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General
Well 31/3-2 was drilled immediately to the southeast of a fault that was interpreted as a boundary fault between Troll West and Troll East. The main objectives of the appraisal well 31/3-2 were to determine if hydrocarbons were present on the downthrown south side of the fault, to determine the contacts, and to determine the degree of communication across the fault plane. A test would be performed in the case of moveable hydrocarbons, in order to observe boundary effects where the pay zone is narrow and thin. The well was planned to reach total depth in the Early Jurassic Drake Formation at 2050 m if drilling through the "boundary fault". In the case of drilling entirely within the hanging-wall block the total depth was estimated to 2130 m.
Operations and results
Well 31/3-2 was spudded with the semi-submersible installation Treasure Seeker on 5 March 1984 and drilled to TD at 2090 m in claystones of the Early Jurassic Drake Formation. No significant technical problems occurred during drilling and testing. The well was drilled with pre-hydrated gel/seawater with sweeps of high viscous mud down to 629 m and with KCl/polymer mud from 629 m to TD.
The Sognefjord Formation (1567 - 1706 m)
was found oil bearing down to 1578.5 m where the oil/water contact was
established. The oil-bearing reservoir consisted of very fine to very
coarse-grained sandstones. They are friable to loose with only traces of
siliceous or calcareous cement. The total net sand in the Sognefjord Formation
was calculated to 132 m out of 139 m gross thickness, giving a net/gross ratio
of 0.95 and an average porosity of 26.6%. A thin (0.5 m) gas cap could be
present on top of the oil column. This was identified from LDT/CNL logs and was
also consistent with the GOR development during the test, but was not confirmed
by RFT data. There were no oil shows above the Sognefjord Formation, and no oil
shows below1595 m, and the Middle to Early Jurassic sa
wlbHistoryDateUpdated: 2016-05-19T00:00:00