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The APPEA Journal The APPEA Journal Society
Journal of Australian Energy Producers
RESEARCH ARTICLE

CHARACTERISING THE FULL STRESS TENSOR BASED ON OBSERVATIONS OF DRILLING-INDUCED WELLBORE FAILURES IN VERTICAL AND INCLINED BOREHOLES LEADING TO IMPROVED WELLBORE STABILITY AND PERMEABILITY PREDICTION

C.A. Barton, D.A. Castillo, D. Moos, P. Peska and M.D. Zoback

The APPEA Journal 38(1) 466 - 487
Published: 1998

Abstract

To minimise wellbore failures in unstable environments, knowledge of the complete stress tensor is crucial to designing optimally-stable borehole trajectories, selecting suitable mud weights, and determining appropriate casing points. Understanding how the in situ stress field interacts with the drilling and production of a well enables one to design for maximum stability and to facilitate intersecting the greatest population of hydraulically-conductive fractures for efficient production. Knowledge of the in situ stress field is also important to reduce uncertainties in sand production prediction to allow more aggressive completion designs and production schedules.

A new interactive software system, Stress and Failure of Inclined Boreholes (SFIB) (Peska and Zoback, 1995a) is used to demonstrate how observations of drilling-induced compressive and tensile wellbore failures from acoustic and electrical images in vertical and inclined boreholes can be integrated with routinely-collected drilling data (leak-off and drill stem tests) to construct a well-constrained stress tensor. These techniques can also exploit wellbore image data to constrain in situ rock strength in vertical and inclined wells. This paper illustrates how to apply this knowledge to limit wellbore instability, design optimally stable wellbores, develop constraints that help mitigate problems associated with sand production, and optimise productivity of fractured reservoirs.

In addition to mapping drilling-induced wellbore features, image data can also be used to determine the distribution, orientation, and apparent aperture of natural fractures and fault systems. With knowledge of the orientations and magnitudes of the in situ stresses it is possible to identify the subset of fractures that are likely to be hydraulically conductive.

Examples of recent applications in the North Sea, Gulf of Mexico, California, and Puerto Rico illustrating how this integrated approach can be used in a variety of tectonic settings.

https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ97023

© CSIRO 1998

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