Prevent shallow flow and enhance cement strength in deepwater environments.
Published: 07/05/2022
Published: 07/05/2022
An operator sought a cost-effective solution to cement a deepwater well amid logistic limitations due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Only two wells in the world had been cemented at this water depth; one in Japan and another in Brazil. Neither well used foamed cement in the riserless section. The operator recognized this would be the first foamed cement effort at such depth, and this posed some risk.
The operator previously drilled a vertical well in Angola off the southwest coast of Africa. The well was drilled at a water depth of 11,000 ft [3,627 m]. The 36-in conductor was jetted at a 12,316 ft [3,754 m] true vertical depth rotary table (TVD-RT). An engineered trimodal cement slurry blend was evaluated that mirrored the system deployed by Schlumberger in Japan; however, it would cost USD 1 million more including airfreight for materials under COVID-19 pandemic transport restrictions when compared to the cost of foamed cement.
Following a thorough risk assessment and a track record of 23 foamed cement jobs already conducted in Angola, Schlumberger accepted the challenge to proceed with foamed cement in the riserless well section.
The CemFOAM foamed cementing equipment, data acquisition, and control system was selected and used. It automatically synchronized the total N2 pumps and foamer pump rates with the base slurry rate from the cementing unit. All slurry testing was conducted in the district laboratory.
Through continuous mixing and nitrification of the 13.35 lbm/galUS [1.60 sg] base slurry, the foamed slurry volume was 1,387 bbl [220.5 m3] with an average foam quality of 27.8% and average density of 10.5 lbm/galUS [1.26 sg]. A total of 119 metric tons of cement and 30,711 liters of N2 were consumed. The final surface pressure was 594.6 psi [4.1 MPa]; the pumping operation took 10 hours. The lead cement slurry was reported at the seabed and the float shoe security check was positive. No casing subsidence was evident once the casing hanger was released. Subsequent 12¼-in openhole drilling was successful to 16,985 ft [5,177 m] TVD-RT and later plugged back.
The selected foamed cement slurry provided the following time-saving benefits: