Facts, Figures and Explanation
Drilling for Oil
Once the environmental and seismic surveys are completed, and if the results look good
drilling an exploratory well is considered. Even at this stage, it remains an uncertain
business with no guarantees. There is still a high risk that nothing at all will be found,
or that the oil will be in such small quantities that it would not be worthwhile extracting
it. In the North Sea only about 1 in 8 exploration wells find quantities of oil and gas that
are economic to develop.
Drilling |
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Drilling exploratory wells
Three different ways of drilling exploratory wells:
This is a barge with legs that can be raised and lowered. It is usually towed into position,
its legs lowered and then once they are sitting on the seabed, the barge is raised out of the
water creating a stable drilling platform. Jack-up units are usually used in up to 100 metres
of water.
- Semi-submersible drilling rig
These usually have an engine so they don't need to be towed. The working platform is
supported on vertical columns that are attached to submerged pontoons. Once in position the
pontoons can be flooded with water to lower the whole unit further into the water. The lower
the pontoons are beneath the water, the less likely they are to be affected by wave action.
This makes them stable in rough seas and in depths of 300 metres or more.
These look more like a conventional ship and can be easily moved between locations. The latest
drill ships can drill in water depths of 1500 metres or more, but they can be unstable in rough
seas.
On Board |
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Spudding the well
The first step is to drill a 90cm hole and then put a wide pipe into the seabed to guide
the drill and the drilling fluid. As each section of the well is completed it is lined with
a heavy steel pipe casing that is cemented in place to prevent it caving in. This process is
called "spudding the well".
The derrick
The derrick is the tall structure that supports all the drilling operations. It is designed
to haul the drillstring - lengths of drillpipe with the drill bit on the end - in and out of the
hole. Sections of drillpipe or drillstring are added as the hole gets deeper. Each piece of
drillstring is typically 10 metres long, about the length of a bus which explains why the derrick,
which needs to accommodate 3 lengths of drillpipe, has to be so tall. The drillstring can weigh
several hundred tonnes, so a powerful motor is needed to winch it up and down.
The drill bit
The drill bit is attached to heavy drill collars that put weight onto the bit. The drill
bit is rotated either by turning the whole drillstring or by a turbine down the hole that is
driven by drill fluid. Depending on how hard the rock is, the drilling rate can be less than
30 centimetres an hour or as much as 60 metres an hour in relatively soft rock.
The drill bit needs changing every few days, or maybe every few hours, depending on the
hardness of the rock. When the drill bit has to be changed, the whole drillstring is pulled
back up, uncoupled in sections, stacked up, the drill bit changed and the whole process starts
again. This is known as a 'round trip' and can take 10 hours or more.
Use of 'mud'
Drilling fluid, which is commonly known as 'mud', is continuously pumped at high pressure
down to the drill bit to lubricate it and keep it cool. The mud also flushes out the rock cuttings
and brings them back to the surface. Geoscientists are able to inspect and analyze these tea leaf
sized samples and gain more information about the rock structures and the presence of hydrocarbons.
The person who does this is known as a mudlogger.
Another important consideration is that the force and weight of the mud that is pumped down the
drillstring into the well, balances the pressure of the crude oil and gas in the surrounding rocks
and so significantly reduces the risk of a blow out.
Controlling the well
Because the oil and gas, deep below the Earth's surface are at high pressure great care has to
be taken to control the pressure. In cinema films they often show what is called a 'blow out'.
This can occur when a drill enters a reservoir and the pressure causes the oil and gas come
spurting out of the well. The result is potentially very dangerous. Although blow outs are
very unusual, all wells are fitted with an emergency valve designed to prevent this from happening.
Core samples
If the geologists find something particularly interesting they can ask for a core sample.
A hollow drill, called a core barrel, is attached to the drillstring and as it goes down a
core of rock forms inside - a bit like using a giant apple corer! This core sample gives a
continuous record of the different layers of rock and therefore more detailed information
than the rock cuttings. Collecting a core sample is expensive and time consuming because it
involves a complete 'round trip'.
Logging
Before a well is finally capped, vital information is gathered by lowering measuring devices
contained in what as known as a sonde down the hole on a wireline. As the line is pulled back up
the hole, the sonde transmits information to a computer on the surface about the porosity and other
qualities of the rock it is cutting through. This information provides a survey of the well and
gives more information about the presence of hydrocarbons in the pores. This technique is called
logging.
Field Appraisal
If an exploratory well shows that hydrocarbons are present, more seismic data is gathered
and then a number of appraisal wells are drilled and more data is collected. From this data
it is possible to estimate how much oil and gas the field contains, how difficult it will be
to extract and what percentage of the oil and gas can be extracted.
Unfortunately, it's not possible to get every last drop of oil out of a reservoir - in the
North Sea, for example, operators expect to recover about 40 - 50% of the total reservoir. This
figure may seem quite low, but remember there isn't a lake of oil and gas. Instead it is trapped
in the pores of the reservoir rock and you can appreciate that it isn't possible to get every last
drop out. Think back to the idea that oil is held in pores in much the same way that water is held
in a sponge. We know that it isn't possible to get every last little drop of water out of a sponge
- it's always a bit damp.
Oil exploration involves lots of people with different skills, for example geologists,
geophysicists, surveyors, mudloggers, computer scientists, marine biologists, drilling engineers,
the drilling crew. Alongside these are all the people employed back onshore for example economists,
planners, lawyers, IT specialists, environmental advisers and safety advisors to name a few.
Facts, Figures and Explanations Index
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