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L & B fields offshore Sabah, Malaysia will be the next deepwater development in Malaysia after Kikeh, Siakap North-Petai, Gumusut-Kakap & Malikai. However, in comparison, L & B are considered marginal in terms of recoverable volumes and size of project, making it crucial to design and execute the project sharply to ensure value delivery. 5 key deepwater lessons learned areas are discussed in this paper as applied to L & B Field Development Plan (FDP) to ensure technical robustness based on experience of surrounding deepwater fields. The first key area is subsea production stability and flow assurance. Among critical evaluations conducted were techno-commercial comparison of dual-loop pipe-in-pipe against heated pipe-in-pipe, upfront artificial lift plans, and water injectors design to avoid hydrates formation as observed in another field. The second critical area is in drilling where key lessons were to conduct thorough geohazard analysis for hazard identification and avoid wellhead subsidence. Thorough geomechanics and fracture gradient were also assessed to identify requirements for managed-pressure drilling and for backup designs. The third key area is well integrity, productivity and injectivity where sand production and fines migration risks need to be addressed through well completion strategy. The reservoir management plan must also reflect realistic production and injection plans and data crucial for monitoring. The fourth key issue is with regards to subsurface complexity in deepwater turbidite environment with risks to production attainability vis-à-vis reservoir connectivity and compartmentalization issues. A no-stones-unturned approach was taken integrating available static and dynamic data to estimate a robust recoverable volume. The fifth critical area is well startup and unloading procedures, which is important for well productivity. Model iterations were needed to conduct methodical well bean-up to eliminate risk of fines movement. Application of lessons learned in these 5 key areas led to robust development plans with mitigations for risks common to deepwater developments offshore north Borneo. For flow assurance strategy, the evaluation led to dual-loop design, proactive artificial lift strategy and optimum water injector locations. Drilling requirements are identified for MPD and backup slim-hole designs. To ensure productivity and injectivity, long highly deviated wells, with downhole sand mitigations, are designed for maximum contact and reduced required drawdown. Skin factors were applied in subsurface modeling as observed in other fields to risk the production targets. The model was also calibrated with dynamic data gained from well tests and pressure points to provide realistic production estimates, with a well sequence plan to observe actual performance and optimize next well locations if necessary. For well startup procedures, model iterations guided by analogue fields’ experiences led to optimum startup designs for L & B. These 5 key lessons learned areas are critical in deepwater development plans to ensure technical robustness during development stage to protect high investment value.
L & B fields offshore Sabah, Malaysia will be the next deepwater development in Malaysia after Kikeh, Siakap North-Petai, Gumusut-Kakap & Malikai. However, in comparison, L & B are considered marginal in terms of recoverable volumes and size of project, making it crucial to design and execute the project sharply to ensure value delivery. 5 key deepwater lessons learned areas are discussed in this paper as applied to L & B Field Development Plan (FDP) to ensure technical robustness based on experience of surrounding deepwater fields. The first key area is subsea production stability and flow assurance. Among critical evaluations conducted were techno-commercial comparison of dual-loop pipe-in-pipe against heated pipe-in-pipe, upfront artificial lift plans, and water injectors design to avoid hydrates formation as observed in another field. The second critical area is in drilling where key lessons were to conduct thorough geohazard analysis for hazard identification and avoid wellhead subsidence. Thorough geomechanics and fracture gradient were also assessed to identify requirements for managed-pressure drilling and for backup designs. The third key area is well integrity, productivity and injectivity where sand production and fines migration risks need to be addressed through well completion strategy. The reservoir management plan must also reflect realistic production and injection plans and data crucial for monitoring. The fourth key issue is with regards to subsurface complexity in deepwater turbidite environment with risks to production attainability vis-à-vis reservoir connectivity and compartmentalization issues. A no-stones-unturned approach was taken integrating available static and dynamic data to estimate a robust recoverable volume. The fifth critical area is well startup and unloading procedures, which is important for well productivity. Model iterations were needed to conduct methodical well bean-up to eliminate risk of fines movement. Application of lessons learned in these 5 key areas led to robust development plans with mitigations for risks common to deepwater developments offshore north Borneo. For flow assurance strategy, the evaluation led to dual-loop design, proactive artificial lift strategy and optimum water injector locations. Drilling requirements are identified for MPD and backup slim-hole designs. To ensure productivity and injectivity, long highly deviated wells, with downhole sand mitigations, are designed for maximum contact and reduced required drawdown. Skin factors were applied in subsurface modeling as observed in other fields to risk the production targets. The model was also calibrated with dynamic data gained from well tests and pressure points to provide realistic production estimates, with a well sequence plan to observe actual performance and optimize next well locations if necessary. For well startup procedures, model iterations guided by analogue fields’ experiences led to optimum startup designs for L & B. These 5 key lessons learned areas are critical in deepwater development plans to ensure technical robustness during development stage to protect high investment value.
The decarbonization of the energy section urges a radical transformation to meet the net zero carbon emission target. In the last decades, many countries around the world have initiated the Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) as one of the pilot projects aiming to permanent and environmentally safe storage of CO2 underground. However, only a few projects have strived and is eventually executed. Ones of the biggest challenges are technicality and commerciality to drive the success of the project. Thus, the objective of this paper is to mainly focus on the CCS well construction, design consideration, and optimization in Southeast Asia offshore CCS projects during the detailed planning phase. The process will start with the reservoir injection targets. Each well is planned to inject one single target to minimize the complexity of well architecture and completion equipment. Inevitably as being common in this area, stacked reservoirs or multi-target reservoirs are exceptional to achieve the intended CO2 injection target with a higher complexity level of completion equipment. Wellhead platform is a huge capital investment. Reuse of existing platform or new wellhead platform brings advantages and disadvantages. The key concerns include slot recovery issues, collision risk, fatigue concern on platform structure, and so on. The detailed consideration has been laid out to ensure the platform integrity and meets the expected design life. Well construction process is similar to normal oil and gas wells, but the main differences are CO2 injecting fluid and load cases analysis. Thus, material selection plays a major role for the well construction process to align with flow assurance study result and expected load case when majority of the worst-case scenario might occur in the late life injection. Material optimization is a key to bring the well construction cost down. Material testing has been constructed as per the expected downhole condition for the verification and optimization purposes. Detailed study of each type of wells are necessary to ensure the casing and completion equipment is fitted for purpose during the well life cycle. The Measurement, Monitoring and Verification (MMV) equipment is embedded since the designed phase with the ranking technique to comply with conformance and containment criteria.
The managed pressure cementing technique is new in relative terms to the past 100 years of industry cementing experience (e.g., circa 2008 with first publication). The technique is becoming more prevalent to overcome challenging well integrity requirements which should help the industry achieve zonal isolation for applications previously deemed too difficult to isolate with cement. A literature review of managed pressure cementing (e.g., MPC) success documented in the public domain shows, at the time of the manuscript preparation, the subject case history is the deepest, hottest, and heaviest application. The same literature review identifies several case histories deeper, not hotter or heavier as well as heavier not deeper or hotter. The manuscript shares the challenges faced and success factors to overcome the deployment risks helping to isolate a challenging openhole section using managed pressure cementing.
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