Petroleum Technology Transfer Council


CENTRAL & EASTERN gULF Region



Prominent Activity and Technology Trends

Stimulation of Watered-out Inactive/Marginal Wells in Louisiana with Dual Completions

The concept and technology for revaluation of marginal and inactive wells associated with considerable reserves but non-productive due to water problems in reservoirs with strong water drive are considered prominent topics for Louisiana. The technology is presently being developed at LSU and the program’s information is in the process of being transferred to oilfield operators in the State. The program’s ultimate goal is successful deployment of a novel technology for re-building productivity potential of aging oilfield infrastructure in the State.

There are reportedly 34,355 inactive wells in Louisiana. A great number of these wells are marginal producers and they are idling, not because the resources have been depleted, but because they have become unprofitable due to excessive water production. For small operators in Louisiana, produced water is the single most important factor controlling economics of their business. Excessive water production makes the whole economics of reservoir/well management vulnerable to ever fluctuating crude oil prices. In the past, in response to low oil prices, numerous low-producing wells have been shut-in as they became uneconomical. Recent dramatic increase of world oil prices and steadily growing demand for energy require revaluation of the whole aging infrastructure of wells in the state and potential for recuperating their productivity after recompleting the wells with downhole water drainage (water sink) installations. A dual well completion technique with downhole water sink (DWS) has been explained and discussed in past workshops. The technique has been field tested in vertical wells and extensively studied for various applications. It has potential for producing oil from wells that have been severely damaged by water. It may also produce oil from thin oil pay zones underlain by a strong water column - unrecoverable by conventional wells.

Case studies have shown that combination of water flooding with DWS may improve sweep efficiency and recovery without changing the size or pattern of floods, i.e. without drilling new wells. Production of water-drive reservoirs in Louisiana has left considerable petroleum reserves un-recovered due to various mechanisms commonly known as reservoir compartmentalization, by-passing caused either by mobility or gravity contrasts, under-running, coning, channeling, and viscous fingering. The resulting by-passed oil may range from 40 to 90 percent of the oil in place dependent upon fluid properties and thickness of the pay zone. Workshops regarding this situation have help operators understand how the oil remains unrecovered in reservoirs with bottom or side-water drive. Simulation models show that the combined effect of water underrunning, salient and coning may cause by-passing of large volumes of oil while making a well inactive due to high water cut. Additional studies also addressed the critical problem of identifying reserves that can be recovered without drilling new wells, i.e. the reserves that can be produced by existing shut-in wells or marginal active wells. Although this work is still in progress a method and software for preliminary screening well/reservoir candidates has been developed. The method employs expert system technique and search analysis software coupled with the Louisiana oilfield data base SONRIS.  

Conasauga Shale Gas Play In Alabama

Development of the Conasauga shale gas play in northeast Alabama continues. With the exception of one well, all development has been in St. Clair County. The Alabama Oil & Gas Board (Board) established the Big Canoe Creek Field, the first shale gas field in Alabama, on 320-acre drilling units. Dominion Black Warrior Basin, Inc. (Dominion) has drilled 13 wells there, ranging in depth from 3,412 feet to 9,023 feet. Initial gas flow rates reported to the Board have ranged from 26 – 233 Mcfd. Dominion continues to drill. Drilling in the field has been challenging due to unique geologic conditions encountered. Problems include lost circulation, swelling of clays, and well bore drift.

There has been other Conasauga Shale drilling. Energen Resources Corporation drilled a couple wells in 2006 in St. Clair County outside the boundaries of the Big Canoe Creek Field and one in Etowah County. Two of the three wells were plugged and abandoned, one due to drilling problems. No test results have been reported for the third well.

Rock units are highly folded and faulted, making geologic interpretations difficult. Thrust faults, which are low angle reverse faults, are the principle faulting mechanism. These faults can cause an exaggerated thickness of the Conasauga as a result of stacking of faulted strata.

View full article on website of Alabama Geological Survey/Alabama Oil & Gas Board (http://www.gsa.state.al.us/documents/misc_ogb/Overview_jun2007.pdf).