CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
DGD is a technology that makes use of
separate fluids with different densities in the wellbore. The lighter fluid
floats on top of the heavy fluid in the riser. The lighter fluid is only used
for inducing pressure and is otherwise inactive. However the heavy fluid is
used for the same purpose as used in the conventional drilling procedures. This
helps to adjust the bottom hole pressure (BHP) in a shorter time, and make it
able to adjust the well bore pressure curves with the formation pressure
curves. The attractions that DGD highlights are the reduction in the cost of
drilling and an increase in the production rate after well completion ( Gaup,
2014). The development work on the DGD
was accelerated during the 1990s when a joint industry project was undertaken
with the aim to utilize such technology to be used in the high pressure, low
fracture gradient in ultra-deep waters. Even though sufficient investments have
been made on drilling rigs which can operate in depths greater than 8000ft, the
resources present at these reservoirs cannot be extracted unless new procedures
are developed to lower hydrostatic mud pressures to avoid fractures in the
shallow zones. The problems faced in ultra-deep drilling include shallow water
flowing, lost circulation and loss of well control. If any of these problems
occur, they will prevent the completion of the well to be achieved.
Multiple casing strings are used to
avoid such problems. This means that the production string is quite small for a
high production well and also for horizontal and multilateral completions in
order to make the project economically viable. Pumps are used to reduce the
hydrostatic head from the mud-line to the surface in DGD techniques. This is
the reason why there is no balanced u-tube present in DGD as compared to the
conventional drilling ( Kennedy 2001).
The primary component that enables the
DGD operations is the Mud Lift Pump (MLP). With the help of diaphragm pumps
powered by the seawater, it pumps the drilling fluid and cutting back to the
rig floor. The Subsea Rotating Device (SRD) maintains the boundary between the
sea water density fluid in the drilling riser and the drilling fluid and
redirects the mud through the MLP through the Solids Processing Unit (SPU). SPU
is used to decrease the size of the drill cuttings which can be managed by the
MLP (Ganpatye et al. 2013). The principal objective of this study is to help
the Drilling Industry to enhance the reliability and improve the cost
effectiveness with minimal maintenance. To address the issues, Dual Gradient
Drilling (DGD) is seen as the most economically viable option. DGD is currently
providing solutions for the problems associated with the depleted offshore and
deep-water reservoirs.
In the past, the oil and gas industry
has typically used the single gradient system to drill wells offshore. With
this system the bottom hole pressure was controlled by a mud column extending
from the drilling rig to the bottom of the wellbore. This mud column was used
to achieve the required bottom hole pressure. Because of the narrow margin
between the pore and fracture pressures it is somewhat difficult to reach total
depth with the single gradient system. This led to the invention of the dual
gradient system. In the dual gradient method, heavy density fluid runs from the
bottom hole to the mud line and a low density fluid from the mud line to the
rig floor so as to maintain the bottom hole pressure. Dual gradient Drilling is
an unconventional method of drilling in which a relatively small diameter
return line is used to circulate drill fluids and cuttings from the sea floor
to the rig’s surface mud system. During DGD, the rig’s marine riser is kept
full of seawater. A rotating diverter, which is similar to a rotating control
head, separates the wellbore and its contained fluids from the seawater in the
marine riser. During well kill operations, the return line is utilized as the
choke line in conventional riser drilling.
Drilling technology has been in a
continuous developing process. As early as in the 1890s, oil wells were drilled
in water, from land connected platforms in lakes and along the coastline, and
in the late 1940s wells were drilled from platforms in the open sea. Today,
wells drilled in water depths of more than 3’000m are not unusual, and offshore
wells with a measured depth of more than 10’000m have been drilled. This line
of developing new ways of reaching the hydrocarbons in the ground has not come
to an end, and further technological improvements are still needed to reach the
hydrocarbons the world will need in the years to come.
To drill oil wells safe and problem
free in ultra-deep (a greater depth than 1500m) waters, accurate pressure
control is required. The main topic in this research, Dual Gradient Drilling
(DGD), is a drilling technology that separates from conventional drilling by
simultaneously utilizing two different fluids with different densities in the
wellbore. This enables both a quicker way of adjusting the bottom hole pressure
(BHP), and the ability to make the wellbore pressure curves fit better with the
formation pressure curves. DGD is ideal for use in ultra-deep waters, and
primarily by reducing drilling cost, but also by increasing the production rate
when the well is completed, the use of DGD can add great value to a prospect.
Both details and challenges for the DGD technology, and possible benefits will
be discussed in more detail in this report. To cover the world’s future consume
of hydrocarbons, technological improvements are needed, turning currently
unreachable and unprofitable reservoirs into the opposite. The main focus of
this thesis, Dual Gradient Drilling (DGD), is a drilling technology that is
ideal for drilling in ultra-deep waters, and could prove vital in drilling the
reservoirs that are currently undrillable. This will increase the possible
supply of hydrocarbons available for consumption.
DGD is not fully accepted in the
drilling industry, and DGD is still considered unconventional.
At present the deep sea drilling
utilizes conventional drilling fluids and enormous number of casings which
significantly affects the fluid density. The well productivity is directly
affected by the inculcation/leakage of mud in low producing zones. The cost of
deep sea water exploration rapidly increases and at the same time imposes
technical boundaries on the depths of the well that can be reached thereby
affecting the productivity. Dual Gradient Drilling (DGD) is the establishment
of multiple pressure gradients within the selected sections of the annulus for
managing the annular pressure profile.
1.1 Problem statement
The concept of Dual Gradient Drilling
is a new concept within the exploration and production industry. It allows
access to reservoirs present in ultra-deep waters in a cost effective fashion
with improved safety by reducing the issues that occur because of the narrow
margin between the pore pressure and the fracture pressure gradients. This
system reduces the hydrostatic pressure of the drilling mud from inside the
riser and hence the bottom hole pressure is reduced.
The basic objective for a DGD system
is to discover the deep water environment and drill wells in ultra-deep waters.
This procedure reduces the operational costs which is the main incentive for
companies to adopt this process.
1.2 Project aim
To critically review and analyze the
benefits involved in using dual gradient drilling as compared to conventional
drilling.
1.3 Project objectives
Evaluation of the key challenges to
successful execution of dual gradient drilling.
Review of the advantages and
limitations of the implementation of the dual gradient drilling procedures with
the conventional drilling platforms.
Evaluation of the reliability of the
dual gradient drilling.
1.4 Organization of study
This research aims to investigate the
benefit of DGD technology. This work will also involve a detailed work
comparing the conventional drilling and dual gradient drilling. This research
is classed into five chapters. Chapter one covers the introductory phase of the
research. The second chapter covers the literature review which examines the
background of the technology based on the objectives. The third chapter covers
the methodology which is based on the collection and analysis of data from
literature. While the results, recommendation and discussion covered the fourth
chapter. The final chapter covered the conclusion of this research.
TOPIC: ASSESSMENT OF THE TECHNICAL BENEFITS OF DUAL GRADIENT DRILLING
Chapters: 1 - 5
Delivery: Email
Delivery: Email
Number of Pages: 60
Price: 3000 NGN
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