Effectively stimulate the well regardless of water quality, proppant volume, or location constraints.
Published: 08/01/2018
Published: 08/01/2018
Operators expect infill wells to perform comparably, or better than, existing parent wells. However, in reality, infill wells often produce below parent well decline curves. This has been confirmed in an analysis by a service provider that encompassed 3,000 fracture hits across five major unconventional plays. Another study was conducted across 10 major U.S. unconventional plays. Two of the biggest drivers behind poor child well performance are the depletion effects of the parent well and the interwell communication between offsets. Study conclusions suggest alternative strategies and technologies that may increase infill well potential. This study examines the effects of reservoir depletion and fracture behavior on infill production.
Based on outcomes from the studies, engineering expert are examining technologies and best practices that mitigate the effects of depletion and interwell communication on child well performance and improving reservoir models to better reflect the impact of infill wells on field development planning. Some suggested strategies include: