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General
The wildcat 6407/1-2 was drilled 43 m NW of well 6407/1-1, which was drilled to 900 m before it was junked due to problems with setting the 20" casing. The objective for both wells was to test for hydrocarbons in Jurassic sandstones. The primary target was Middle Jurassic sand horizons, Early Jurassic sands was secondary target. The well was the first well north of 62 degrees to encounter liquid petroleum.
The well is Type Well for the Kai Formation and Reference Well for the Nordland Group. It is Reference Well for the Lyr Formation, the Fangst Group, and the BÅt Group
Operations and results
Wildcat well 6407/1-2 was spudded with
the semi-submersible installation Dyvi Delta on 13 November 1982 and drilled to
TD at 4560 m in the Late Triassic Grey Beds. The well was drilled with
seawater/gel down to 901 m, with gypsum/lignosulphonate from 901 m to 3568 m,
and with Spersene/XP-20/resin from 3568 m to TD. At 1817 m loss of mud to the
formation was discovered. A survey showed that this was caused by a collapse of
20" casing from approximately 667 m. It was therefore decided to run the
13 3/8" casing at this point. A total of 164 days were spent on the
drilling phase, which was 56 days more than prognosed. 22 days were lost due to
bad weather, 17 days due to BOP problems, 4 days working with the collapsed
20" casing, 7 days were spent on fishing when the drill string parted. A
further 12 days were spent on excessive reaming in the 12 1/4" hole in the
Paleocene and top of the Cretaceous formation, and in the 8 1/2" hole in
the Heather formation. The reaming was necessary when running back in hole
after several days WOW with the BOP closed and the riser disconnected. The well
was drilled 60 meters deeper than prognosed. The testing phase lasted for 21
days, which includes a 7" casing tie back operation of 6 days, which was
necessary because of a leak in the 9 5/8" at approximately 1850 m. The
wlbHistoryDateUpdated: 2016-05-19T00:00:00