| Authors |
Michael A. Simpson, Saeed Al-Reda, Darrell Foreman, and Julio Guzman, Saudi
Aramco; Mahmoud Al-Fawzy, EMEC; and Philip Vice, Baroid
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Abstract
This paper describes the benefits and lessons learned from drilling 44 deep gas
reservoir sections with sodium and potassium formate brine drilling fluids in
Saudi Arabia’s prolific Ghawar field from 2004 through 2008.
Initially in Saudi Aramco, the formate brine drilling fluids were used
primarily to prevent formation damage across the pre-Khuff sandstone
reservoirs. As formate use burgeoned, their ancillary benefits such as stuck
pipe mitigation, better bit performance, better than expected reservoir
performance, lower pump pressures, torque and drag, solids content and enhanced
temperature stability; use as a completion fluid and recyclability became
evident.
The fluids have been used in a variety of reservoir drill-in fluid applications
in the pre-Khuff, Jauf and Unayzah sandstones with bottom hole temperatures
(BHT) up to 323°F. The formates have also been used by Saudi Aramco in the
Khuff carbonates for single and dual lateral horizontal wells where the
drilling fluid overbalance to formation pressure sometimes exceeds 1,400
psi.
In addition to the return permeability testing conducted prior to actually
drilling the first wells with formates, the fluids nondamaging properties were
proved up in the case of the Tinat-A well, a Unayzah-A re-entry/horizontal
sidetrack, that had to be shut in for three years, due to a mechanical
obstruction in the completion, with a 90 pounds per cubic foot (pcf)
sodium/potassium formate completion fluid left in the hole as kill fluid. After
removing the obstruction via a snubbing unit workover the well initially tested
at 30 mmscfd with 4,320 psig FWHP, which was much higher than estimated.
In a JFYN Unayzah B/C well, JFYN-A, only 1,214 ft of 5-7/8” hole was cut across
the reservoir using a recycled 92 pcf potassium formate and the well flowed
back at 45 mmscfd with 358 bopd oil on a 44/64” choke, which was also much
higher than expected.
Laboratory return permeability to gas test with Khuff-C cores showed 91% return
permeability after flowing through the cores with potassium formate drilling
fluid with 2% commercial lubricant as compared to 40% return permeability for
the KCl Polymer drilling fluids of the same density normally used across the
Khuff-C.
The formates have also been used in combination with fine, medium and coarse
calcium carbonate functioning as a bridging agent to drill in extreme
overbalance situations across the Khuff-C reservoirs. The best example of this
practice is UTMN-J, a Khuff-B re-entry sidetrack, where an 81 pcf sodium
formate brine served as the base drilling fluid to drill and complete the 3675
ft horizontal section. The well was flowed back at a rate of 35 mmscfd without
enzyme treatment or acid stimulation.
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