Horizontal Drilling Potential
in Utah
CHIDSEY, THOMAS C., and CRAIG D. MORGAN, Utah Geological and Mineral Survey, Salt Lake City, UT
A minimum of 18 reservoirs in both producing and frontier areas of Utah are potential
targets for horizontal drilling. Horizontal drilling can enhance production in some active
fields
, revive production in abandoned
fields
, and discover new
fields
in areas traditionally overlooked for oil and gas.
Many Utah oil and gas fields
produce from naturally fractured reservoirs, a principal objective for horizontal drilling. The Grassy Trail Creek field (Carbon and Emery Counties) is an example of an older field that was revived using horizontal drilling. Between 1982 and 1984, 18 wells with 68 short-radius horizontal laterals were drilled in the Triassic Moenkopi Formation. The eight best wells were completed for an average rate of 127 BOPD per well, twice that of conventionally drilled wells in the field.
Using current technology, fields
within the Paradox basin, Uinta basin, and Overthrust belt are also good candidates for horizontal drilling. In the northern Paradox basin, six
fields
have produced oil from the Cane Creek zone, a fractured organic-rich shale in the Pennsylvanian Paradox Formation. The active Long Canyon field has produced nearly a million barrels of high gravity, low sulfur oil. Neighboring abandoned
fields
had steep production declines and no associated water, suggesting that additional untapped reservoirs still exist. In the Uinta basin, fractured reservoirs in the Green River and Wasatch formations are the principal candidates. In the Overthrust belt, horizontal drilling could enhance production within the fractured Twin Creek, Nugget, Phosphoria, Dinwoody, and Mad
son formations.
Other potential
Utah targets include thin reservoirs in the Green River, Ferron, Dakota, and Kaibab formations; algal mounds in the Paradox Formation; and coal-bed methane-bearing units within the Cretaceous Blackhawk and Straight Cliff formations.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91004 © 1991 AAPG Annual Convention Dallas, Texas, April 7-10, 1991 (2009)