Abstract

Summary In this article we present field results from two scale squeeze treatments carried out on the same subsea horizontal well from the Strathspey field in the North Sea. The initial squeeze was a bullhead application of phosphonate scale inhibitor to control a sulfate scale problem in a horizontal well. Ten months after the initial treatment a second bullhead squeeze treatment was applied in two stages. This latter utilized a thermally degraded pelleted wax diverter to temporarily impair the injectivity in the heel region of the horizontal well thus allowing propagation of the second stage of the squeeze treatment into the midsection of the horizontal well. In this article we show the significance of production logging tool data to evaluate the location of deposited scale and water production prior to a squeeze treatment. These data were used to design a novel two stage squeeze treatment in which an initial squeeze slug was applied to the heel region followed by application of a pelleted thermally degraded wax diverter to prevent further loss of scale inhibitor to the heel region. The action of the wax diverter allowed a second scale inhibitor slug to be placed further along the horizontal section of the well. Details of the diverter selection and the squeeze design strategy implemented in this squeeze treatment will be presented. During the field treatment, physical (downhole pressure and temperature) data and chemical (nonradioactive tracers, inhibitor and ion concentrations) data were recorded. These data will be used to indicate the success of the diversion treatment by a comparison with the first squeeze applied to the same well 10 months previously. This is the first successful application of a thermally degraded wax diverter to a subsea horizontal well in the North Sea basin. The well was successfully treated with no process upset during flowback and no decline in well production while allowing the well bore to be protected from continued sulfate scale formation. In this article it is clearly shown that with the correct selection of both the scale inhibitor and diverter agent together with ulitization of all available information relating to the reservoir, it is possible to squeeze scale inhibitors into subsea horizontal wells without the need for intervention by expensive coiled tubing from a diving support vessel.

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