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Section 1: Horizontal Drilling Technology (How and Why)

Horizontal drilling is a process where a steerable drill bit follows a horizontal path oriented 90 degrees from vertical through a reservoir rock. It enhances economic recovery of hydrocarbons and increases production. Horizontal drilling reduces the number of wells needed to develop a field and has less environmental impact than vertical drilling by reducing the surface area disturbed. To drill horizontally, the bit starts vertically and deviates at a predetermined depth to drill horizontally. Common horizontal drilling methods are long-radius and medium-radius. Factors like reservoir characteristics, objectives, and conditions must be considered to select the best method. Tight reservoirs, naturally fractured reservoirs, thin reservoirs, and those with potential water/gas problems are suitable candidates for horizontal drilling.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
99 views

Section 1: Horizontal Drilling Technology (How and Why)

Horizontal drilling is a process where a steerable drill bit follows a horizontal path oriented 90 degrees from vertical through a reservoir rock. It enhances economic recovery of hydrocarbons and increases production. Horizontal drilling reduces the number of wells needed to develop a field and has less environmental impact than vertical drilling by reducing the surface area disturbed. To drill horizontally, the bit starts vertically and deviates at a predetermined depth to drill horizontally. Common horizontal drilling methods are long-radius and medium-radius. Factors like reservoir characteristics, objectives, and conditions must be considered to select the best method. Tight reservoirs, naturally fractured reservoirs, thin reservoirs, and those with potential water/gas problems are suitable candidates for horizontal drilling.

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Waraey
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Section 1: Horizontal Drilling Technology (How and Why)

This section includes the summary of the following book:


Azar, J.J. and Samuel, G.R. (2007) Drilling engineering. Tusla, Okla: PenWell. pp 254-264.

Azar and Samuel (2007) describe horizontal drilling as a process of using a steerable drill bit to follow a horizontal path oriented approximately 90o vertical through the reservoir rock. For a horizontal well drilling to be accomplished, factors such as effective planning, proper program implementation, real-time monitoring of field data and effective team work must be considered. Horizontal well drilling enhances economic recovery of hydrocarbon reserves from fields that are not achievable. This has provided a great number of opportunities for the oil and gas industry. Secondly, horizontal drilling increases primary and secondary production and also increases the ultimate recovery of hydrocarbons in place. Thirdly, horizontal drilling reduces the number of wells to develop in an entire field. Finally, horizontal drilling reduces footsteps in the area therefore; it has a positive impact on the environment. To drill a horizontal well successfully, major elements such as downward force on drill bit, drill bit rotation, and fluid circulation are considered. Horizontal drilling starts from the surface, the steerable drill bit drills the hole vertically and at a premeasured depth known as the kick off depth (KOD) the drill bit deviates horizontally to an angle of 90o. The most common methods used to drill horizontally are the long-radius method and medium-radius method. Before selecting a method, the following should be taken into consideration; cost, reservoir rock characteristics, company objectives, conditions of reentry holes, completion methods, amount of reach and well spacing. Reservoirs that may be suitable for horizontal drilling are; tight reservoirs, naturally vertically fractured reservoirs, economically inaccessible reservoirs, heavy oil reservoirs, thin reservoirs and reservoirs that may have potential water/gas-coning complications. Horizontal drilling has a significant increase in production. There are various reservoirs that are suitable for horizontal drilling however, there must be a cost comparison between vertical drilling and horizontal drilling based on the return of investment.

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