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General
Well 2/4-18 R is located in the northern part of the block, on the eastern margin of the Feda Graben, Southern Norwegian North Sea. A number of wells originally operated by SAGA are located in this area on the Hidra Terrace, in the transition zone between the Hidra High-Steinbit Terrace to the NE, and the Feda Graben to the SW. The structural elements are separated by large NW-SE striking normal fault systems, forming series of rotated and downstepping terraces towards the axis of the Central Graben. The main objective of well was to test the reservoir potential of the Late Jurassic in a down-dip position with respect to previous wells 2/4-14 and 2/4-16. Secondary prospects were to be evaluated in the Late and Early Cretaceous. Planned TD was 5042 m +/- 150 m.
Operations and results
Well 2/4-18 R was spudded with the jack-up installation Maersk Guardian on19 February 1994 and drilled to TD at 5310 m in the Late Jurassic Farsund Formation. Drilling went without significant technical problems and close to the planned time schedule. The well was drilled with spud mud down to 521 m; with gel mud from 521 m to 1008 m; with pseudo oil based mud (Novadrill with poly-alpha-olefins from 1008 m to 3230 m, and with HI TEMP Polymer mud from 3230 m to TD.
The well penetrated 3048 m of sediments
confined to the Holocene-Eocene Nordland and Hordaland Groups. As in the
previous wells in the area, the uppermost 900 m was composed of sand and clay.
The rest was dominated by claystones with thin beds of limestone and sandstone.
The Lowermost Eocene-Early Paleocene Rogaland Group proved a thickness of 193
m. The uppermost part was characteristically containing tuffaceous claystones.
The middle part was dominated by claystones with traces of limestone/dolomite,
whereas limestones and marls dominated the lower part. The Early Paleocene -
Late Cretaceous Shetland Group had a thickness of 1113 m, and rested
unconformable on the 252 m thick, Ear
wlbHistoryDateUpdated: 2016-07-06T00:00:00