Australian Operator Drills 2,400-m Vertical Well with Inclination of 0.75° in Faulted Formation | SLB

Australian operator drills 2,400-m vertical well with inclination of 0.75° in faulted formation

minus
Australia, Oceania, Onshore

To maintain hold inclination and verticality in a faulted formation with a high dip angle, the operator used the PowerV™ vertical drilling rotary steerable system (RSS) paired with a SHARC™ high-abrasion-resistance PDC drill bit from Smith Bits, an SLB company, and also increased drilling performance to save 2 days of drilling.

Drill vertical well in faulted shale formation

As part of a gas exploration program in South Australia, an operator was drilling vertical wells in a faulted formation with a high dip angle. Maintaining verticality of the wellbores was critical for conducting extensive coring, wireline logging, and downhole testing. Natural drillbit walk and the presence of faults in the formation had prevented the operator from achieving verticality in offset wells using positive displacement mud motors and traditional rotary BHAs.

The first offset well was drilled to 2,585-m MD using a BHA with a mud motor, and the well deviated to an inclination of 10° and departed 94.3 m from the surface location at 2,585-m MD. The second offset well, which was drilled using a rotary steerable BHA, deviated as much as 20° and departed 225 m from the surface location at 2,680-m MD.

Successfully maintain hold inclination with vertical-drilling RSS to support wireline and coring operations

SLB recommended using the PowerV RSS optimized with a SHARC high-abrasion-resistance PDC drill bit to drill the 12¼-in section from 500-m MD to 2,400-m MD. The RSS was fitted with an another SHARC drill bit to drill the 8½-in section from 2,400 m to TD at 4,400 m. Using automatic inclination hold mode, the PowerV RSS maintains precise directional control. The fully rotating design of the RSS also decreases the risk of differential sticking and improves hole cleaning.

Using the PowerV RSS, the operator was able to maintain verticality with a maximum of 0.75° inclination despite high-dip faults in the critical 12¼-in section; a maximum of 0.26° was achieved in the 8½-in section. The PowerV RSS paired with a SHARC drill bit drilled 1,863.5 m at 58.2 m/h, reaching section TD 2 days faster than was achieved in an offset well drilled with a mud motor BHA. The wellbore also met the tight tolerances required by the operator, which allowed for the successful conclusion of the extensive well evaluation program.

Australian Operator Drills 2,400-m Vertical Well with Inclination of 0.75° in Faulted Formation - PowerV RSS enables crucial well evaluation program while saving 2 rig days
Offset wells 1 and 2 were drilled with mud motor and rotary steerable BHAs, and their wellbores deviated 10°–20°. The PowerV RSS maintained verticality in the deep shale reservoir with a deviation of 0.75° or less while maintaining higher ROP than was achieved in either offset well.
Products Used
Subscribe