North Sea Well Access Restored Through Intelligent Wireline Intervention Well-Safe Solutions Recovers 11,575 ft of Slickline Lost in a Well After 15 Years Collection of data with minimal pressure loss in flowing wells Contingency barrier option on high-value subsea wells Recovery of magnetic junk in high temperature wells Hard scale removal at multiple obstruction points Retrieval of equipment lost in the well and fast-track production restart High deviation, heavy-duty fishing, North Sea Recovery of safety valve lockout tool which had parted downhole Retrieval of sub-surface safety valve (SSSV) with damaged fish neck Retrieval of injection valve backed off from 7-in retrievable bridge plug Trial deployment of slickline-set SIM plugs and Peak latch/seal micro coil stinger Data acquisition to monitor pressure buildup in a shut-in well Bespoke activation tool design Evaluation of an e-line deployed tractor, stroker, and slickline toolstring Trial test to remove hard scale from production tubing using mechanical means Cut wire at rope socket to retrieve stuck toolstring Retrieval of injection valve from tubing crossover at 10,400 ft High-deviation fishing at depth in the Middle East Isolation of failed inflow valve at high deviation Location and stabilization of a leak path in the completion string Innovative use of an LWIV to perform first subsea slickline intervention in Nigeria Efficient straddle solution enables repair of production Christmas tree Permanent plug keeps P&A project moving Peak eCutter facilitates faster stuck toolstring recovery in long-reach, highly-deviated well > Retrievable sand screen anchoring system eliminates leaks Mechanical scale removal saves USD 250,000 PTTEP gas lift straddle conversion restores oil production for mature well Slickline-deployed plug isolates damage to avoid workover KOC restores oil production to 800 bbl/d using digital-slickline-conveyed straddle system D-Set setting tool and DSL digital slickline cable set large-bore gauge hanger in monobore well Retrievable bridge plug enables proper tubing cut and saves 4 rig days, Congo Remote Intervention Operation Enables Effective Planning of Plug and Abandonment Campaign Shell Removes 900-ft Parted Wireline from North Sea Well Setting a Critical Well Barrier in Tubing with Damaged Nipple Profiles

Retrievable sand screen anchoring system eliminates leaks

Retrievable configuration creates a production path with twice the expected gas flow.

Slickline configuration by Peak Well Systems avoids the need to run recompletion on well and reduces total service costs by 50%.

The operator’s concerns

An oil and gas operator in Indonesia wanted to increase gas production from new perforation intervals in an existing 27°-deviation well with 4.5-in 13Cr-80 tubing. However,  well deviation was expected to produce sand from the zones, and the operator also wanted to ensure there would be no leaks from the new sand screen assembly.

What they tried first

Coiled tubing (CT) deployment was considered, but that would have required a large equipment footprint on the platform deck, complex equipment mobilization, and significantly more field personnel. Because there was a personnel limit on board, this solution was not feasible.

What was recommended

Peak Well Systems recommended using a retrievable sand screen anchoring system based on the SIM* sealing integrity management system deployed by slickline. Its stinger and receptacle latching and sealing system ensures no leak can occur from any of the sand screen assembly’s joints. After the strings of sand screen are installed above the bottom anchor, the SIM system retrievable bridge plug is installed on the last run to seal off and isolate the upper section. The solution by Peak Well Systems would be significantly more cost effective and less complex than a CT operation.

What happened

Using the retrievable sand screen anchoring system by Peak Well Systems reduced the total service cost by 50% compared with the cost of a CT operation. It also eliminated the need to run recompletion to install new sand screen packs in existing completion strings. And it mitigated against future reruns of sand screen joints.

Beyond this, the retrievable configuration created a gas production path through the screen packs at 6 MMcf/d—approximately twice the expected flow rate of 3.1 MMcf/d. The method helped the operator maintain rigless operations for well intervention. It also reduced the number of personnel directly involved with the field installation from 10 people to 5. The operator chose this installation method as the preferred way for upcoming retrievable sand screen programs.

 

Product Code(s): SIM Retrievable Bridge Plug - 351
*Mark of Schlumberger