Wellesley drills dry well in North Sea
Published by Laura Dean,
Deputy Editor
Oilfield Technology,
Wellesley Petroleum AS, operator of production licence 925, is in the process of completing the drilling of wildcat well 35/12-7 in the North Sea.
The well was drilled about 2 km south of the 35/12-2 (Grosbeak) oil and gas discovery in the northern part of the North Sea, and 80 km west of Florø.
The objective of the well was to prove petroleum in Upper Jurassic reservoir rocks (the Heather formation).
The well encountered two units of sandstone in the Heather formation. The upper unit had traces of gas in poorly developed sandstone and about 7 m of aquiferous sand with good reservoir properties. The lower unit is about 25 m of aquiferous sandstone with good reservoir properties. The well is classified as dry.
Data acquisition and sampling have been carried out.
This is the third exploration well in production licence 925. The licence was awarded in APA2017.
The well was drilled to a vertical depth of 2726 mbelow the sea surface. The well was terminated in the Oseberg formation in the Middle Jurassic.
Water depth at the site is 358 m. The well will be permanently plugged and abandoned.
Well 35/12-7 was drilled by the Transocean Arctic drilling facility, which will now proceed to production licence 248 I in the North Sea, to drill wildcat well 35/11-21 S, where Wellesley Petroleum AS is the operator.
Read the article online at: https://www.oilfieldtechnology.com/drilling-and-production/25072018/wellesley-drills-dry-well-in-north-sea/
You might also like
Wood boosts North Sea operations with triple extension awards
Wood has announced a trio of reimbursable contract extensions worth US$118 million to continue to deliver operations and maintenance solutions for Shell UK, Dana Petroleum and CNOOC International’s UK business.