Dry wells near the Knarr Field in the North Sea
                            
                                
                                
                                        
                                            
                                        
                                
                                    
                                        Published by Joseph Green,
                                        Editor 
                                        
                                    
                                Oilfield Technology,
                                
                            
                        
BG Group AS, operator of production licence 373 S, is in the process of completing the drilling of wildcat wells 34/3-4 S and 34/3-4 A.
The wells were drilled about 5 km east of the Knarr field in the northern part of the North Sea.
The purpose of wildcat well 34/3-4 S was to investigate a large channel system in reservoir rocks in the Pleistocene. The well encountered a 250m thick channel system, about 50m of which was of very good reservoir quality. Traces of gas were encountered in two thin sandstone layers.
The purpose of well 34/3-4 A was to prove petroleum in lower Jurassic reservoir rocks (the Cook formation). Well 34/3-4 A encountered about 110m of the Cook formation, 53m of which was sandstone with good reservoir quality and traces of gas.
Data sampling and acquisition have been carried out in both wells. Both wells are classified as dry.
These are the fifth and sixth exploration wells in production licence 373 S. Wells 34/3-4 S and 34/3-4 A were drilled to measured depths of 1607 and 4535m, respectively, and vertical depths of 1584 and 4321m below the sea surface, and were terminated in the Hordaland group in the Miocene and the Amundsen formation in the Lower Jurassic. Water depth at the site is 406m.
The wells will now be permanently plugged and abandoned.
Wells 34/3-4 S and 34/3-4 A were drilled by the Transocean Searcher drilling facility, which will now move on to drill wildcat well 34/3-5 S in the same production licence.
Adapted from press release by Joe Green
Read the article online at: https://www.oilfieldtechnology.com/exploration/16022015/dry-wells-near-knarr-field-north-sea-458/
You might also like
DNV proposes revised risk management framework for UK offshore renewables industry, built on oil and gas best practice
DNV has released a comprehensive study comparing major accident risks and risk management practices in the UK between the offshore oil and gas and the offshore renewables industries.
 
                                 
                                            