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General
Well 34/7-18 is located on the Vigdis Field on Tampen Spur in the Northern North Sea. It was designed to drill and test a Jurassic Prospect (Segment IV of the C Plus structure), between the Snorre and Tordis Fields. The well was drilled in a high position on a gently dipping structure where the top of the Brent Group is eroded. The primary objective was to test the presence, reservoir quality and fluid contacts in the prospect. A secondary objective was to test the pressure regimes in the Jurassic sequence, including possible depletion associated with pressure communication, previously identified in the nearby Tordis Field. A boulder bed was expected at 303 m, and shallow gas could occur at 394 m and 546 m.
Operations and results
Wildcat well 34/7-18 was spudded with the semi-submersible installation West Alpha on 20 July 1991 and drilled to TD at 2443 m in the Early Jurassic Drake Formation. Problems with retrieving core no 2 led to 4 days lost while fishing. During plug and abandon the cut and pull tool twisted off and 9 x 8" DC and 7 x 5" HWDP was left on seabed. Three days were lost while clearing the seabed and cutting the casing and retrieving the well head, which was eventually retrieved using explosives. Shallow gas was encountered in the pilot hole and a boulder bed was indicated from drilling parameters at 342 m. The well was drilled with spud mud down to 1115 m, and with KCl mud from 1115 m to TD.
In the Nordland and Hordaland Groups, the
well penetrated mainly claystones with relatively minor sandstone intervals. A
Paleocene oil discovery was made, and two cores were cut in the Lista
Formation, Rogaland Group. These were cut in the interval 1774 -1782 m, of
which 6.3 m were recovered. RFT pressure measureme
wlbHistoryDateUpdated: 2020-02-21T00:00:00