Streamline running and setting in deviated wells with single-trip gravel-pack completions, and use any QUANTUM packer accessories.
Challenge:
Solution: Deploy the QUANTUM HS™ retrievable hydraulic-set sealbore production packer to absorb high shock and enable easy recovery after the perforation operation
Results:
Petroleum Development Oman (PDO) was drilling in the Saddad area in the Al Wusta region and wanted to decrease its operation time while completing a vertical well. With a potentially high volume of oil located within the Khaleel (Karim) reservoir, the common completion strategy has yielded a flow rate of 240 m3/d. The operator conducted additional studies on ways to produce more from this reservoir. A clean perforation tunnel can be achieved using high-pressure drawdown and has been proven as a key contributor to improve the productivity up to 450 m3/d, a 87.5% increase in comparison with previously used completion strategies.
SLB recommended using the robust QUANTUM HS retrievable hydraulic-set sealbore production packer, which features superior strength constraint in comparison with conventional retrievable or permanent packers and enables reliable, easy completion string recovery. In addition, an automatic gun release system was used to immediately drop the guns and begin producing the well after the perforation was established. A completion fluid was used to create a static underbalanced condition during perforation that maximized perforation tunnel cleanout and enabled well flow to surface.
Combining the well completion strategy with tubing-conveyed perforation in a "shoot and drop" operation saved 2 days in rig time with a single trip downhole. The automatic gun release system eliminated the need to initiate well production after a planned CT operation, resulting in a combined estimated total of USD 135,000 in operational cost savings for the well.
The technology was then used in six additional wells, increasing production by an average of 200 m3/d of oil per well and saving a total of USD 700,000 in associated well costs for all seven wells.