Thin-walled liner equipment cuts costs on well deepening project
Thin-walled, slim hole liner equipment can save $3 million to $4 million per well in deep reentry applications by allowing existing wells to be deepened or sidetracked rather than drilling new wells from the surface. The design makes it possible to reenter existing wells, successfully isolate deplet...
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Published in | The Oil & gas journal Vol. 94; no. 35; pp. 46 - 55 |
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Main Authors | , , |
Format | Magazine Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Tulsa, OK
Pennwell
26.08.1996
Endeavor Business Media |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
ISSN | 0030-1388 1944-9151 |
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Summary: | Thin-walled, slim hole liner equipment can save $3 million to $4 million per well in deep reentry applications by allowing existing wells to be deepened or sidetracked rather than drilling new wells from the surface. The design makes it possible to reenter existing wells, successfully isolate depleted zones and deepen the well into virgin-pressured reservoirs. The design includes thin-walled, close-tolerance liner hangers, liner top packers, tieback seal assemblies and liner setting sleeves that provide reasonable burst and collapse resistance while maintaining an inside diameter to facilitate drilling a deep, deviated 4 3/4-inch hole with a tapered 2 7/8-inch x 3 1/2-inch drillstring. Shell Canada Ltd. undertook a reentry and deepening project in 1995 in its Waterton field in Western Canada. The project is discussed. |
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Bibliography: | content type line 24 ObjectType-Feature-1 SourceType-Magazines-1 |
ISSN: | 0030-1388 1944-9151 |