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General
Wildcat well 6609/11-1 was drilled on the Northwestern side of the Helgeland Basin outside Mid Norway. The primary objective was to test sandstone reservoirs of Middle to Early Jurassic age in a structurally high position on a narrow SW-NE trending horst block. The secondary objective was to test sandstone reservoirs of Early Jurassic to Upper Triassic age. The well was planned to be drilled to 3200 m, 200 m into the Triassic.
Operations and results
Wildcat well 6609/11-1 was spudded with the semi-submersible installation Treasure Seeker on 19 May 1983 and drilled to TD at 3068 m in Late Triassic sediments of the Åre Formation. No major technical problems occurred during drilling. Operations were interrupted for 11 and a half days due to a crew strike. The well was drilled with seawater and hi-vis pills to 915 m and with gypsum/polymer mud from 915 m to TD.
The well encountered good quality
sandstone reservoirs of Early Jurassic and Late Triassic age. These reservoirs
were water bearing with minor amounts of residual hydrocarbons indicated on the
logs. The uppermost part of the sandstone interval, 2546 - 2570 m had the
highest reservoir quality encountered in the well. Porosities ranged from
15-30% (20.6% average in net sand) with a net/gross sand ratio of 0.85 and an
average SW of 90%. The unit ranged from Sinemurian to Pliensbachian in age and
consisted of massive to thinly bedded, very fine to fine grained sandstones
with interbeds and stringers of shale, siltstone and limestone. Below 2570 m
the sandstone units tended generally coarser grained and exhibited fining
upward sequences with reduced porosity and net/gross ratio. The only recorded
oil show in the well was on core no 1 at 2559.7 m to 2560.9 m. No significant
mud gas levels were recorded. The Late Jurassic shales and the Early Jurassic
coals and carbonaceous shales are rich source rocks for oil and gas. However,
the Late Jurassic shales are immature in the well
wlbHistoryDateUpdated: 2016-05-19T00:00:00