Overcoming a Cementing Failure: Sequenced Fracturing Technique for Remedial Application | SLB

Overcoming a Cementing Failure: Sequenced Fracturing Technique for Remedial Application

Published: 10/20/2015

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The Cottage Grove formation is an active U.S. mid-continent play where cemented horizontal wells are traditionally stimulated by fracturing several perforation clusters simultaneously using limited entry "perf and plug" or other multi-stage completion solutions. Leaving sections of the lateral unstimulated when fracturing over a large interval can be even more severe in uncemented completions, where the limited entry technique cannot be relied on to distribute the flow of stimulation fluids in the reservoir. Prior to the introduction of the sequenced fracturing technique, there was no solution to reliably stimulate a large un-cemented or openhole sections. This led to potential losses of EUR in those wells where for some unplanned event, a section of the wellbore cannot be cemented or isolated with plugs. Recently, a well was drilled and unforeseen issues resulted in 3,300 feet of casing with a completely un-cemented annulus. A remedial cement job was not a feasible option and was quickly dismissed. It was decided to use a new sequenced fracturing technique to complete the stimulation without compromising EUR. This technique uses degradable fibers and multi-sized particles as a composite pill to temporarily plug the fractures and divert stimulation slurry to other regions along the wellbore. In this instance, 20 fracturing stages separated by 12 composite pills and 9 bridge plugs were pumped in sequence to optimize the number of fractures along the wellbore and maximize production.

A production and radioactive tracer log run after the operation revealed that the composite pill successfully diverted the treatment fluids from areas previously fractured to previously unstimulated portions of the lateral. As a result, the entire lateral which had been left without cement was ultimately evenly stimulated. This was confirmed by a production log which showed a constant increase in oil and gas production compared to reference wells. Two hundred and six days after the well has been put on production, the well productivity has been more than 30% higher than any offset well.

The design, execution and job evaluation of the treatments are detailed in this paper, and highlight the keys to the successful treatment which turned a well initially thought to be a failure into a technical and economic success.

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