivates a strategic plan to expand technical and operational capabilities in a drilling campaign.\n \n \n \n The 1-md oil reservoir is a carbonate dominated by packstone and grainstone rock types in terms of storage capacity. Average porosity is 18%, and thickness is 130 ft. Permeability reduces in an southeast/northwest direction, dropping below 1 md. Calcite cementation development has occurred in the westernmost areas of the reservoir because of late oil in these low structural areas.\n Initially, the target reservoir was drilled at 2-km well spacing with a five-spot waterflooding scheme from wellhead platform towers. Later, development was optimized by a line waterflooding scheme at 250-m well spacing by development from an environmental island. The target reservoir area was partitioned into four development areas (West A, West B, West C, and West D). The partition is based on drilling reachability from environmental islands and underlying geology.\n The current optimized development began in the West A reservoir area through an artificially constructed island. The remaining reservoir areas required investment of two new islands. High risk is associated with these investment decisions because these reservoir areas degrade in terms of reservoir rock properties. Additionally, an increasing trend of water saturation exists with progress in the northwest direction within the transition zone.\n The development plan in the West A area is based on drilling segments called AB and BC, first with over-20,000-ft laterals to achieve production buildup by target date. To test the West B area, Segment BC was extended, thus covering both West A and B areas. This option reduced drilling complexity and maximized the reservoir-production rate. Additionally, by adopting the island drilling option instead of appraising a limited area of West B, an extensive area of approximately 10 km could be appraised.\n To implement this option, a stepout drilling plan was executed by drilling eight extended-reach maximum-reservoir-contact wells in increments to meet the goal of appraising the West B reservoir area. These first wells were extended in increments of 1,000–2,000 ft to test the capability to drill and run completion to target a measured depth (MD) of 45,000 ft. Upon applying learnings from these pilot wells, a stepout to extending wells to 50,000 ft MD and greater was studied. Fig. 1 shows the map of the subject drilled well with an extended MD of 50,000 ft with an underlying oil-saturation map. This optimized field-development strategy has allowed for effective West B reservoir appraisal.\n","PeriodicalId":16720,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Petroleum Technology","volume":"95 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-05-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Multifunctional-Team Approach Achieves Extended-Reach Record Offshore Abu Dhabi\",\"authors\":\"C. Carpenter\",\"doi\":\"10.2118/0524-0094-jpt\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"\\n \\n This article, written by JPT Technology Editor Chris Carpenter, contains highlights of paper SPE 216326, “Longest Extended-Reach-Drilling Well Worldwide Drilled in Middle East, Offshore Abu Dhabi, UAE,” by Marah Mohamad Alabed, Naser Salah Alsuwaidi, and Jamie Scott Duguid, SPE, ADNOC, et al. The paper has not been peer reviewed.\\n \\n \\n \\n The complete paper describes the engineering design and operational practices that supported the setting of a new extended-reach world record in a mature carbonate field offshore Abu Dhabi. This accomplishment reduces the carbon footprint of the development, allows acquisition of reservoir data earlier in the development plan, and accelerates production while reducing costs. This extended-reach development program is a strong example of what can be accomplished when a multifunctional team cultivates a strategic plan to expand technical and operational capabilities in a drilling campaign.\\n \\n \\n \\n The 1-md oil reservoir is a carbonate dominated by packstone and grainstone rock types in terms of storage capacity. Average porosity is 18%, and thickness is 130 ft. Permeability reduces in an southeast/northwest direction, dropping below 1 md. Calcite cementation development has occurred in the westernmost areas of the reservoir because of late oil in these low structural areas.\\n Initially, the target reservoir was drilled at 2-km well spacing with a five-spot waterflooding scheme from wellhead platform towers. Later, development was optimized by a line waterflooding scheme at 250-m well spacing by development from an environmental island. The target reservoir area was partitioned into four development areas (West A, West B, West C, and West D). The partition is based on drilling reachability from environmental islands and underlying geology.\\n The current optimized development began in the West A reservoir area through an artificially constructed island. The remaining reservoir areas required investment of two new islands. High risk is associated with these investment decisions because these reservoir areas degrade in terms of reservoir rock properties. Additionally, an increasing trend of water saturation exists with progress in the northwest direction within the transition zone.\\n The development plan in the West A area is based on drilling segments called AB and BC, first with over-20,000-ft laterals to achieve production buildup by target date. To test the West B area, Segment BC was extended, thus covering both West A and B areas. This option reduced drilling complexity and maximized the reservoir-production rate. Additionally, by adopting the island drilling option instead of appraising a limited area of West B, an extensive area of approximately 10 km could be appraised.\\n To implement this option, a stepout drilling plan was executed by drilling eight extended-reach maximum-reservoir-contact wells in increments to meet the goal of appraising the West B reservoir area. These first wells were extended in increments of 1,000–2,000 ft to test the capability to drill and run completion to target a measured depth (MD) of 45,000 ft. Upon applying learnings from these pilot wells, a stepout to extending wells to 50,000 ft MD and greater was studied. Fig. 1 shows the map of the subject drilled well with an extended MD of 50,000 ft with an underlying oil-saturation map. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
本文由 JPT 技术编辑 Chris Carpenter 撰写,收录了 SPE 216326 号论文 "在阿联酋阿布扎比近海中东地区钻探的全球最长延伸钻井 "的要点,作者是 Marah Mohamad Alabed、Naser Salah Alsuwaidi 和 Jamie Scott Duguid,SPE、ADNOC 等。 该论文未经同行评审。 这篇完整的论文介绍了在阿布扎比近海成熟碳酸盐岩油田创造新的延伸作业世界纪录的工程设计和作业实践。这一成就减少了开发过程中的碳足迹,允许在开发计划的早期获取储层数据,并在降低成本的同时加快生产。这一延伸开发计划是一个有力的例子,说明了多功能团队在钻探活动中制定战略计划以扩展技术和运营能力所能取得的成就。 1 立方米的油藏属于碳酸盐岩,储量以包岩和粒岩为主。平均孔隙度为 18%,厚度为 130 英尺。渗透率沿东南/西北方向降低,低于 1 md。储油层最西部地区出现了方解石胶结发育,因为这些低构造地区的石油开采较晚。最初,目标储层的钻井井距为 2 千米,采用五点注水方案,从井口平台塔上注水。后来,通过从环境岛进行开发,优化了 250 米井距的线状注水方案。目标储层区被划分为四个开发区(西 A 区、西 B 区、西 C 区和西 D 区)。划分的依据是从环境岛和底层地质出发的钻井可达性。目前的优化开发始于西 A 油藏区,通过人工建造的岛屿进行。其余库区需要投资建造两个新岛。这些投资决策具有很高的风险,因为这些储油区的储油岩属性会退化。此外,在过渡区内,随着向西北方向的推进,水饱和度呈上升趋势。西 A 区的开发计划以钻探 AB 和 BC 区段为基础,首先钻探 20,000 英尺以上的侧管,以便在目标日期前实现增产。为了测试西 B 区,延长了 BC 区段,从而覆盖了西 A 区和西 B 区。这一方案降低了钻井的复杂性,并最大限度地提高了储层生产率。此外,通过采用岛式钻井方案,而不是对西 B 区的有限区域进行评价,可以对大约 10 千米的广大区域进行评价。为实施该方案,执行了一个阶跃钻井计划,即钻探八口最大储层接触延伸井,以实现评估西 B 储层区域的目标。第一口井的延伸深度为 1,000-2,000 英尺,以测试钻井和完井的能力,目标测量深度 (MD) 为 45,000 英尺。在应用这些试验井的经验后,研究了将油井延伸至 50,000 英尺 MD 或更大深度的步骤。图 1 显示了 MD 延伸至 50,000 英尺的目标钻井图,以及底层石油饱和度图。这种优化的油田开发战略使 West B 油藏得到了有效的评价。
Multifunctional-Team Approach Achieves Extended-Reach Record Offshore Abu Dhabi
This article, written by JPT Technology Editor Chris Carpenter, contains highlights of paper SPE 216326, “Longest Extended-Reach-Drilling Well Worldwide Drilled in Middle East, Offshore Abu Dhabi, UAE,” by Marah Mohamad Alabed, Naser Salah Alsuwaidi, and Jamie Scott Duguid, SPE, ADNOC, et al. The paper has not been peer reviewed.
The complete paper describes the engineering design and operational practices that supported the setting of a new extended-reach world record in a mature carbonate field offshore Abu Dhabi. This accomplishment reduces the carbon footprint of the development, allows acquisition of reservoir data earlier in the development plan, and accelerates production while reducing costs. This extended-reach development program is a strong example of what can be accomplished when a multifunctional team cultivates a strategic plan to expand technical and operational capabilities in a drilling campaign.
The 1-md oil reservoir is a carbonate dominated by packstone and grainstone rock types in terms of storage capacity. Average porosity is 18%, and thickness is 130 ft. Permeability reduces in an southeast/northwest direction, dropping below 1 md. Calcite cementation development has occurred in the westernmost areas of the reservoir because of late oil in these low structural areas.
Initially, the target reservoir was drilled at 2-km well spacing with a five-spot waterflooding scheme from wellhead platform towers. Later, development was optimized by a line waterflooding scheme at 250-m well spacing by development from an environmental island. The target reservoir area was partitioned into four development areas (West A, West B, West C, and West D). The partition is based on drilling reachability from environmental islands and underlying geology.
The current optimized development began in the West A reservoir area through an artificially constructed island. The remaining reservoir areas required investment of two new islands. High risk is associated with these investment decisions because these reservoir areas degrade in terms of reservoir rock properties. Additionally, an increasing trend of water saturation exists with progress in the northwest direction within the transition zone.
The development plan in the West A area is based on drilling segments called AB and BC, first with over-20,000-ft laterals to achieve production buildup by target date. To test the West B area, Segment BC was extended, thus covering both West A and B areas. This option reduced drilling complexity and maximized the reservoir-production rate. Additionally, by adopting the island drilling option instead of appraising a limited area of West B, an extensive area of approximately 10 km could be appraised.
To implement this option, a stepout drilling plan was executed by drilling eight extended-reach maximum-reservoir-contact wells in increments to meet the goal of appraising the West B reservoir area. These first wells were extended in increments of 1,000–2,000 ft to test the capability to drill and run completion to target a measured depth (MD) of 45,000 ft. Upon applying learnings from these pilot wells, a stepout to extending wells to 50,000 ft MD and greater was studied. Fig. 1 shows the map of the subject drilled well with an extended MD of 50,000 ft with an underlying oil-saturation map. This optimized field-development strategy has allowed for effective West B reservoir appraisal.