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In order to reduce stimulation costs, most conventional methods incorporate hydraulic fracturing of multiple perf clusters over multiple stages to treat large segments of shale rock in horizontally completed laterals. Under ideal situations, this technique would create equally-stimulated fractures at each perf cluster. However, in practice, such treatments can create overstimulation in some perf clusters and under-stimulation in others with unknown stimulated lengths and volumes. As operators move towards increased number of stages, increasingly larger number of plugs cause additional wireline trips and associated plug drilling time, which increases the total cost and mechanical risk of the completion. In some fields, operators use combinations of ball actuated sleeves and plug-and-perf methods due to technical limitations in drilling out of all the frac plugs. In response to these practical issues, ExxonMobil has implemented its proprietary Just-In-Time Perforating (JITP) technique in multiple horizontal wells over the last year. Prior to this deployment effort, JITP had been extensively used in vertical and S-shaped wells in the Piceance basin, Colorado. This paper discusses the learnings obtained after one year of multi-stage fracturing using horizontal JITP in unconventional plays. JITP creates multiple single-zone fracture stimulations on a single wireline run using ball-sealer diversion and perforating guns that remain downhole during fracturing. With the unique granularity of single-zone fracturing, much has been learned about the shale and treatment design. Better placement control can be useful in avoiding fracturing into offset wellbores. Field applications have confirmed the use of less horsepower, fewer frac plugs, improved fracture placement control, and added flexibility in water management. This paper also reviews technical considerations for other completion designs and fluid systems as well as opportunities for enhanced operations based on recent field learnings.
In order to reduce stimulation costs, most conventional methods incorporate hydraulic fracturing of multiple perf clusters over multiple stages to treat large segments of shale rock in horizontally completed laterals. Under ideal situations, this technique would create equally-stimulated fractures at each perf cluster. However, in practice, such treatments can create overstimulation in some perf clusters and under-stimulation in others with unknown stimulated lengths and volumes. As operators move towards increased number of stages, increasingly larger number of plugs cause additional wireline trips and associated plug drilling time, which increases the total cost and mechanical risk of the completion. In some fields, operators use combinations of ball actuated sleeves and plug-and-perf methods due to technical limitations in drilling out of all the frac plugs. In response to these practical issues, ExxonMobil has implemented its proprietary Just-In-Time Perforating (JITP) technique in multiple horizontal wells over the last year. Prior to this deployment effort, JITP had been extensively used in vertical and S-shaped wells in the Piceance basin, Colorado. This paper discusses the learnings obtained after one year of multi-stage fracturing using horizontal JITP in unconventional plays. JITP creates multiple single-zone fracture stimulations on a single wireline run using ball-sealer diversion and perforating guns that remain downhole during fracturing. With the unique granularity of single-zone fracturing, much has been learned about the shale and treatment design. Better placement control can be useful in avoiding fracturing into offset wellbores. Field applications have confirmed the use of less horsepower, fewer frac plugs, improved fracture placement control, and added flexibility in water management. This paper also reviews technical considerations for other completion designs and fluid systems as well as opportunities for enhanced operations based on recent field learnings.
Barrow Island (BWI), 56 km from the coast of Western Australia, is home to several mature reservoirs that have produced oil since 1965. The main reservoir is the Windalia sandstone, and it has been waterflooded since 1967, while all the other reservoirs are under primary depletion. Due to the maturity of the asset, it is economically critical to continue to maximise oil production rates from the 430 online, artificially lifted wells. It is not an easy task to rank well stimulation opportunities and streamline their execution. To this end, the BWI Subsurface Team applied Lean Six Sigma processes to identify opportunities, increase efficiency and reduce waste relating to well stimulation and well performance improvement. The Lean Sigma methodology is a combination of "Lean Production" and "Six Sigma" these are methods used to minimise waste and reduce variability respectively. The methods are used globally in many industries, especially those involved in manufacturing. In this asset, we applied the processes specifically to well performance improvement through stimulation and other means. The team broadly focused on categorising opportunities in both production and injection wells and ranking them, specifically: descaling wells, matrix acidising, sucker rod optimisation, reperforating and proactive workovers. The process for performing each type of job was mapped and bottlenecks in each process isolated. Upon entering "Control" phase, several opportunities had been identified and put in place. Substantial improvements were made to the procurement, logistics and storage of hydrochloric acid (HCl) and associated additives, enabling quicker execution of stimulation work. A new programme was also developed to stimulate wells that had recently failed and were already awaiting workover, which reduced costs. A database containing the stimulation opportunities available at each individual well assisted with this process. The project resulted in the stimulation of several wells in the asset with sizable oil rate increases in each. This case study will extend the information available within the oil-industry literature regarding the application of Lean Sigma to producing assets. It will assist other Operators when evaluating well stimulation opportunities in their fields. Technical information will be shared regarding feasibility studies (laboratory compatibility work and well transient testing results) for acid stimulation and steps that can be taken to streamline the execution of such work. Some insights will also be shared regarding the most efficient manner to plan rig-work regarding stimulation workovers.
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