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To: bcjt who wrote (4019)8/17/1999 8:36:00 AM
From: VanGo101  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4821
 
New article from Bob Christi:

bakersfield.com

Giant gas field again testing skill
of drillers

Filed: August 17, 1999

By BOB CHRISTIE
Californian staff writer
e-mail: bchristie@bakersfield.com

Drilling specialists are walking a fine line in their quest to drill deeper into a
natural gas-bearing formation at Lost Hills, taking a slow but sure
approach in an attempt to complete a commercial well without having
another blowout.

The problems workers assigned to the Nabors Drilling USA rig are
grappling with is clear to any casual observer — they are burning off gas
in a flare. The gas flaring is a good sign in some respects; it means the
drill bit is in the pay zone, and the well's owners think it may be hugely profitable.

In other respects, however, it shows there are no small number of technical problems in drilling very deep into a newly discovered, highly pressurized gas reservoir.

The first attempt to drill a well at this spot concluded with one of the largest
blowouts in recent history in North America. The well blew out on the
evening of Nov. 23, 1998, destroying the drilling rig and resulting in a
six-month wild well.

The current well was used as a relief well for the one that blew out, and
now is designed to replace it and prove the new reservoir can produce
commercial quantities of gas.

If it is completed and successfully produces commercial quantities of gas,
it will be the deepest producing well in California.

The consortium of Canadian and U.S. companies drilling the well plan to
deepen it to 19,000 feet from the current 17,428 feet.

But they may never reach the target depth because of the pressure
problems now being encountered.

When the drill bit entered the gas-bearing formation at about 17,200 feet
late last week, there were immediate shows of natural gas. Crews use
drilling fluid known as "mud" to keep that gas from pushing its way to the
surface. The weight of the mud is varied, depending on the pressure of
the gas reservoir. The concept is to have the mud heavy enough to keep
the gas or oil from flowing into the well bore but not so heavy as to go into
the rock formation itself.

Loss of mud into the formation can result in a blowout, because eventually
the above-ground facilities run out of fluid to pump and the gas or oil will
come roaring back up the hole. A blowout also can occur if the mud is too
light and the gas or oil overpowers it. Complex blowout preventer valves
are used to prevent either event, but they are not foolproof. This reservoir
is highly pressurized, with readings exceeding 15,000 pounds per square
inch.

On Sunday, the drill bit entered a second producing zone with a different
pressure, most likely lower pressure, experts said. What occurred next is
known as "loss of circulation."

Drilling fluid weighted for the higher pressure above began entering the
formation, and crews were forced to stop drilling. That's likely when they
began flaring the gas, because they were forced to lower the mud weight,
which allowed gas from the higher pressure zones to flow into the "mud
column."

"They're walking the line now of keeping the mud weight heavy enough to
keep the gas in but not heavy enough to go into the formation," said
Claude Fiddler, a Bakersfield consultant and former Chevron executive
with extensive experience with high- pressure natural gas reservoirs. "I
think these guys, the owners and geologists, are jumping up and down
with joy and counting their money, but old Jimmy Fox (the drilling
consultant on the operation) and his mud guy are walking the fine line."

The Canadian stock markets are booming on news that the well has again
encountered significant quantities of gas, with most of the companies
involved in the consortium drilling the well seeing increases of about 10
percent on Monday.

But much of the movement apparently is on speculation, according to one
Canadian stock analyst.

"It's not surprising that the stocks are reacting to this, but right now they're
trading more on rumor than facts," said Andrew Hogg, oil and gas analyst
with Yorkton Securities Inc. in Calgary. Hogg said this well needs to be
completed, tested and placed on production before more is really known.

And more wells need to be drilled to prove the extent of what the
companies are calling the East Lost Hills field, Hogg said.

The first of those, about 2 miles to the northwest, is set to begin drilling by
the end of the week.

The problems the current rig is encountering will likely be the same on this
well, if it is successful in hitting the same reservoir. But this well is
designed to be able to handle it easier, because the drill rig is one of the
biggest in the United States.

The problems with pressure now being encountered on the well may force
the operators to complete it and put it on production soon, without risking
another blowout by trying to drill deeper into the formation.