Abstract

Abstract Long horizontal wells in naturally fractured carbonate reservoirs often exhibit very high water-cut within months of production because of the early arrival of water from natural fractures. Passive inflow control devices (P-ICDs) have been used globally to balance influx, delay water or gas breakthrough to prolong well life. However, some wells have continued to experience high water-cut despite the control measures. Image log review has revealed the uncertainty is in the identification of fractures and its conductivity networks. Two additional zonal control technologies are presented in this paper: on/off ICDs and intelligent (IC) or smart completions in comparison. A software-based 3D reservoir model was built to represent a horizontal oil-producer in a fractured carbonate reservoir penetrating a thin oil rim. The first model simulated well production performance in a well with on/off ICD. Intervention was replicated in time (i.e., taking longer) to shut-off ICDs. The second model evaluated production forecast over the same period for the same well, this time equipped with an IC in the open hole (OH). Actions in this case were taken right away from the surface (i.e. without downhole intervention) to identify and restrict or shut-off intervals with water breakthrough. Time-lapsed 3D reservoir model calibration is possible with ICs as they provide real-time downhole pressure and temperature across each interval. The timely control of zonal valves from surface actuation reduced production of water or gas. On/off ICDs, on the other hand, necessitated scheduling a production log (PL) to confirm the interval of water or gas breakthrough and performing coiled-tubing (CT) intervention to shut-off the problematic zone. Intervention comes at cost of interrupting well production and reducing net oil recovery. A simplified cost-benefit analysis of both cases showed that despite a higher initial capital investment in ICs, well operating costs were substantially lower with higher oil recovery. In IC solution, costs for running production logs and intervention tools were eliminated and so was the risk of losing these tools in the hole and the loss in production during the intervention period. Continuous monitoring of downhole pressure data helped reservoir characterization and prediction of reservoir production behavior without compromising production on-stream time. A comparison of different reservoir flow control devices suggests that ICs are the optimal choice in some fractured carbonate reservoir conditions. They provide real-time monitoring of each producing zone and surface control of the flow control valve (FCV) settings in real-time as reservoir performance changes. They enable production testing evaluation—without production logging and interventive shifting with CT, i.e. to determine the source of water entry and optimization of multi-zone production without downhole intervention.

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