SPE Reservoir Evaluation & Engineering
Volume 11, Number 6, December 2008, pp. 976-983

SPE-96018-PA

A Parametric Study on the Benefits of Drilling Horizontal and Multilateral Wells in Coalbed Methane Reservoirs

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DOI  More information 10.2118/96018-PA http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/96018-PA

Citation

  • Maricic, N., Mohaghegh, S.D., and Artun, E. 2008. A Parametric Study on the Benefits of Drilling Horizontal and Multilateral Wells in Coalbed Methane Reservoirs. SPE Res Eval & Eng11 (6): 976-983. SPE-96018-PA.

Discipline Categories

  • 6.6.5 Well Performance Monitoring, Inflow Performance
  • 6.7.5 Economic Evaluations
  • 6.7.2 Recovery Factors

Summary

Recent years have witnessed a renewed interest in development of coalbed methane (CBM) reservoirs. Optimizing CBM production is of interest to many operators. Drilling horizontal and multilateral wells is gaining popularity in many different coalbed reservoirs, with varying results. This study concentrates on variations of horizontal- and multilateral-well configurations and their potential benefits.

In this study, horizontal and several multilateral drilling patterns for CBM reservoirs are studied. The reservoir parameters that have been studied include gas content, permeability, and desorption characteristics. Net present value (NPV) has been used as the yard stick for comparing different drilling configurations. Configurations that have been investigated are single-, dual-, tri-, and quadlateral wells along with fishbone (also known as pinnate) wells. In these configurations, the total length of horizontal wells and the spacing between laterals (SBL) have been studied. It was determined that in the cases that have been studied in this paper (all other circumstances being equal), quadlateral wells are the optimum well configuration.

Introduction

Several studies in the past have examined the impact of different reservoir properties on CBM production (Ertekin et al. 1988; Zuber 1998; Katyal et al. 2007), including the effect of secondary (micro-) permeability (Gamson et al. 1993; Mavor and Gunter 2006; Palmer et al. 2006). This paper is dedicated to examining the impact of different horizontal-well configurations (multilateral) on the production and recovery in CBM reservoirs.

In this section, a brief background on reservoir-engineering aspects of CBM production is presented along with details on the reservoir simulator used for modeling the cases used in this study. Some basic introduction about horizontal wells and their impact on production behavior is also presented.

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History

  • Original manuscript received: 11 July 2005
  • Meeting paper published: 9 October 2005
  • Revised manuscript received: 10 July 2008
  • Manuscript approved: 2 August 2008
  • Version of record: 29 December 2008