With the estimated current supply of hydrocarbons in the United States studies have found that 41.5% of both oil and gas still remain above 3,000 ft (915 m). Shallow oil and gas wells from 250 ft to 6,000 ft (76.25 m to 1,830 m) have been drilled virtually the same way the last 140 years. The basic way to drill a shallow well up to this point has been to drill vertical and hope to hit a reserve. Hundreds of thousands of wells are out there today that have been drilled this way.
Horizontal Well Drillers has developed a new drilling rig designed to efficiently drill shallow horizontal wells with extended reach laterals. It gives operators a way to tap back into the reserves of old or orphan wells and produce new wells.
Horizontal wells
Horizontal wells generally increase productivity from four to as high as 25 times that of vertical wells. Wells that would have otherwise would have been considered marginal or uneconomical are now successful because of horizontal drilling. The following reservoir types are excellent examples of conditions that would benefit from this technology:
• Thin reservoirs where hydrocarbon deposits are wider than they are thick;
• Reservoirs with natural vertical fractures;
• Isolated and bypassed oil and gas reservoirs; and
• Reserves in environmentally sensitive areas.
Horizontal drilling
True horizontal drilling can follow the pay zone on a flat axis up or down depending on formation. The problem with drilling rigs today is that when they try to go horizontal at
shallow depths, lack of penetration is encountered. Conventional drilling rig rate of penetration (ROP) is greatly reduced due to the lack of pressure that is exerted to the bit as
it is cutting.
Horizontal drilling today has the problem of going horizontal at a shallow depth. Some drill
Figure 1. Drill site in Indiana. The rig is has a small footprint. Total jobsite size 200 ft by 200 ft (61 m by 61 m). (Images courtesy of Horizontal Well Drillers) |
New drilling rig design
The design is state-of-the-art, compact, fast and cost-effective. The new drill rig can be built on a trailer or heavy transport that can be moved from site to site easily. The drilling rig is lying down flat when it arrives on site.
When on site the operator sets the rig upright by two hydraulic cylinders. The cylinders are mounted to the backside of the rig platform and to the trailer.
The drilling rig’s main design feature, which allows the rig to go horizontal with so much power, is the hydraulic rack and pinion system. Hydraulic motors move the drill stem up and down. The drilling rig has a push and pull rating of 500,000 lb. The design of the drilling rig was to make it very mobile. It can be set up and ready to drill in one day compared to two to five days with other rigs.
Benefits
The main benefit is the increase in pay zone. With the longer laterals the pay zone can be as much as 108 times greater than conventional. The other major benefit is the lateral length from any depth. The rig is designed to go horizontal from depths as shallow as 250 ft down to 6,000 ft. The actual length of the laterals has gone to 5,000 ft (1,524 m), and plans are to go up to 7,500 ft (2,286.5 m) in the near future. Other major benefits include:
• Cost and time reductions;
• Increased safety;
• Steady ROP throughout the drilling process (80% at 5,000 ft). No major decrease when drilling at the end of lateral;
• Push and pull ratings of 500,000 lbs;
• Rotational torque up to 64,000 ft/lb depth rating of 15,000 ft (4,573 m) allows for use of 5-in. and 6 5/8-in. drill pipe;
• When drilling the rig uses one 5-in. drill string (does not need to use multiple strings of pipe);
• Lateral hole 8 3/4-in. is 44% larger than most 61¼8-in. conventional drillings systems;
• Mud pits are trailer-mounted and self-contained;
• Mud pumps and service equipment are all trailer-mounted;
• Very mobile — one day rig up/one day rig down;
• Low-cost mobilization — 10 load normal move;
• No casing crews;
• No lay down machines needed;
• While running casing the drill can rotate and circulate the hole;
• Tool joints will not hang up downhole;
• Safety — minimized roughneck assistance and 90% self automated;
• Enclosed mud cleaning system;
• One drilling rig from start to completion;
• Smallest foot print — 200 ft by 200 ft (61 m by 61 m) pad location; and
• Proven performance.
In June 2007 the company set out to do 10 test wells in Indiana. The area already had wells
Figure 2. Rig is drilling down a rod and getting ready to load another. Rack and pinion system — the rig’s key design feature — can be seen. |
Conclusion
In addition to draining four to 25 times as that of vertical well bores, horizontal wells cost significantly less than drilling several vertical wells in the same area. The operating costs associated with infrastructure, wellhead equipment and maintenance is also greatly reduced. The performance of the new drilling rig has been excellent. The rig has completed wells far faster than anyone expected. With the drilling technology already proven we see the market as a whole changing from thinking drilling deeper to drilling known reserves with better technology.
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