Showing posts with label Directional drilling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Directional drilling. Show all posts

Directional drilling


Directional drilling is the art and science involving the intentional deflection of a wellbore in a specific direction in order to reach a predetermined objective below the surface of the earth
  • At one time it was thought that all wells were vertical
  • Methods to measure deviation were developed in the 1920’s (initially acid bottle)
  • Directional drilling developed after 1929 when new survey instruments were available (inclination and direction)
  • The first controlled directionally drilled well was drilled in the Huntington Beach Field in 1930 to tap offshore reserves from land locations
  • Directional drilling became more widely accepted after a relief well was drilled near Conroe, Texas in 1934

  • Today, directional drilling is an integral part of the petroleum industry
  • It enables oil companies to produce reserves that would not be possible without directional drilling
  • One of the primary uses of directional drilling was to sidetrack a well even if it was to go around a stuck BHA

 
  • Sometimes multiple sidetracks are used to better understand geology or to place the wellbore in a more favorable portion of the reservoir
  • Straight hole drilling is a special application of directional drilling

  1. To keep from crossing lease lines
  2. To stay within the specifications of a drilling contract
  3. To stay within the well spacing requirements of a developed field
 
  • Drilling multiple wells from a single structure or pad
  • Most offshore development would not be possible without directional drilling
  • Inaccessible surface location
  • Drilling in towns, from land to offshore and under production facilities



  • Drilling around salt domes
  • Salt can cause significant drilling problems and directional drilling can be used to drill under the overhanging cap
  • Steeply dipping sands can be drilled with a single wellbore
  • Fault drilling
  • In hard rock, deviation can be a problem
  • Sometimes the bit can track a fault
  • Drilling at a higher incident angle minimizes the potential for deflection of the bit
  •  Relief well drilling
  • Directional drilling into the blowout when the surface location is no longer accessible
  • Very small target and takes specialized equipment
  •  Horizontal drilling
  • Increasing exposure of the reservoir to increase productivity
  •  Multilateral drilling
  • Drilling more than one wellbore from a single parent wellbore

  •        Extended reach drilling wells are characterized by high inclinations and large departures in the horizontal plane







  • Extended reach wells are wellbores where the horizontal departure is significantly higher than the true vertical depth of the well, which is the horizontal departure – TVD ratio (HD/TVD)
  • Extended reach wells have been drilled with HD/TVD ratios greater the 6/1.
    BP drilled a well at Wytch Farm with a measured depth of 34,967’ (10,658 m), a TVD of 5,266’ (1,605 m) and horizontal departure of 33,181’ (10,114 m) 
    •    There are four basic hole patterns
    •      Not all wells conform to the basic hole patterns and may be a combination of patterns
    •     For simplicity, the basic hole patterns are defined as: