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General
Well 1/6-6 is located ca 2 km south of the Albuskjell Field in the southern Norwegian North Sea. The principal objective was to test the hydrocarbon potential of Middle and Late Jurassic sandstones on the southern flank of a faulted dip closure, partially underlying the Albuskjell Chalk Field. It was proposed to drill to a total depth of 5355 m or 200 m below the interpreted Base Late Jurassic.
Operations and results
Well 1/6-6 was spudded with the semi-submersible installation Dyvi Stena on 10 February 1992 and drilled to final TD at 5565 m (5562 m TVD), some 100 m into Triassic siltstone. The well achieved its objective, which entailed drilling 210 m deeper than plan, to a new Norwegian depth record of 5565 m RKB. Maximum pore pressure in the well was estimated to have been 2.24 sg, higher than the worst-case scenario defined by the well proposal. BHT was 190 deg C. Both pore pressure and BHT were the highest yet encountered in Norway. The well was production tested under these stringent conditions.
Including additional time, the planned work scope for the well was 179.5 days. It eventually took 395 days. Of these, only 204.5 days (51.8%) was considered productive time. Five incidents accounted for 75% of lost time. These were: dropped 10-3/4" casing, failed wellhead, well control incident, failure of the HPC tieback packer and waiting on weather. The problems involved two sidetracks. The dropped 10-3/4" casing with TD at 4467 m led to the first sidetrack, which was made from kick-off at 2560 m. Then, after drilling to 3284 m and tripping out, a second sidetrack was accidentally made from 2522 m.
The well was drilled with seawater and
viscous sweeps to 1127 m and with gypsum / polymer mud from 1127 m to 4466 m in
the first hole. The first sidetrack was drilled with gypsum/polymer mud from
kick-off to TD. The second and final sidetrack was drilled with VISPLEX for
sidetracking, then with HF PLUS (glyc
wlbHistoryDateUpdated: 2016-07-06T00:00:00