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Propped fracture stimulation of gas wells has a long history of both successes and failures in Pakistan. The operator is actively developing tight gas reservoirs which include the Cretaceous Pab Formation. In recent years, this field has been subjected to an intense drilling and stimulation program with the objective to increase gas production from the tight Pab sandstone. One significant issue is the highly complex geo-mechanical situation, due to strike-slip stress regime which leads to very high fracturing pressures and the potential for fracture growth both vertically and horizontally. This paper is a case study of the evolution of propped fracturing strategy in an existing gas field, looking in detail at 4 wells that have been stimulated over the last seven years. In addition to analyzing the fracture treatment data, the pre- and post-frac welltest and long-term production data are also analyzed to better understand the fracture performance and the issues that affect post-fracture performance in a reservoir with such high stresses and normal (or depleted) reservoir pressure. The analysis uses an integrated approach, with history matching of both the fracture treatment data and the pre- and post-frac welltests and long-term production. The basis of the integrated approach is a reservoir description with one set of permeabilities that is used for both types of analysis, to ensure that the fracture analysis results and reservoir simulation results are consistent with each other. The fracture treatments in these four wells all share a pattern of very high closure stress gradients (close to overburden gradient), low fluid efficiency and a significant risk of screenout. Post-fracture production is close to expectation in most of the wells, although there are issues with the initial post-frac performance during the cleanup period, consistent with the effect of multi-phase non-Darcy flow. Resin Coated Proppant (RCP) was used in two of the wells, and may have had a negative effect on the initial production (choke or mechanical skin effect) as described in a previous publication by the authors (Shaoul, 2020). Two of the wells were vertical and two were deviated, which also has an effect on the post-fracture performance. There are very few published case studies of propped fracture stimulation from Pakistan, which has a unique and difficult geo-mechanical situation. This paper also compares the hydraulic fracturing results in Pakistan with a few other locations around the world where similar behavior has been seen, to give a better understanding of what can be done to improve hydraulic fracturing in these difficult reservoirs, either by trying to prevent some problems that can be avoided and by accepting that some problems are inherent in such a reservoir can only be partially mitigated by changing fracture design style and fracture design goals.
Propped fracture stimulation of gas wells has a long history of both successes and failures in Pakistan. The operator is actively developing tight gas reservoirs which include the Cretaceous Pab Formation. In recent years, this field has been subjected to an intense drilling and stimulation program with the objective to increase gas production from the tight Pab sandstone. One significant issue is the highly complex geo-mechanical situation, due to strike-slip stress regime which leads to very high fracturing pressures and the potential for fracture growth both vertically and horizontally. This paper is a case study of the evolution of propped fracturing strategy in an existing gas field, looking in detail at 4 wells that have been stimulated over the last seven years. In addition to analyzing the fracture treatment data, the pre- and post-frac welltest and long-term production data are also analyzed to better understand the fracture performance and the issues that affect post-fracture performance in a reservoir with such high stresses and normal (or depleted) reservoir pressure. The analysis uses an integrated approach, with history matching of both the fracture treatment data and the pre- and post-frac welltests and long-term production. The basis of the integrated approach is a reservoir description with one set of permeabilities that is used for both types of analysis, to ensure that the fracture analysis results and reservoir simulation results are consistent with each other. The fracture treatments in these four wells all share a pattern of very high closure stress gradients (close to overburden gradient), low fluid efficiency and a significant risk of screenout. Post-fracture production is close to expectation in most of the wells, although there are issues with the initial post-frac performance during the cleanup period, consistent with the effect of multi-phase non-Darcy flow. Resin Coated Proppant (RCP) was used in two of the wells, and may have had a negative effect on the initial production (choke or mechanical skin effect) as described in a previous publication by the authors (Shaoul, 2020). Two of the wells were vertical and two were deviated, which also has an effect on the post-fracture performance. There are very few published case studies of propped fracture stimulation from Pakistan, which has a unique and difficult geo-mechanical situation. This paper also compares the hydraulic fracturing results in Pakistan with a few other locations around the world where similar behavior has been seen, to give a better understanding of what can be done to improve hydraulic fracturing in these difficult reservoirs, either by trying to prevent some problems that can be avoided and by accepting that some problems are inherent in such a reservoir can only be partially mitigated by changing fracture design style and fracture design goals.
Fracturing treatments are often challenging in high-pressure/high-temperature, tectonically stressed areas with heterogeneous and complex lithology. This study presents case histories of two multistage fracturing campaigns executed on a tight gas formation in a deep volcanic reservoir onshore Japan. This work begins by highlighting the technical difficulties experienced during the first campaign, reviews the countermeasures developed over the course of the decade between campaigns, and finishes lessons learned from execution and evaluation of the second campaign. A root-cause analysis was undertaken to understand the poor treatment results from the first campaign where stages were defined by no formation breakdown, poor injectivity or early screen-out. It included re-evaluation of core/petrophysical interpretation, stress model and net pressure history matching, and development of injectivity index diagnostic plots. The findings were used to identify updated technologies and workflows for the second campaign with consideration of limitations in the target well drilled +10 years before and uncompleted. Finally, details of field execution and post-job logging results are presented to verify effectiveness of proposed techniques and extract lessons learned for future operations. The breakdown and injectivity issues of the first campaign appear to be tied to the initiation interval location and facies, where initiating in a massive lava facies was most problematic due to high stress and extreme tortuosity. Uncertainty in the propped height from the net pressure history matches showed room for optimization in treatment design. In the second campaign, with mitigation plans for breakdown issues, premature screen-outs and detection of propped height in place, nine fracture stages were attempted. Eight stages achieved successful breakdown with careful target selection and weighted brine. Two conventional treatments with crosslinked gel were placed in the intervals with high injectivity and, as a field trial, two slickwater treatments with high viscosity friction reducer were placed in intervals to deal with low injectivity. Issues with high apparent net pressure due to tortuosity continued, comparable to the first well, and efforts to further reduce treating pressure for future campaigns continues. Logging of the non-radioactive traceable proppant pumped revealed thin propped heights while production logging showed contribution from the zones treated with slickwater indicating it may be a viable solution for this type of challenging reservoir. This work highlights a series of technical issues and possible solutions of multistage fracturing in a volcanic reservoir, validated through field execution. Proposed solutions partially solved the challenges, but at the same time they open further questions for future campaigns. This study can serve as a reference for fracturing operations in challenging analogue reservoirs.
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