GROVE, KENNETH W., RANDAL M. BAYNE, and CHARLES C. HORGAN, Columbia Gas Development Corporation, Houston, TX
ABSTRACT: The Cane Creek Clastic Interval of the Pennsylvanian Paradox Formation-An Exciting New Horizontal Target Part II: Horizontal Drilling Technology: A Case Study
In 1991, Columbia Gas and its partners completed the first medium-radius horizontal well in Utah as a Cane Creek producer. The Kane Springs Federal #27-1 had an initial production of 914 BOPD. Since that time, two additional high-volume producers have been completed and a fourth well has been temporarily abandoned. Columbia's horizontal success rate to date is 75%, a marked improvement over vertical exploitation.
An integrated program incorporating subsurface geology, seismic interpretation, and well design has been critical to Columbia's success. Oil-base mud systems are used to maintain hole integrity in the thick Paradox salt sequence and to permit optimal drilling mechanics during the angle-building phase
. A protective casing string is set in the top of the Cane Creek prior to the final landing and drilling of the horizontal leg. Measurement-while-drilling logging systems are essential during the angle-building
phase
and for successfully staying in-zone in the lateral
phase
. Oriented horizontal cores provide bedding attitudes and fracture directions. Unpredictable, abrupt changes in surrounding salts and structuring within the Cane Creek interval require constant monitoring by the well-sit
team to successfully land and stay in the target zone. Real-time well-site decision-making authority is an absolute must during steering operations.
Pore-fluid pressure gradients exceed 0.85 psi/ft, but only in the presence of open fractures. Second-order folds with amplitudes of 15-100 ft and apparent wavelengths of 300-3000 ft have been encountered. Core data suggests the presence of a regional northeast-southwest, near vertical, open-fracture system. Additional drilling should continue to produce clearer insights in this newly developing horizontal play.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90993©1993 AAPG Rocky Mountain Section Meeting, Salt Lake City, Utah, September 12-15, 1993.