Informed Decisions Guided by GeoMechanics to Improve Drilling Performance: A Case Study from Onshore Field, Abu Dhabi; UAE
Autor: | Salim Benmamar, Saif Al Arfi AL Arfi, Satya Perumalla, Gamal Salem, Agung Baruno, Sankhajit Saha, Pranjal Bhatt |
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Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Zdroj: | Day 2 Mon, November 29, 2021. |
DOI: | 10.2118/204559-ms |
Popis: | ADNOC (Abu Dhabi National Oil Company) recently drilled some wells in Onshore Abu Dhabi (Field-A) and encountered consistent hole instability from Umm Er Radhuma (UER) to Simsima. Thus, a GeoMechanical review was proposed to investigate the root causes, if any, and recommend possible remedies for the upcoming drilling campaign. While detailed drilling event analysis allowed to investigate the correlation between the mud weight program and well trajectory, borehole image log analysis and geological understanding from nearby fields indicated the possible role of structural and lithological features on hole instability. Integration of drilling engineering data and regional geological knowledge helped to narrow down the possible causes of drilling challenges. Sedimentalogical review of Image logs have established some correlation between rock types and hole instability events. Drilling experience shows there is very narrow margin for loss and/or gain to occur. There is regional geological evidence of the presence of a wide range of vuggy structures, as well as natural fractures and/or faults. These features tend to make Simsima formation heterogeneous in terms of permeability and more prone to losses. Since most fractures are parallel to SHmax direction and well was drilled towards Shmin direction, there are greater chances of encountering faults and/or fractures, which would be critically-stressed and lead to loss and/or gain situations. Geomechanical parameters helped highlight the magnitudes and orientations of principal stresses. Observations of several tight hole and stuck pipe events while tripping from Radhuma and UERB shale to Simsima seem to indicate mud weight used was insufficient. Role of multiple failure mechanisms was identified, and relevant solutions were recommended as well as implemented to achieve the drilling success. The case study presented here emphasizes how different carbonate textures and the presence and orientation of natural fractures and/or faults within Simsima formation can impact hole instability with respect to wellbore trajectory. Proactive implementation of recommendations from this analysis on well planning and fluid design resulted in improvement of drilling performance and reduction of non-productive time in new wells. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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