Petroleum Technology Transfer Council


midcontinent Region



Prominent Activity and Technology Trends

Oklahoma’s Woodford Gas Shale Play

Drilling in Oklahoma’s Woodford Shale first became popular in 2005. The Woodford in Oklahoma ranges in depth from just a few thousand feet to more than 16,000 feet. Most of the current development is in southeast Oklahoma where the shale layer is about 7,000 to 9,000 feet deep. There are some early, early wells, but it is really the last 2-3 years that the play has become active. Newfield Exploration Company, the most active player, drilled their first Woodford well in 2003. Results were positive enough for them to acquire a large land position in an area 15-20 miles wide and 60 miles long in southeast Oklahoma. Horizontal drilling has been the biggest spark to Newfield and Woodford activity in general. Newfield alone spudded 47 horizontal wells in 2006 and expects to spud another 150 in 2007. A Newfield presentation in May 2007 indicates that there were 227 horizontal wells at that time, with Newfield operating 88 and having working interest in 58% of the wells. In 2007 Newfield expects to keep 12-15 rigs busy drilling horizontals. Newfield has drilled enough wells that, in their words “after experimenting with different drilling and completion techniques, the company has tended to find an optimum well design.” (May 25, 207 Newsok article) Devon Energy Corp and Antero are the next most active companies in the play. The Oklahoma Geologic Survey maintains a gas shales completion database, available at no charge on its website. Woodford activity may be spreading. In July 2007 Devon Energy Corp announced they would be drilling a Woodford well in western Oklahoma’s Canadian County, more than 150 miles from the heart of activity.

Arkansas’s Fayetteville Gas Shale Play

Located on the Arkansas side of the Arkoma Basin, the Mississippian-age Fayetteville Shale ranges in thickness from 50 to 550 ft at depths ranging from 1,500 to 6,500 feet. It encompasses a 15-county area that stretches from Arkansas’s western border to the Mississippi River. Southwestern Energy Company pioneered the play and is by far and away the biggest player. Information from Southwestern’s website, as of April 30, 2007, notes that they had completed 263 wells in the Fayetteville, of which 208 were horizontal. Of those horizontals, 87% were fracture stimulated using slickwater or crosslinked gel fluids. The wells are located in 33 separate pilot areas in eight Arkansas counties. Production was up to 155 MMcfd, basically an eight-fold increase just in the last year. Southwestern anticipates participating in 400 horizontals in 2007, being the operator in 75% of them. The Arkansas Geological Survey maintains Fayetteville Shale Gas Play maps containing planned, permitted and completed well locations plotted on either a standard base map or color-enhanced digital elevation base map. With either the Survey provides an Excel database of well information. Products are routinely updated.

Testing Disproportionate Permeability Reduction Concepts in Gelled Polymer Treatments in Kansas’ Arbuckle Wells

In a project co-funded by the Stripper Well Consortium, the Tertiary Oil Recovery Project at the University of Kansas evaluated disproportionate permeability reduction (DPR) concepts in gelled polymer treatments in three Arbuckle wells in the Bemis Shutts Field. In the DPR process, following a conventional gelled polymer treatment, there is a post placement process in which some of the gel that is formed in situ is dehydrated by injection of oil to create flow channels that exhibit preferential permeability to oil and significantly lower permeability to water. After a gelled polymer treatment, the treated well is shutin for a period of time (for the three wells tested: 10, 27 and 14 days) to allow the gel to set. Then lease crude is injected at low rates for several days (for the three wells tested: 10 bopd over seven days, 9.6 bopd over 11 days, 11.3 bopd over 14 days). The well is then placed online and production monitored. The three tested wells had been previously treated conventionally, so there was a basis for comparison to see if there was a DPR effect. The results – sustained reduction in water production was achieved in two of the three wells. Incremental oil was produced in two of the wells. One well did not respond to the gel treatment. In wells producing incremental oil, production declined to at or below pretreatment rates within a few months after treatment. Looking at the total picture, the overall conclusion was that the results were inconclusive – positive benefit could not definitively be shown.