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General
Wildcat well 6610/3-1 is located ca 80 km southwest of the Røst Island in the Lofoten archipelago of Northern Norway. The main objective was to test the hydrocarbon potential in the Early Jurassic (Tilje Formation) sandstones. A secondary objective was to test the possibility of development of sandy fans from Early Tertiary (Paleocene) to Early Cretaceous. The secondary objective had been fulfilled by drilling of the primary entry 6610/3-1, which was temporarily abandoned in February 1993 due to problems induced by severe weather conditions. The re-entry was done to fulfil the primary objectives.
Operations and results
Wildcat well 6610/3-1R is the re-entry of well 6610/3-1. It was entered with the semi-submersible installation Ross Isle on 15 September 1993 just below the 13 3/8" casing shoe in well 6610/3-1 (kick-off point at 1750 m in intra-Tang sandstone). Well 6610/3-1R was drilled to TD at 4200 m in the Triassic Red Beds. No significant technical problems were encountered during drilling. The well bore was drilled with ANCO 2000 mud from kick-off to TD.
The Tilje Formation was encountered from
3771 m to 3935 m with sandstone interbedded with siltstone and with limestone
and claystone stringers. The sandstone was mostly fine-grained and mostly
silica and calcite cemented. An FMT pressure log was run, but no gradient could
be established due to tight/impermeable Formation. The well penetrated three
source rock formations: the Spekk Formation (3534 m to 3614 m), the Melke
Formation (3614 m to 3705 m, and the Åre Formation coals (3935 m to 4147 m).
Moderate to minor shows of unproducible character were detected at scattered
intervals in the Lange Formation. These were indicated by wet gas occurrences,
sediment extracts and oil recovered through mud injection in a test interval.
Trace shows were also recorded on claystones/limestones and silty layers in the
Spekk and Melke Formation. No producible oil or gas was en
wlbHistoryDateUpdated: 2016-07-06T00:00:00