Skip to main content

Unconventional technologies could boost reservoir recovery

Published by , Editorial Assistant
Oilfield Technology,


A new study from IHS Market indicates there is significant upside potential for US oil and gas operators to apply lower-cost unconventional drilling and completion technologies in order to boost production from tight conventional reservoirs.

The new IHS Markit Energy study, Horizontal Drilling in US Tight Conventional Plays, provides an assessment of nearly 46 000 US horizontal wells completed between 2010 and 2015. It details how the unconventional drilling and completion technologies could be applied to the redevelopment of conventional wells in the top 39 established US tight conventional plays where the major shale plays are also being developed.

The IHS Markit study identifies two key plays that have potential to better leverage the horizontal technologies include the Rocky Mountain region (Williston, Powder River and Denver basins), the Permian basin and Eagle Ford play fairways in Texas, and the mid-continent region, including the Anadarko basin.

According to the report, the average global recovery factor for a conventional oil reservoir is 34%, with two-thirds of the oil still left behind in the ground. However, the reality is that many tight conventional oil reservoirs, demonstrate recovery factors of only 15% or less, which is substantially lower than the average recovery factor for conventional reservoirs. (IHS Markit defines tight conventional reservoirs as those with permeabilities of 0.01 to 2.0 millidarcies (md) range that have tended to be sub-commercial in the conventional domain in the past).

Steve Trammel, director of North America well and production content at IHS Markit Energy gave his thoughts

“Our IHS Markit research indicates that there are significant potential benefits of applying some of the same drilling and completion techniques that have been used so successfully in the US shale oil plays to increase recovery in these tight, US conventional plays”.

“We identified tight conventional plays that were tested with horizontal wells during the last five years, and in our study, which analysed nearly 46 000 US horizontal wells completed between 2010 and 2015, average initial potential (IP) test rates for the leading tight conventional plays compare favourably with the IPs of established shale oil plays. However, of the horizontal wells we analysed, just 10% of the horizontal wells drilled were in tight US conventional plays, so there is considerable potential here for operators.”

In addition, Trammel said, leveraging these technologies is attractive to operators because the overall break-even costs to develop these projects are much lower and delivery infrastructure is already in place.

“These tight conventional resources are in reservoirs with older vertical wells that can be re-entered by horizontal drilling. The rock properties do not require the size and cost of a hydraulic frack job needed for an unconventional zone, and therefore these are much more economic for operators in the current low oil price environment,” Trammel said.

Additionally, Trammel said, leveraging horizontal wells to further test tight conventional plays in these areas has led to the establishment of stacked plays with huge resource potential. “The plays in the Rocky Mountain region, in particular,” he said, “have the majority of the highest-ranking tight conventional plays of those we studied in our IHS Markit Energy report, but tight conventional plays in Texas, including the Permian Basin and Eagle Ford fairway, also fared well, in terms of potential for redevelopment.”

The IHS Markit Energy report includes an unexpected bonus for operators, Trammel said. “Our analysis identified 25 tight conventional ‘sleeper’ plays that have been tested with only a few horizontal wells, but have average IP rates greater than 200 boe/d. In addition, shallow conventional plays may also offer opportunities for operators to leverage these unconventional technologies in the current oil price environment.”


Adapted from a press release by Louise Mulhall

Read the article online at: https://www.oilfieldtechnology.com/drilling-and-production/15072016/unconventional-technologies-could-boost-reservoir-recovery/

You might also like

 
 

Embed article link: (copy the HTML code below):


 

This article has been tagged under the following:

Oil & gas news