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A major operator in onshore Middle East was planning to conduct a water shutoff intervention in an oil producer with very high water cut and a naturally fractured carbonate reservoir. The well was completed horizontal with 18 inflow control device (ICD) elements and 16 swell packers along the production liner and openhole section. The production tubing had an electrical submersible pump (ESP) and Y-tool to allow access to the horizontal section. Due to the complexity of the completion and limited access to the reservoir, an engineered approach combining a precise placement method with a reliable water conformance chemistry was necessary. The engineered approach relied on the use of coiled tubing (CT) equipped with real-time downhole measurements, high-pressure rotary jetting tool, backpressure valve, and through-tubing inflatable packer. Downhole readings included CT internal pressure, annulus pressure, annulus temperature, and casing collar locator (CCL). They were used both to achieve optimum use of the rest of the bottomhole assembly during the intervention, and to evaluate treatment effectiveness. The selected water conformance fluid system combined a medium-molecular-weight polyacrylamide crosslinked gel for fissure plugging with a nanoparticulate leak off control additive to keep most of the polyacrylamide gel within the fissure network. In horizontal wells, critical steps for water shutoff, such as proper wellbore conditioning, accurate placement technique and controlled fluid penetration, cannot be accomplished through conventional methods, especially in completions with flow control components, and innovative methodologies are required for efficient intervention. An evolved approach for water shutoff intervention relying on real-time downhole data was implemented for the first time in this field, reducing water production from 1300 B/D to 400 B/D, while increasing oil production from 180 B/D to 350 B/D. In the first run, high-pressure rotary jetting tool was used to condition the wellbore tubulars across the inflatable packer planned anchoring depth. In the second run, the through-tubing inflatable packer was set at the target depth, and the water shutoff treatment was pumped into the formation across the target ICDs. CT real-time downhole measurements were instrumental for accurate depth correlation, ensure optimum differential pressure across the high-pressure jetting tool, to control inflation and anchoring of the through-tubing inflatable packer, and to monitor the water shutoff treatment. This engineered approach, which leverages the use of real-time downhole data to accurately control the positioning and actuation of high-pressure jetting tools and through-tubing inflatable packers, enables critical interactions with formation and completion. This level of control is critical in water shutoff operations, for it enables the customization of original designs based on the changing downhole conditions to achieve maximum effectiveness of the sealing fluids.
A major operator in onshore Middle East was planning to conduct a water shutoff intervention in an oil producer with very high water cut and a naturally fractured carbonate reservoir. The well was completed horizontal with 18 inflow control device (ICD) elements and 16 swell packers along the production liner and openhole section. The production tubing had an electrical submersible pump (ESP) and Y-tool to allow access to the horizontal section. Due to the complexity of the completion and limited access to the reservoir, an engineered approach combining a precise placement method with a reliable water conformance chemistry was necessary. The engineered approach relied on the use of coiled tubing (CT) equipped with real-time downhole measurements, high-pressure rotary jetting tool, backpressure valve, and through-tubing inflatable packer. Downhole readings included CT internal pressure, annulus pressure, annulus temperature, and casing collar locator (CCL). They were used both to achieve optimum use of the rest of the bottomhole assembly during the intervention, and to evaluate treatment effectiveness. The selected water conformance fluid system combined a medium-molecular-weight polyacrylamide crosslinked gel for fissure plugging with a nanoparticulate leak off control additive to keep most of the polyacrylamide gel within the fissure network. In horizontal wells, critical steps for water shutoff, such as proper wellbore conditioning, accurate placement technique and controlled fluid penetration, cannot be accomplished through conventional methods, especially in completions with flow control components, and innovative methodologies are required for efficient intervention. An evolved approach for water shutoff intervention relying on real-time downhole data was implemented for the first time in this field, reducing water production from 1300 B/D to 400 B/D, while increasing oil production from 180 B/D to 350 B/D. In the first run, high-pressure rotary jetting tool was used to condition the wellbore tubulars across the inflatable packer planned anchoring depth. In the second run, the through-tubing inflatable packer was set at the target depth, and the water shutoff treatment was pumped into the formation across the target ICDs. CT real-time downhole measurements were instrumental for accurate depth correlation, ensure optimum differential pressure across the high-pressure jetting tool, to control inflation and anchoring of the through-tubing inflatable packer, and to monitor the water shutoff treatment. This engineered approach, which leverages the use of real-time downhole data to accurately control the positioning and actuation of high-pressure jetting tools and through-tubing inflatable packers, enables critical interactions with formation and completion. This level of control is critical in water shutoff operations, for it enables the customization of original designs based on the changing downhole conditions to achieve maximum effectiveness of the sealing fluids.
Efficient reservoir sweep is critical for operators to boost oil production in the Middle East. This task becomes particularly challenging in carbonate formations, which typically feature permeability ranging from microscopic pores to large cavernous vugs. Extreme heterogeneity disserves water injectors, leading to nonuniform injection profiles. Consequently, water sweeping is inefficient and leaves significant residual oil behind. In the Mesopotamian Basin, the matrix stimulation approach was rethought to address high permeability contrasts and produce the bypassed oil. The methodology relied on coiled tubing (CT) equipped with fiber optics and real-time downhole measurements, a CT-deployed inflatable packer, and a high-pressure rotary jetting tool. The array of downhole readings was leveraged to ensure optimal use of the bottomhole assembly. The high-pressure rotary jetting tool was used in the first run to condition the wellbore tubulars across the inflatable packer planned anchoring depth. In the second run, the inflatable packer was set at the target depth, and the stimulation treatment was selectively pumped either above or below the packer, depending on the depth of the interval of interest. The proposed stimulation technique was implemented in more than 40 wells, which included vertical and deviated water injectors, completed with 3 1/2-in. or 4 1/2-in. tubing and up to 7-in. casing, with two to five perforated intervals averaging 30 to 50 m in total, temperatures ranging from 90 to 140°F, and an average meadured depth of 2500 m. The CT-deployed inflatable packer had an expansion ratio of up to 3 to 1. CT real-time downhole measurements, such as CT internal pressure, CT annulus pressure, temperature, downhole axial forces, gamma ray, and casing collar locator (CCL), were instrumental to eliminate the uncertainties associated with changing downhole conditions and depth correlation. They also enabled a controlled actuation of the downhole tools in subhydrostatic wells, as the pressure imbalance caused by the low bottomhole pressure can generate loss of fluid flow and pressure across the tools. For the first time, the operator was able to stimulate the tight rock in water injector wells, enhancing injection sweeping efficiency and boosting oil production from offset wells. As a result of this campaign, production gains are estimated at 60,000 BOPD, and injectivity increased in average 2 times per intervention. This approach has now become the state of the practice for the operator to stimulate wells with high permeability contrast. This enhanced matrix stimulation technique, leveraged by CT and real-time downhole measurements, brings a new level of confidence to accurately and effectively deploy inflatable packers in wells with challenging expansion ratio and low reservoir pressure. In addition, the proposed technique enables stimulating tight rock across intervals with extreme heterogeneity, resulting in a more efficient sweep and an increase in oil production.
With the scarcity of new field discoveries and depletion of existing mature fields, operators in Pakistan are keen on cost-effective rigless solutions to enhance production. In the northern region, one operator was looking to curb the water production of an oil well completed with a jet pump installation. The subhydrostatic nature of the well, naturally fractured reservoirs, and large producing units with multiphase reservoir fluids and active aquifers posed significant challenges for rigless well intervention for water control and zonal isolation. High water cut resulted in oil production loss and made the well uneconomic. An innovative zonal isolation method was required to overcome those challenges. The proposed solution comprised coiled tubing (CT) capable of acquiring real-time downhole measurements through fiber optic telemetry and delivering a through-tubing inflatable packer. The 2 1/8- in. packer was to be set in 4 1/2-in. liner with an expansion ratio of ~2:1. Planning and design considerations included selecting the bottomhole assembly (BHA) and performing pre-job quality checks of the inflatable packer and fiber optic cable. Downhole measurements verified accurate packer setting depth using a casing collar locator (CCL). To achieve adequate packer inflation without jeopardizing the packer integrity and to confirm proper anchoring of the packer onto the casing, downhole CT internal and annulus pressures were continuously monitored. During the first run, the liner tubulars were conditioned across the planned packer setting depth using a high-pressure rotary jetting nozzle. In the second run, the through-tubing inflatable packer was anchored, tested, and ultimately released at the target depth, providing a mechanical isolation above the water-invaded interval. Water shutoff is one of the most challenging remedial operations in the oil and gas industry. During the design stage for mechanical isolation, key steps such as proper wellbore conditioning, accurate placement technique, and effective sealing across the water-bearing zones must be carefully reviewed to increase the chance of success. Conventional CT solutions fall short when it comes to actual tool depth with errors as high as 0.3% being accepted as common. Likewise, critical factors for CT operations in subhydrostatic wells, such as precise control of fluid flow in pressure-sensitive tools and understanding of changing well conditions, are very difficult to validate through conventional CT. An advanced CT solution relying on real-time downhole data combined with a high-pressure rotary jetting nozzle and a through-tubing inflatable packer was able to deliver precise results, reducing the water production from 1,253 B/D to 93 B/D and increasing oil production from 48 B/D to 224 B/D. Furthermore, the production tubing remained in place, eliminating the need for a workover rig. Real-time downhole measurements also served as a safety net so the packer would not inflate prematurely, and to allow validation of downhole conditions throughout the intervention. By leveraging the use of real-time downhole measurements to accurately control the positioning and actuation of high-pressure jetting tools and through-tubing inflatable packers, critical interactions with the formation or the completion are achieved, improving operational reliability while reducing risk of failure for water shutoff operations in subhydrostatic wells with a narrow depth margin between intervals.
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