Part three. Drilling and workover.
Drilling a well is a process that involves
making a cylindrical opening in rock whose
diameter is small compared to the well shaft
length. Drilling equipment is used to carry
out the process, without human access to
the bottom hole. The start of the well, on
the surface, is called the well head, and the
bottom - the bottom hole, with the well
walls creating the shaft. Drilling comes in
three forms: vertical, slanted and horizontal.
Horizontal drilling is considered the most
complex technically.
Wells have been drilled since ancient
times. In fact, the first wells were drilled in
China to produce water and saline solutions
and were noted in the works of Confucius,
about 600 BC. They were drilled to roughly
900 m.
The dawn of oil production is considered
to be burst for modern drilling, with the
first oil well drilled by accident in 1826 in
Kentucky in the USA, when looking for salt
brine. The first “real” oil well in the USA was
drilled in 1859 by Colonel E.Drake for the
Seneca Oil Company close to the town of
Titusville, Pennsylvania. After two months
of work, oil had been found at a depth of 20
m, and this was the start of the oil industry
in the USA.
Until relatively recently, Drake’s well was
thought to be the first oil well in the world,
but documents discovered about the work
headed by V.N.Semenov show that the first
oil well was actually drilled in 1848 at the
Caspian Sea Bibi-Eibat field. The first oil
came on 14 July.
Kazakhstan’s first oil appeared in 1899
when a gush of light oil appeared at the
Karashungul field at a depth of 40 m. As we
started producing oil in Kazakhstan at the
end of the 19
th
century, that makes us one
of the oldest oil producers in the world -
far earlier than Venezuela, Iran, Kuwait,
Mexico, Norway or Saudi Arabia.
In 1987, oil was drilled for the first time
offshore - in the Pacific Ocean, close to
Summerland Island (California, USA).
In PetroKazakhstan, wells are drilled
and repaired by the PKKR Drilling & Well
Services Department, consisting of 80
people in 2 structural divisions - Drilling
Department and Well Services Department.
In 2012, PetroKazakhstan drilled 110
wells, including 56 production wells, 32
exploratory wells and 22 appraisal wells,
which stretch for a total of 169,315 rm. In
addition, 102 wells had been commissioned
by the end of 2012.
Drilling, like much other oil field work, is
hazardous. For that reason, we asked some
of our specialists to tell us about the drilling
and repair process.
Ultra deep wells
The first American oil well gushed oil at a
depth of 20 m; the first Russian oil wells
were drilled to a depth of at least 100 m.
However, with the development of oil
production, drilling depth has gradually
increased, as oil has had to be produced
from deeper and deeper horizons. For
example, by the end of the 1960’s, in the
USSR the average depth of production
wells was 1,710 m. The deepest well in
the world used in industrial production
is a gas well in Texas, at 7,460 m. The
deepest non-oil well is the Kolsk well,
which is deeper than 12 km, and which
is used for scientific and research
purposes.
- What does drilling work at the PetroKazakhstan field involve?
- PetroKazakhstan wells are drilled by contractors - Sibu-Kyzlorda LLP, Zhanros Drilling LLP, PM Lucas LLP, Bureniye & K LLP and NTS LLP,
which own 10 drilling rigs between them.
- Can you tell us about the well construction process?
- The well construction cycle includes a preparatory phase, erecting a platform and equipment; rigging up; the actual drilling process; well
casing and plugging; formation drilling and testing for oil and gas influx.
Preparatory work involves selecting a rig location, laying an access road and installing electricity, water and telecommunication networks.
Then drilling rig and equipment are erected according to approved plans to ensure work is performed safely, the relevant maintenance
checks can be performed and assembly costs are kept to a minimum. Rigging includes a test launch of the drilling rig to check the efficiency
of all elements and units.
The drilling process starts once a square section drill bit has been screwed on to the Kelly stem. A rotor turns to put the Kelly stem into
motion, which in turn turns the drill bit. As the well shaft gets deeper, it is strengthened and plugged if necessary. Well strengthening involves
dropping a casing pipe into the well and cementing it. Wells are plugged to prevent fluid seeping from unused horizons to within the casing,
which is why all shaft rock cavities are filled in. Although, during the drilling process, productive strata have already been developed, they are
ZJ30 мобильді бұрғылау қондырғысы / Мобильная
буровая установка ZJ30 / Mobile Drilling Rig ZJ30
МҰНАЙШЫ
Маусым 2013
51
isolated using casing pipes and plugging ensuring any oil or gas seeping into the well does not hinder
further drilling.
Once sinking has been completed, productive strata are reopened using perforation to ensure oil
and gas influx. After this, the well is developed, i.e. oil and gas inflow is initiated. Well development,
depending on specific conditions, may take between several hours and several months.
Once oil and gas have appeared, the well is taken over by the operating team, and the rig is moved a
few metres to drill a well pad (editor: a pad is 10-12 slanted wells covering one large oil field) or moved
to the next pad.
- How long does the entire process take on average?
- The whole process from the start of preparatory work until well completion takes about 15-18
days.
- What are the minimum and maximum times needed to drill a well in PetroKazakhstan?
- In time terms, historically the quickest well drilled was at Aryskum-304, which took 6.5 days. It took
us 86.7 days to drill the Tuzkol well and 108.4 days to drill the geologically complex Doszhan-24 well.
In depth terms, the Aryskum 301 exploration well is the deepest, at 4,250 m.
- What types of wells exist?
- Wells are divided into smaller (up to 2,000 m deep), medium-sized (up to 4,500 m deep), deep (up
to 6,000 m deep) and ultra deep wells (over 6,000 m deep). Depending on shaft axis and configuration,
wells are divided into vertical, horizontal and slanted. PetroKazakhstan drilled its first horizontal well in March 2005, and PKKR now has 19
of them. PetroKazakhstan tends now to drill vertical wells.
In the oil industry, wells are divided into investigation wells (which are then divided into exploratory, development and other wells) and
operating wells. Operating wells can be categorised as production, injection, appraisal or control wells. Production and injection wells form
the so-called operating well stock or operating wells.
- What drilling methods are used at the PetroKazakhstan fields?
- Wells can be drilled mechanically and non-mechanically (for example, using hydraulic and electric impulse methods). However, the
industry currently only uses percussion and rotary drilling - the mechanical methods, as non-mechanical drilling is currently experimental.
We use mechanical drilling at all our fields.
- What difficulties do you come up against in deep-hole drilling?
- The most common difficulties in drilling deep wells is that well walls tend to collapse, fluid is either lost or can appear in strata (i.e. leaks
in); differential wall sticking by drilling and casing pipes is also among them.
Serikbek
Dzhilkamanov,
Head of Oil-and-gas
Exploration of Deep Drilling,
PKKR
- Drilling is the main element in the well construction
cycle, both in time and cost terms. Can you tell us about
the costs involved and working with suppliers?
Zhanat Akhmetova & Liliya Umarova:
- Drilling is one of the most important areas in well
construction. It incurs the most time costs and, more
importantly, monetary costs. That’s why, compared to other
areas of accounting, drilling costs are grouped in the most
detail.
The oil production industry is one of those that has no raw
material costs. Oil deposits do not cost anything in the terms
of feedstock expenses. However, drilling requires the use of a
lot of different materials such as clay, cement, pipes, power, a
lot of water used for technical purposes, and auxiliary services
(to cement and test casing for permeability and to carry
out electric assurance work). Together with equipment and
apparatus lease costs, the above costs also include the cost
of the wells themselves. The oil and gas industry is a capital
intensive one as it incurs high costs for drilling, well operating
and mechanisation.
Currently, 5 drilling companies provide the PetroKazakhstan group of companies (PKKR, Kolzhan and PKVI) with 10 drilling rigs. As far
as well repairs are concerned, our 16 units come from 6 companies. Then another 15 or so companies provide cementing, surveying, unit
supervision, gas logging and other subsidiary drilling and well repair services.
Zhanat Akhmetova ,
Material and Cost Control
Specialist of Drilling
Department, PKKR
Liliya Umarova,
Material and Cost Control
Specialist of Drilling
Department, PKKR
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МҰНАЙШЫ
- What new drilling technology has appeared in recent years?
- Zhanros Drilling management closely follows innovations in the drilling & workover
industry, and is always modernising both its equipment and techniques. For example,
in 2012 we commissioned a new ZJ30 drilling rig, and even more recently we sent a
brand new mobile ZJ40 rig to the Tuzkol field. They’re easier to use, i.e. both machines
having more space for the driller in a closed cabin; using a joy stick instead of a steering
wheel. The driller can observe drilling using video monitors. Working conditions have
improved, productivity has increased, task performance has become clearer and safety is
observed, all of which means the quality and speed of work has grown.
Drilling and workover technology does not stand still. Drill bit and drilling fluid
properties are constantly being modernised, along with the quality of drilling pipes,
machines and mechanisms. One of the techniques with the greatest potential is
probably coiled tubing, which is used in the continuous radial feeding of pipes into wells,
significantly easing and speeding up drilling and repair work. Coiled tubing may be used
to drill new wells, reopen strata, but it has the greatest technical and economic effect
on drilling second slanted or horizontal shafts from existing wells. Flexible pipes help
carry out drilling work in basins and increase well yield 3-8 times. Coiled tubing technology is popular due to its effectiveness and safety.
Zhanros Drilling’s plans involve developing coiled tubing technology, which, by the way, will involve a lot of investment. It’s worth
pointing out that our modernisation and favourable investment climate is supported by the European Bank for Reconstruction and
Development, which is a close business partner and which has repeatedly provided us with some significant loans.
Aleksey Myltykbayev,
General Director, drilling company
“Zhanros Drilling” LLP
- How many wells on average does your division repair per year?
- We carry out underground and major repairs on production and injection wells, and also develop
newly drilled wells.
This year, we are planning to complete the underground repair of 1,000 wells, which includes
developing new wells; repairing wells with electro-centrifugal pumps, screw pumps and bottom-
hole pumps; working at water-injection wells and also repairing temporarily closed wells so they can
return to operations.
Repairs are carried out using loaders provided by contractors. In 2013, we will use 16 loaders
provided by DOS Engineering Ltd, Technology AlemOil LLP, RMZ-Shapagat LLP, Zhanros Drilling
LLP, NeftTechService LLP and FracJet LLP.
- One of the problems at our fields is water cut. How much time does a repair take after
water has seeped into a well? And what are the most difficult situations?
- Most repairs are carried out in production wells (electro-centrifugal, screw and bottom-hole
pumps). In addition, more than 100 newly drilled wells will be equipped with our loaders.
As far as a water-out is concerned, work to isolate water intervals in production wells takes an
average of 229 hours.
- Does your division deal with well abandonment?
- Sometimes wells that are no longer viable or casing of which cannot be repaired are closed
temporarily or abandoned. Only a few wells require this type of work every year. Temporary well closure and abandonment are needed to
ensure the safety of those working there and to protect the environment.
Sariyev Talgat,
Deputy manager, Workovers,
PKKR
Thank you for your interviews!
- Which technical projects were developed and implemented in 2012 and
which ones in 2013?
- To drill a well you first of all need to draft a technical well construction plan. Technical
well construction plans are drafted for groups of wells (within a single field) at specific
depths, and indicate the type of drilling rig and well construction to be used.
In 2012, PetroKazakhstan carried out drilling work, mostly exploration and operating
wells, based on six group technical plans. For example, operating wells were drilled at
the North-West Kyzylkiya field to a planned depth of 1,600 m, exploration and operating
wells - at the Karaganda block and Aryskum pocket to planned depths of 1,500/2,750 m
and 2,250/3,250 m, respectively. Operating and horizontal wells H-3 and H-4 were drilled
at the Kyzylkiya field.
These projects will be continued in 2013. In addition, due to changes in technical
data and well depth, three group plans were also drafted. Exploration and operating
wells are currently being drilled at the Doshan and Bukharsai fields, and operating wells
- at the North Nuraly, Maibulak and Aryskum fields. A horizontal well was also drilled at
Aryskum according to new project.
Ryskhan Dzhienbayeva,
Leading Geologist of Drilling
Department, PKKR
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53
1. What does your working day
involve?
Operators work according to a shift
schedule. After the manner of the Kazakh
proverb “the early bird catches the worm”,
I get up at 5.30 am and start getting ready
for work. A bus takes the workers from
the hostel to the production site, and by
6:45 I am at work and ready to take over
the shift.
The main objective of our site is to
treat crude oil and ensure it reaches
commercial standards. We receive oil
by pipeline and road tankers from the
Kumkol, Kyzylkiya and Aryskum oil fields,
and also from a number of other fields.
We remove mechanical impurities, water,
salt and oil gas, after which we transfer the
commercial oil to KazTransOil pipeline
system for further pumping according
to the route through OQMS (Oil Quality
Measuring System).
Crude oil goes through a number of
treatment processes and stages before it
reaches a commercial standard. My role is
to control as well the addition of chemical
reagents that are used to ensure the swift
removal of various impurities from the
oil. I am also responsible for ensuring that
facilities operate continuously.
2. What types of errors can you not
afford to make in your job?
We cannot afford to be ignorant,
irresponsible or careless. We absolutely
have to follow all safety and fire
requirements. Although it was told a
number of times, I will still stress again,
with experience as a person who’s been
working in the dangerous oil production
industry and its heightened explosion
risk for a long time, that negligence
can threaten life and lead to significant
damage.
3. What good habits have you
acquired thanks to your work?
I always follow safety regulations and
all emergency prevention procedures
closely. I am used to following the rules,
which helps me discover any weaknesses
and adopt the required measures.
4. What is your main personal
achievement?
It’s work related. In 1991, I started as a
3
rd
category operator, and now I’m a 5
th
category operator. I was also honoured
to receive a letter of gratitude from the
Oblast Akim and a certificate of merit
from the PKKR President.
5. How do you like to relax?
Even though it may sound banal, I like
spending time with my family, even more
so as I work on rotation and I don’t get to
see my wife and children that often. We
enjoy spending time in the countryside,
fishing on the local lake. If you think
about it, it’s great just to see their smiling
faces as they forget about the fuss of daily
life.
6. What is your favourite saying or
quotation?
There’s a famous Kazakh proverb along
the lines of “a Kazakh man is no longer
a man if he doesn’t keep his word”. You
could say that this sums me up.
7. How would you describe a
modern man?
It’s my understanding that the modern
man needs to be strong spiritually, decent,
patriotic and proud of his home country.
A real man is one who’s remembered by
his actions and not his words.
In honor of Defender of Motherland Day we had interviews with our fellow employees
about their job and not only.
7 QUESTIONS TO...
...GABIT YELMURATOV,
5
th
category operator of dehydration and desalting unit, Central Processing Facility,
Kumkol, PKKR
Education
Kyzylorda secondary technical
vocational school №1, qualification
- 3
rd
category oil and gas production
operator; Korkyt Ata Kyzylorda State
University, speciality - oil and gas
industry
Career
1986 - worker, Pervomai karakul state
farm; 1990 - 1
st
category mechanic at
section 11 of the Western Kazakhstan
railway; 1991 - 3
rd
category operator of
dehydration and desalting unit (DDU),
Yuzhneftegas; 2000 - 4
th
category
operator, DDU; 2007 - 5
th
category
operator, DDU, PKKR
Awards
- Letter of gratitude from the Kyzylorda
Oblast Akim (2002)
- Jubilee medal “Құмкөл кенішінің
өнеркәсіптік игерілуінің 20 жылдығы”
(2006)
- Letter of gratitude from the Company
President (2011)
Military Service
Military rank - private, interior troops
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...ADILBEK BEKLIYEV,
Chief technician, PKKR
1. How have you changed while
working in PetroKazakhstan?
I started working for PetroKazakhstan
immediately after finishing university,
and have been working here for more
than 20 years. I remember that in the
90’s, the oil industry was something new
and a bit unusual for Kyzylorda. Rotation
work, when you live a long way from your
family, group rigs, collectors, specialised
machinery and wells... And of course, oil -
our black gold... It was all very interesting!
When the summer came along with the
scorching Kyzylorda sun, we forgot about
the harsh winter, the cold and the wind,
but we did want it to be a little bit cooler.
Despite the fickleness of the weather and
all the difficulties, we worked together
well, were proud of our work and helped
each other. It was, after all, the first field in
Kazakhstan that local specialists instead
of ones from neighbouring countries had
developed.
Working at Kumkol I have tried to
understand the entire technical process
and gain experience as I go. As a result, I
have moved up the career ladder. Working
for PetroKazakhstan has given me a lot:
invaluable experience, organisational
skills, an ability to be diplomatic and
manage.
2. What qualities do you need in
your profession?
You need endurance. Working at an
oil field requires stamina and patience,
skilfulness, cold-bloodedness and
strength. All of these qualities make a real
oil man; someone who understands that
it’s hard work that can help you reach
those levels to ensure the Kyzylorda region
and Kazakhstan as a whole flourishing.
3. What is the quietest part of your
working day?
In 2010, I was appointed as a chief
engineer at Kolzhan LLP, and since 2011,
I have been the chief technician at PKKR.
When I used to work on the fields, I
would really use my well-earned 15 rest
days, if I had to, managing the field from
the town. Today, I can’t really say which
part of my working day is the quietest. A
technical engineer’s work is never the
same. Probably, the quietest part of the
day is actually those couple of minutes in
the morning just when you walk into your
office (laughs).
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