Severe wellbore instability in a complex lithology formation necessitating casing while drilling and continuous circulation system

Abstract Most of drilling hole problems are attributed to wellbore stability issues which adversely cause excessive lost time and cost millions of dollars. The past drilling experiences in Kupal oilfield showed excessive mud losses, kick flows, tight holes and pipe stuck leading to repeated reaming,...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: R. Ashena, A. Elmgerbi, V. Rasouli, A. Ghalambor, M. Rabiei, A. Bahrami
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2020-01-01
Series:Journal of Petroleum Exploration and Production Technology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/s13202-020-00834-3
id doaj-957527a61d3746bfbc1c4bdf9e5d719e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-957527a61d3746bfbc1c4bdf9e5d719e2021-01-17T12:22:16ZengSpringerOpenJournal of Petroleum Exploration and Production Technology2190-05582190-05662020-01-011041511153210.1007/s13202-020-00834-3Severe wellbore instability in a complex lithology formation necessitating casing while drilling and continuous circulation systemR. Ashena0A. Elmgerbi1V. Rasouli2A. Ghalambor3M. Rabiei4A. Bahrami5Bear and Brook ConsultingUniversity of LeobenUniversity of North DakotaOil Center Research InternationalUniversity of North DakotaUniversity of AlbertaAbstract Most of drilling hole problems are attributed to wellbore stability issues which adversely cause excessive lost time and cost millions of dollars. The past drilling experiences in Kupal oilfield showed excessive mud losses, kick flows, tight holes and pipe stuck leading to repeated reaming, fishing and sidetracking. Most of the drilling-associated problems in this field occurred during drilling the 12 ¼-in. hole, which is across the non-reservoir Gachsaran formation (consisting of anhydrite, gypsum and marl with thin limestone layers). Mainly due to the lack of required formation evaluation data, no geomechanical studies of this formation have been conducted to date. In this work, first, we constructed a geomechanical model to investigate the root of the problems. This is a pioneer wellbore stability work for such a complex lithology formation which included finding the equations best-matching with core data and field observations. Finally, to overcome the field challenges and hole problems, the study proposes some field remedial actions. The results of the geomechanical modeling show that the pore pressure, shear and tensile failure gradients are greatly variable with the safe mud weight window becoming excessively narrow at some intervals. This accounts for the encountered wellbore stability issues as managing the mud weight in these situations requires several casing strings. To mitigate the extent of the problem, this study proposes the application of innovative drilling technologies including casing while drilling to eliminate the casing running time with potential reduction in drilling time, and continuous circulation system to prevent cuttings settling and kick flows during connections. These technologies are capable of elimination of the geomechanical part of the drilling delay (30% of the average 77 drilling days) per well.https://doi.org/10.1007/s13202-020-00834-3Wellbore stabilityNon-reservoir complex lithology formationCasing while drillingContinuous circulation system
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author R. Ashena
A. Elmgerbi
V. Rasouli
A. Ghalambor
M. Rabiei
A. Bahrami
spellingShingle R. Ashena
A. Elmgerbi
V. Rasouli
A. Ghalambor
M. Rabiei
A. Bahrami
Severe wellbore instability in a complex lithology formation necessitating casing while drilling and continuous circulation system
Journal of Petroleum Exploration and Production Technology
Wellbore stability
Non-reservoir complex lithology formation
Casing while drilling
Continuous circulation system
author_facet R. Ashena
A. Elmgerbi
V. Rasouli
A. Ghalambor
M. Rabiei
A. Bahrami
author_sort R. Ashena
title Severe wellbore instability in a complex lithology formation necessitating casing while drilling and continuous circulation system
title_short Severe wellbore instability in a complex lithology formation necessitating casing while drilling and continuous circulation system
title_full Severe wellbore instability in a complex lithology formation necessitating casing while drilling and continuous circulation system
title_fullStr Severe wellbore instability in a complex lithology formation necessitating casing while drilling and continuous circulation system
title_full_unstemmed Severe wellbore instability in a complex lithology formation necessitating casing while drilling and continuous circulation system
title_sort severe wellbore instability in a complex lithology formation necessitating casing while drilling and continuous circulation system
publisher SpringerOpen
series Journal of Petroleum Exploration and Production Technology
issn 2190-0558
2190-0566
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Abstract Most of drilling hole problems are attributed to wellbore stability issues which adversely cause excessive lost time and cost millions of dollars. The past drilling experiences in Kupal oilfield showed excessive mud losses, kick flows, tight holes and pipe stuck leading to repeated reaming, fishing and sidetracking. Most of the drilling-associated problems in this field occurred during drilling the 12 ¼-in. hole, which is across the non-reservoir Gachsaran formation (consisting of anhydrite, gypsum and marl with thin limestone layers). Mainly due to the lack of required formation evaluation data, no geomechanical studies of this formation have been conducted to date. In this work, first, we constructed a geomechanical model to investigate the root of the problems. This is a pioneer wellbore stability work for such a complex lithology formation which included finding the equations best-matching with core data and field observations. Finally, to overcome the field challenges and hole problems, the study proposes some field remedial actions. The results of the geomechanical modeling show that the pore pressure, shear and tensile failure gradients are greatly variable with the safe mud weight window becoming excessively narrow at some intervals. This accounts for the encountered wellbore stability issues as managing the mud weight in these situations requires several casing strings. To mitigate the extent of the problem, this study proposes the application of innovative drilling technologies including casing while drilling to eliminate the casing running time with potential reduction in drilling time, and continuous circulation system to prevent cuttings settling and kick flows during connections. These technologies are capable of elimination of the geomechanical part of the drilling delay (30% of the average 77 drilling days) per well.
topic Wellbore stability
Non-reservoir complex lithology formation
Casing while drilling
Continuous circulation system
url https://doi.org/10.1007/s13202-020-00834-3
work_keys_str_mv AT rashena severewellboreinstabilityinacomplexlithologyformationnecessitatingcasingwhiledrillingandcontinuouscirculationsystem
AT aelmgerbi severewellboreinstabilityinacomplexlithologyformationnecessitatingcasingwhiledrillingandcontinuouscirculationsystem
AT vrasouli severewellboreinstabilityinacomplexlithologyformationnecessitatingcasingwhiledrillingandcontinuouscirculationsystem
AT aghalambor severewellboreinstabilityinacomplexlithologyformationnecessitatingcasingwhiledrillingandcontinuouscirculationsystem
AT mrabiei severewellboreinstabilityinacomplexlithologyformationnecessitatingcasingwhiledrillingandcontinuouscirculationsystem
AT abahrami severewellboreinstabilityinacomplexlithologyformationnecessitatingcasingwhiledrillingandcontinuouscirculationsystem
_version_ 1724335020075646976