Abstract

Summary For successful delivery of well integrity (WI), there needs to be an understanding of the risks that can cause undesirable events such as safety hazards or loss of containment. Performing a risk assessment (RA) on a well, or type of well, will help determine and rank the potential risks and provide information that allows limited resources to be applied in the most effective manner. The main objectives of performing a risk assessment include (a) following a formal process to assess risk consistently and to enable comparison between well-barrier failure-mode scenarios; (b) qualitatively assessing well-barrier failure risk for every segment of a well; (c) documenting suggestions that are offered by the riskassessment team for mitigating well-barrier failure risk; and (d) providing a report of the methodology, failure-mode scenarios, risk ranking, and potential mitigation actions for use as a reference tool for managing WI on a routine basis. Our WI/RA model follows a common qualitative risk-assessment process—a team-based, structured brainstorming format, using the "What-If Methodology" to identify potential hazards associated with well-barrier failure modes. In addition, the model has the following attributes: It incorporates a unique method to segment well barriers into discrete sections, successively "failing" each section for evaluation. The list of analyzed well-barrier failure modes, along with their risk ranking, becomes the risk register for the well or type of well.It is adaptable for assessing well-barrier failure modes on a single well, or a group of wells, having the same general design parameters. An entire well portfolio can be assessed quickly by analyzing types of wells rather than individual wells.It can be used to assess well-barrier failure risk for any type of well.The model can easily be modified to conform to any company's risk model.The WI/RA model has been proven toSuccessfully assess well-barrier failure risk for thousands of wellsFocus specifically on well-barrier failure modes, and as a result be an effective tool that should be incorporated into a "best-in-class" WI programBe used as a management tool to provide guidance for how limited resources can be used effectively to continuously deliver WI.

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