Summary
Chevron Thailand, on average, drills 12,000-ft measured-depth/8,200-ft total
vertical depth wells in approximately 4.5 days. The factor that contributes
most to this level of performance is the "offlining" of as many drilling-rig
activities as possible. In our drilling operation, almost all pipe-handling and
cementing operations are performed offline (i.e., off the critical-operations
path and therefore simultaneous to other activities on the rig). We have now
taken the next logical step in performing offline operations. In May 2007,
Chevron Thailand introduced the world’s first simultaneous openhole wireline
logging and drilling operation on Seadrill RT-7 (a tender-assist drilling rig)
and currently is deploying the same system on additional tender-assist rigs
(TARs) and jackup rigs.
This paper is the second in a series of two that describe the engineering
design and operational implementation of the tools and techniques necessary to
make offline openhole wireline logging a reality. The first paper (Upchurch and
Graves 2008) in this series details the engineering design aspects, and the
resultant benefits, of this paradigm-changing logging system. This second paper
describes the processes that were used to implement the system, along with the
inherent risks and benefits of each phase of the implementation. Implementing
radically new processes such as this into pre-existing drilling systems
significantly increases the risk for technical failure, well control incidents,
and personnel injury. This paper details the processes that were developed for
avoiding all three. In the case of this new technology, our phased approach to
implementation has resulted in smooth, incident-free introductions to the
various rigsites. The benefits of this new system, and our method for
implementing it without incident, are paying significant dividends to Chevron
Thailand.
© 2009. Society of Petroleum Engineers
View full textPDF
(
801 KB
)
History
- Original manuscript received:
4 December 2008
- Meeting paper published:
17 March 2009
- Revised manuscript received:
26 March 2009
- Manuscript approved:
4 May 2009
- Published online:
29 October 2009
- Version of record:
14 June 2010