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Oil well



 
 
An oil well is a general term for any boring through the Earth
Earth

Earth is the third planet from the Sun. Earth is the largest of the terrestrial planets in the Solar System in diameter, mass and density. It is also referred to as the World and Wiktionary:Terra.Note that by International Astronomical Union convention, the term "Terra" is used for naming extensive land masses, rather...
's surface designed to find and produce petroleum
Petroleum

Petroleum or crude oil is a naturally occurring, flammable liquid found in rock formations in the Earth consisting of a complex mixture of hydrocarbons of various molecular weights, plus other organic compounds....
 oil
Petroleum

Petroleum or crude oil is a naturally occurring, flammable liquid found in rock formations in the Earth consisting of a complex mixture of hydrocarbons of various molecular weights, plus other organic compounds....
 hydrocarbons. Usually some natural gas
Natural gas

Natural gas is a gas consisting primarily of methane. It is found associated with fossil fuels, in coal beds, as methane clathrates, and is created by methanogenic organisms in marshes, bogs, and landfills....
 is produced along with the oil, and a well designed to produce mainly or only gas may be termed a gas well.

The earliest known oil well
Oil well

An oil well is a general term for any boring through the Earth's surface designed to find and produce petroleum Petroleum hydrocarbons. Usually some natural gas is produced along with the oil, and a well designed to produce mainly or only gas may be termed a gas well....
s were drilled in China
China

China is a Culture of China, an ancient civilization, and, depending on perspective, a national or multinational entity extending over a large area in East Asia....
 in 347 CE
Common Era

Common Era, abbreviated as CE, is a designation for the calendar system most commonly used in the Western world, and also internationally, for numbering the year part of the calendar date....
.






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An oil well is a general term for any boring through the Earth
Earth

Earth is the third planet from the Sun. Earth is the largest of the terrestrial planets in the Solar System in diameter, mass and density. It is also referred to as the World and Wiktionary:Terra.Note that by International Astronomical Union convention, the term "Terra" is used for naming extensive land masses, rather...
's surface designed to find and produce petroleum
Petroleum

Petroleum or crude oil is a naturally occurring, flammable liquid found in rock formations in the Earth consisting of a complex mixture of hydrocarbons of various molecular weights, plus other organic compounds....
 oil
Petroleum

Petroleum or crude oil is a naturally occurring, flammable liquid found in rock formations in the Earth consisting of a complex mixture of hydrocarbons of various molecular weights, plus other organic compounds....
 hydrocarbons. Usually some natural gas
Natural gas

Natural gas is a gas consisting primarily of methane. It is found associated with fossil fuels, in coal beds, as methane clathrates, and is created by methanogenic organisms in marshes, bogs, and landfills....
 is produced along with the oil, and a well designed to produce mainly or only gas may be termed a gas well.

Oil Well
The earliest known oil well
Oil well

An oil well is a general term for any boring through the Earth's surface designed to find and produce petroleum Petroleum hydrocarbons. Usually some natural gas is produced along with the oil, and a well designed to produce mainly or only gas may be termed a gas well....
s were drilled in China
China

China is a Culture of China, an ancient civilization, and, depending on perspective, a national or multinational entity extending over a large area in East Asia....
 in 347 CE
Common Era

Common Era, abbreviated as CE, is a designation for the calendar system most commonly used in the Western world, and also internationally, for numbering the year part of the calendar date....
. They had depths of up to about and were drilled using bits
Drill bit

Drill bits are cutting tools used to create cylindrical holes. Bits are held in a tool called a drill, which rotates them and provides torque and axial force to create the hole....
 attached to bamboo
Bamboo

The bamboos are a group of woody perennial plant evergreen plants in the true grass family Poaceae, subfamily Bambusoideae, tribe Bambuseae....
 poles. The oil was burned to evaporate brine
Brine

File:Kissingen-Solepumpe-1848.JPGFile:Kissingen-Solepumpe-1848-2.JPGBrine is water Saturation or nearly saturated with a Salt .It is used to preserve vegetables, fish, and meat, in a process known as brining ....
 and produce salt
Sodium chloride

Sodium chloride, also known as common salt, table salt, or halite, is a chemical compound with the chemical formula SodiumChlorine....
. By the 10th century, extensive bamboo
Bamboo

The bamboos are a group of woody perennial plant evergreen plants in the true grass family Poaceae, subfamily Bambusoideae, tribe Bambuseae....
 pipelines connected oil wells with salt springs. The ancient records of China and Japan
Japan

Japan is an island country in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean, it lies to the east of the Sea of Japan, People's Republic of China, North Korea, South Korea and Russia, stretching from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea and Taiwan in the south....
 are said to contain many allusions to the use of natural gas for lighting and heating. Petroleum was known as burning water in Japan in the 7th century.

The Middle East
Middle East

File:GreaterMiddleEast1.pngThe Middle East is a region that spans southwestern Asia, western Asia, and northeastern Africa. It has no clear boundaries, often used as a synonym to Near East, in opposition to Far East....
's petroleum industry
Petroleum industry

The petroleum industry includes the global processes of Hydrocarbon exploration, Extraction of petroleum, Oil refinery, transporting , and marketing petroleum List of crude oil products....
 was established by the 8th century, when the street
Street

A street is a public thoroughfare in the built environment. It is a public parcel of landform adjoining buildings in an urban area context, on which people may freely assemble, interact, and move about....
s of the newly constructed Baghdad
Baghdad

Baghdad is the Capital of Iraq and of Baghdad Governorate, with which it is also coterminous. With a municipal population estimated at 6.5 million, it is the largest city in Iraq, and the second largest city in the Arab World....
 were paved with tar
Tar

Tar is modified resin produced from the wood and roots of pine by destructive distillation under pyrolysis. It is a viscosity black liquid. Production and trade in tar was a major contributor in the economies of Northern Europe and Colonial America....
, derived from petroleum that became accessible from natural fields in the region. Petroleum was distilled
Distillation

Distillation is a method of separation process mixtures based on differences in their Volatility in a boiling liquid mixture. Distillation is a unit operation, or a physical separation process, and not a chemical reaction....
 by the Persian
Persian people

Persian identity, at least in terms of language, is traced to the ancient Indo-Iranians , who arrived in parts of Greater Iran circa 2000-1500 BCE....
 alchemist Muhammad ibn Zakariya Razi (Rhazes) in the 9th century, producing chemicals such as kerosene
Kerosene

Kerosene, sometimes spelled kerosine in scientific and industrial usage, also known as paraffin, is a combustible hydrocarbon liquid....
 in the alembic
Alembic

An alembic is an alchemy still consisting of two retorts connected by a tube. Technically, the alembic is only the upper part , while the lower part is the cucurbit, but the word was often used to refer to the entire distillation apparatus....
 (al-ambiq), and which was mainly used for kerosene lamp
Kerosene lamp

The kerosene lamp is any type of lighting device which uses kerosene as a fuel. There are two main types of kerosene lamp which work in different ways, the "wick lamp" and the "pressure lamp"....
s. Arab and Persian chemists
Alchemy and chemistry in Islam

Alchemy and chemistry in Islam refers to the study of both traditional alchemy and early practical chemistry by Islamic science in the Islamic Golden Age....
 also distilled crude oil in order to produce flammable
Flammability

Flammability is defined at how easily something will burn or ignite, causing fire or combustion. The degree of difficulty required to cause the combustion of a substance is subject to quantification through fire testing....
 products for military purposes. Through Islamic Spain
Al-Andalus

Al-Andalus was the Arabic name given to the parts of the Iberian Peninsula governed by Arab Muslims, at various times in the period between 711 and 1492....
, distillation became available in Western Europe
Western Europe

Western Europe refers to the countries in the western most half of Europe. This concept has had different meanings, political and cultural as well as geographical issues have influenced the area....
 by the 12th century.

Some sources claim that from the 9th century, oil field
Oil field

An oil field is a region with an abundance of oil wells extracting petroleum from below ground. Because the oil reservoirs typically extend over a large area, possibly several hundred kilometres across, full exploitation entails multiple wells scattered across the area....
s were exploited in the area around modern Baku
Baku

Baku , sometimes known as Baqy, Baky, Baki or Bak?, is the capital, the largest city, and the largest port of Azerbaijan....
, Azerbaijan
Azerbaijan

Azerbaijan , officially the Republic of Azerbaijan , is the largest and most populous country in the South Caucasus, located partially in Eastern Europe and partially in Western Asia....
, to produce naphtha
Naphtha

Naphtha normally refers to a number of different flammable liquid mixtures of hydrocarbons, i.e. a distillation product from petroleum or coal tar boiling in a certain range and containing certain hydrocarbons, a broad term encompassing any volatile, flammable liquid hydrocarbon mixture....
 for the petroleum industry
Petroleum industry

The petroleum industry includes the global processes of Hydrocarbon exploration, Extraction of petroleum, Oil refinery, transporting , and marketing petroleum List of crude oil products....
. These fields were described by Marco Polo
Marco Polo

Marco Polo was a trader and exploration from the Venetian Republic who gained fame for his worldwide travels, recorded in the book Il Milione also known as Oriente Poliano and the Description of the World....
 in the 13th century, who described the output of those oil wells as hundreds of shiploads. When Marco Polo in 1264 visited the Azerbaijani city of Baku, on the shores of the Caspian Sea, he saw oil being collected from seeps. He wrote that "on the confines toward Geirgine there is a fountain from which oil springs in great abundance, inasmuch as a hundred shiploads might be taken from it at one time."

Shallow pits were dug at the Baku seeps in ancient times to facilitate collecting oil, and hand-dug holes up to 35 meters (115 ft) deep were in use by 1594. These holes were essentially oil wells. Apparently 116 of these wells in 1830 produced 3,840 metric tons (about 28000 barrels) of oil. In 1849, Russian engineer F.N. Semyenov used a cable tool to drill an oil well on the Apsheron Peninsula, ten years before Colonel Drake's famous well in Pennsylvania. Also, offshore drilling started up at Baku at Bibi-Eibat field near the end of the 19th century, about the same time that the first offshore oil well was drilled in 1896 at Summerland field on the California Coast. The earliest oil wells were drilled percussively by hammering a cable tool
Drilling rig

A drilling rig is a machine which creates holes and/or shafts in the ground. Drilling rigs can be massive structures housing equipment used to drill water wells, oil wells, or natural gas extraction wells or they can be small enough to be moved manually by one person....
 into the earth. Soon after, cable tools were replaced with rotary drilling, which could drill boreholes to much greater depths and in less time. The record-depth Kola Borehole
Kola Superdeep Borehole

File:???????? ????????????? ????????.jpgThe Kola Superdeep Borehole was the result of a scientific drilling project of the former USSR. The project attempted to drill as deep as possible into the Earth's Crust ....
 used non-rotary mud motor drilling to achieve a depth of over 12 000 meters (38,000 ft). Until the 1970s, most oil wells were vertical (although different lithology and mechanical imperfections cause most wells to deviate at least slightly from true vertical). However, modern directional drilling
Directional drilling

Directional drilling is the practice of drilling non-vertical oil wells. It can be broken down into three main groups: Oilfield Directional Drilling, Utility Installation Directional Drilling and in-seam directional drilling ....
 technologies allow for strongly deviated wells which can, given sufficient depth and with the proper tools, actually become horizontal. This is of great value as the reservoir
Petroleum geology

Petroleum geology refers to the specific set of geological disciplines that are applied to the search for hydrocarbons ....
 rocks which contain hydrocarbons are usually horizontal, or sub-horizontal; a horizontal wellbore placed in a production zone has more surface area in the production zone than a vertical well, resulting in a higher production rate. The use of deviated and horizontal drilling has also made it possible to reach reservoirs several kilometers or miles away from the drilling location (extended reach drilling), allowing for the production of hydrocarbons located below locations that are either difficult to place a drilling rig on, environmentally sensitive, or populated.

Life of a well

The creation and life of a well can be divided up into five segments:
  • Planning
  • Drilling
  • Completion
  • Production
  • Abandonment


Drilling

The well is created by drilling a hole 5 to 36 inch
Inch

An inch is the name of a Units of measurement of length in a number of different systems, including Imperial units, and United States customary units....
es (127.0 mm to 914.4 mm) diameter into the earth with a drilling rig which rotates a drill string
Drill string

A drill string on an oil rig is a column, or string, of drill pipe that transmits drilling fluid and rotational power to the drill bit#well drilling bits....
 with a bit attached. After the hole is drilled, sections of steel tubing (casing), slightly smaller in diameter than the borehole, are placed in the hole. Cement may be placed between the outside of the casing and the borehole. The casing provides structural integrity to the newly drilled wellbore in addition to isolating potentially dangerous high pressure zones from each other and from the surface.

With these zones safely isolated and the formation protected by the casing, the well can be drilled deeper (into potentially more-unstable and violent formations) with a smaller bit, and also cased with a smaller size casing. Modern wells often have 2-5 sets of subsequently smaller hole sizes drilled inside one another, each cemented with casing.

To drill the well
  • The drill bit, aided by the weight of thick walled pipes called "drill collars" above it, cuts into the rock. There are different types of drillbit, some cause the rock to fail by compressive failure. Others shear slices off the rock as the bit turns.
  • Drilling fluid
    Drilling fluid

    Drilling a very deep hole is a very costly business. The hole size is kept very small as the drilled depth increases because it is to cased and cemented after wards....
     (aka "mud") is pumped down the inside of the drill pipe and exits at the drill bit. Drilling mud is a complex mixture of fluids, solids and chemicals which must be carefully tailored to provide the correct physical and chemical characteristics required to safely drill the well., Particular functions of the drilling mud include cooling the bit, lifting rock cuttings to the surface, preventing destabilisation of the rock in the wellbore walls and overcoming the pressure of fluids inside the rock so that these fluids don't enter the wellbore.
  • The generated rock "cuttings
    Drill cuttings

    Drill cuttings refers to any material removed from a borehole while drilling Oil well. Although sand and shale make up the majority of the cuttings encountered while drilling a well, depending on the location, any number of Geologic_formation will actually be encountered....
    " are swept up by the drilling fluid as it circulates back to surface outside the drill pipe. The fluid then goes through "shakers
    Shale shakers

    Shale shakers are devices that remove drill cuttings from the drilling fluid while circulating and drilling. There are many different designs and research into the best design is constantly ongoing since solids control is vital in keeping down costs associated with the drilling fluid....
    " which strain the cuttings from the good fluid which is returned to the pit. Watching for abnormalities in the returning cuttings and monitoring pit volume or rate of returning fluid are imperative to catch "kicks" (when the formation pressure at the depth of the bit is more than the hydrostatic head of the mud above, which if not controlled temporarily by closing the blowout preventers
    Blowout preventer

    A blowout preventer is a large valve that can seal off at the surface a well being drilled or worked over. During drilling or well intervention, the valve may be closed if overpressure from an underground zone causes formation fluids such as oil or natural gas to enter the wellbore and threaten the rig....
     and ultimately by increasing the density of the drilling fluid would allow formation fluids and mud to come up uncontrollably) early.
  • The pipe or drill string
    Drill string

    A drill string on an oil rig is a column, or string, of drill pipe that transmits drilling fluid and rotational power to the drill bit#well drilling bits....
     to which the bit is attached is gradually lengthened as the well gets deeper by screwing in additional 30-foot (10 m) joints (i.e., sections) of pipe under the kelly
    Kelly drive

    A kelly drive refers to a type of well drilling device on a Drilling rig that employs a section of pipe with an outer surface that is square, hexagonal or octagonal, which passes through the kelly bushing and Rotary_table_%28drilling_rig%29....
     or topdrive at the surface. This process is called making a connection. Usually joints are combined into 3 joints equaling 1 stand. Some smaller rigs only use 2 joints and some rigs can handle stands of 4 joints.


This process is all facilitated by a drilling rig
Drilling rig

A drilling rig is a machine which creates holes and/or shafts in the ground. Drilling rigs can be massive structures housing equipment used to drill water wells, oil wells, or natural gas extraction wells or they can be small enough to be moved manually by one person....
 which contains all necessary equipment to circulate the drilling fluid, hoist and turn the pipe, control downhole pressures, remove cuttings from the drilling fluid, and generate onsite power for these operations.

Completion

After drilling and casing the well, it must be 'completed'. Completion is the process in which the well is enabled to produce oil
Petroleum

Petroleum or crude oil is a naturally occurring, flammable liquid found in rock formations in the Earth consisting of a complex mixture of hydrocarbons of various molecular weights, plus other organic compounds....
 or gas.

In a cased-hole completion, small holes called perforations
Perforation (oil well)

A perforation in the context of oil wells, refers to a hole punched in the Casing or liner of an oil well to connect it to the Oil reservoir ....
 are made in the portion of the casing
Casing (oil well)

Casing is large diameter pipe that is assembled and inserted into a recently drilled section of a borehole and typically cemented into place....
 which passed through the production zone, to provide a path for the oil to flow from the surrounding rock into the production tubing. In open hole completion, often 'sand screens' or a 'gravel pack' is installed in the last drilled, uncased reservoir section. These maintain structural integrity of the wellbore in the absence of casing, while still allowing flow from the reservoir into the wellbore. Screens also control the migration of formation sands into production tubulars and surface equipment, which can cause washouts and other problems, particularly from unconsolidated sand formations in offshore fields.

After a flow path is made, acids and fracturing fluids are pumped into the well to fracture
Hydraulic fracturing

Hydraulic fracturing is a method used to create Fracture that extend from a borehole into rock formations, which are typically maintained by a proppant, a material such as grains of sand or other material which prevent the fractures from closing....
, clean, or otherwise prepare and stimulate the reservoir rock to optimally produce hydrocarbons into the wellbore. Finally, the area above the reservoir section of the well is packed off inside the casing, and connected to the surface via a smaller diameter pipe called tubing. This arrangement provides a redundant barrier to leaks of hydrocarbons as well as allowing damaged sections to be replaced. Also, the smaller diameter of the tubing produces hydrocarbons at an increased velocity in order to overcome the hydrostatic effects of heavy fluids such as water.

In many wells, the natural pressure of the subsurface reservoir is high enough for the oil or gas to flow to the surface. However, this is not always the case, especially in depleted fields where the pressures have been lowered by other producing wells, or in low permeability oil reservoirs. Installing a smaller diameter tubing may be enough to help the production, but artificial lift methods may also be needed. Common solutions include downhole pumps, gas lift, or surface pump jacks
Pumpjack

Pumpjacks are the overground drives for a reciprocating piston pump installed in a borehole. It is used to mechanically lift liquid out of the well if there is not enough bottom hole pressure for the liquid to flow all the way to the surface....
. Many new systems in the last ten years have been introduced for well completion. Multiple packer
Production packer

A production packer is a standard component of the completion hardware of Oil well used to provide a seal between the outside of the production tubing and the inside of the casing, liner, or wellbore wall....
 systems with frac ports or port collars in an all in one system have cut completion costs and improved production, especially in the case of horizontal wells. These new systems allow casings to run into the lateral zone with proper packer/frac port placement for optimal hydrocarbon recovery.

Production

The production stage is the most important stage of a well's life, when the oil and gas are produced. By this time, the oil rigs and workover rig
Workover

The term workover is used to refer to any kind of oil well well intervention involving invasive techniques, such as wireline, coiled tubing or snubbing....
s used to drill and complete the well have moved off the wellbore, and the top is usually outfitted with a collection of valves called a production tree. These valves regulate pressures, control flows, and allow access to the wellbore in case further completion work is needed. From the outlet valve of the production tree, the flow can be connected to a distribution network of pipelines and tanks to supply the product to refineries, natural gas compressor stations, or oil export terminals.

As long as the pressure in the reservoir remains high enough, the production tree is all that is required to produce the well. If the pressure depletes and it is considered economically viable, an artificial lift method mentioned in the completions section can be employed.

Workover
Workover

The term workover is used to refer to any kind of oil well well intervention involving invasive techniques, such as wireline, coiled tubing or snubbing....
s are often necessary in older wells, which may need smaller diameter tubing, scale or paraffin removal, acid matrix jobs, or completing new zones of interest in a shallower reservoir. Such remedial work can be performed using workover rigs – also known as pulling units or completion rigs – to pull and replace tubing, or by the use of well intervention
Well intervention

A well intervention, or 'well work', is any operation carried out on a Oil well during , or at the end of its productive life, that alters the state of the well and or well geometry, provides well diagnostics or manages the production of the well....
 techniques utilizing coiled tubing
Coiled tubing

Coiled tubing refers to metal piping, normally 1" to 2.875" in diameter, used for Well intervention in oil well and sometimes as production tubing in depleted gas wells, which comes spooled on a large reel....
. Depending on the type of lift system and wellhead a rod rig or flushby can be used to change a pump without pulling the tubing.

Enhanced recovery methods such as water flooding, steam flooding, or CO2 flooding may be used to increase reservoir pressure and provide a "sweep" effect to push hydrocarbons out of the reservoir. Such methods require the use of injection wells (often chosen from old production wells in a carefully determined pattern), and are used when facing problems with reservoir pressure depletion, high oil viscosity, or can even be employed early in a field's life. In certain cases – depending on the reservoir's geomechanics – reservoir engineers may determine that ultimate recoverable oil may be increased by applying a waterflooding strategy early in the field's development rather than later. Such enhanced recovery techniques are often called "tertiary recovery
Extraction of petroleum

The extraction of petroleum is the process by which usable petroleum is extracted and removed from the earth....
".

Abandonment

When the well no longer produces or produces so poorly that it is a liability, it is abandoned. In this process, tubing is removed from the well and sections of well bore are filled with cement to isolate the flow path between gas and water zones from each other, as well as the surface. Completely filling the well bore with cement is costly and unnecessary. The surface around the wellhead is then excavated, and the wellhead and casing are cut off, a cap is welded in place and then buried.

The production from an oil well declines in production. The point at which the well no longer makes a profit and is plugged and abandoned is called the “economic limit.” The equation to determine the economic limit contains four factors, namely: (1) taxes, (2) operating cost, (3) oil price, and (4) royalty. When oil taxes are raised, the economic limit is raised. When oil price is increased, the economic limit is lowered.

When the economic limit is raised, the life of the well is decreased. Proven oil reserves are lost when the life of an oil well is decreased. Inversely, when the economic limit is lowered, the life of the well is increased. Proven oil reserves are increased when the life of the well is increased.

At the economic limit there often is still a significant amount of unrecoverable oil left in the reservoir. It might be tempting to defer physical abandonment for an extended period of time, hoping that the oil price will go up or that new supplemental recovery techniques will be perfected. However, lease provisions and governmental regulations usually require quick abandonment; liability and tax concerns also may favor abandonment.

In theory an abandoned well can be reentered and restored to production (or converted to injection service for supplemental recovery or for downhole hydrocarbons storage), but reentry often proves to be difficult mechanically and not cost effective.

Types of wells

Oil wells come in many varieties. By produced fluid, there can be wells that produce oil, wells that produce oil
Oil

An oil is a chemical substance that is in a viscosity liquid state at room temperature or slightly warmer, and is both hydrophobic and lipophilic ....
 and natural gas
Natural gas

Natural gas is a gas consisting primarily of methane. It is found associated with fossil fuels, in coal beds, as methane clathrates, and is created by methanogenic organisms in marshes, bogs, and landfills....
, or wells that only produce natural gas. Natural gas is almost always a byproduct of producing oil, since the small, light gas carbon chains come out of solution as it undergoes pressure reduction from the reservoir to the surface, similar to uncapping a bottle of soda pop where the carbon dioxide effervesces. Unwanted natural gas can be a disposal problem at the well site. If there is not a market for natural gas near the wellhead
Wellhead

A wellhead is a general term used to describe the component that is used to suspend casing strings and provide sealing functionality for oil wells....
 it is virtually valueless since it must be piped to the end user. Until recently, such unwanted gas was burned off at the wellsite, but due to environmental concerns this practice is becoming less common. Often, unwanted (or 'stranded' gas without a market) gas is pumped back into the reservoir with an 'injection' well for disposal or repressurizing the producing formation. Another solution is to export the natural gas as a liquid. Gas-to-liquid, (GTL) is a developing technology that converts stranded natural gas into synthetic gasoline, diesel or jet fuel through the Fischer-Tropsch process developed in World War II Germany. Such fuels can be transported through conventional pipelines and tankers to users. Proponents claim GTL fuels burn cleaner than comparable petroleum fuels. Most major international oil companies are in advanced development stages of GTL production, with a world-scale (140,000 bbl/day) GTL plant in Qatar scheduled to come online before 2010. In locations such as the United States with a high natural gas demand, pipelines are constructed to take the gas from the wellsite to the end consumer.

Another obvious way to classify oil wells is by land or offshore wells. There is very little difference in the well itself. An offshore well targets a reservoir that happens to be underneath an ocean. Due to logistics, drilling an offshore well is far more costly than an onshore well. By far the most common type is the onshore well. These wells dot the Southern and Central Great Plains, Southwestern United States, and are the most common wells in the Middle East.

Another way to classify oil wells is by their purpose in contributing to the development of a resource. They can be characterized as:
  • production wells are drilled primarily for producing oil or gas, once the producing structure and characteristics are determined
  • appraisal wells are used to assess characteristics (such as flow rate) of a proven hydrocarbon accumulation
  • exploration wells are drilled purely for exploratory (information gathering) purposes in a new area
  • wildcat wells are drilled based on a large element of hope, in a frontier area where little is known about the subsurface. In the early days of oil exploration in Texas
    Texas

    Texas is a U.S. state located in the South Central United States, nicknamed the Lone Star State. Texas is the second largest U.S. state in both area and population, spanning , and with a growing population of 24.3 million residents....
    , wildcats were common as productive areas were not yet established. In modern times, oil exploration in many areas has reached a very mature phase and the chances of finding oil simply by drilling at random are very low, and much more effort is placed in exploration and appraisal wells.


At a producing well site, active wells may be further categorised as:
  • oil producers producing predominantly liquid hydrocarbons, but mostly with some associated gas.
  • gas producers producing almost entirely gaseous hydrocarbons.
  • water injectors injecting water
    Water injection (oil production)

    The water injection method used in Petroleum production is where water is injected back into the Oil field usually to increase pressure and thereby stimulate production....
     into the formation to maintain reservoir
    Oil reservoir

    A petroleum reservoir or an Crude oil and Natural gas reservoir , is a subsurface pool of hydrocarbons contained in Porosity rock formations....
     pressure or simply to dispose of water produced with the hydrocarbons because even after treatment, it would be too oily and too saline to be considered clean for dumping overboard, let alone into a fresh water source, in the case of onshore wells. Frequently water injection has an element of reservoir management and produced water disposal.
  • aquifer producers intentionally producing reservoir
    Oil reservoir

    A petroleum reservoir or an Crude oil and Natural gas reservoir , is a subsurface pool of hydrocarbons contained in Porosity rock formations....
     water for re-injection to manage pressure. This is in effect moving reservoir water from where it is not as useful to where it is more useful. These wells will generally only be used if produced water from the oil or gas producers is insufficient for reservoir management purposes. Using aquifer produced water rather than sea water is due to the chemistry.
  • gas injectors injecting gas into the reservoir often as a means of disposal or sequestering for later production, but also to maintain reservoir pressure.


Lahee classification
  • New Field Wildcat (NFW) – far from other producing fields and on a structure that has not previously produced.
  • New Pool Wildcat (NPW) – new pools on already producing structure.
  • Deeper Pool Test (DPT) – on already producing structure and pool, but on a deeper pay zone.
  • Shallower Pool Test (SPT) – on already producing structure and pool, but on a shallower pay zone.
  • Outpost (OUT) – usually two or more locations from nearest productive area.
  • Development Well (DEV) – can be on the extension of a pay zone, or between existing wells (Infill).


Cost

The following is a quick comparison of average well costs for the UK
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
 Continental Shelf
Continental shelf

The continental shelf is the extended perimeter of each continent and associated coastal plain, and was part of the continent during the glacial periods, but is undersea during Ice age such as the current epoch by relatively shallow seas and Bay....
 (UKCS). These costs exclude testing (e.g., flow rate testing), and are based on values from March 1998. Prices have doubled since then :

Typical well costs for UKCS wells in 1998
Well location Typical cost (in millions of £)
Northern North Sea
North Sea

The North Sea is a marginal sea, epeiric sea on the European continental shelf. The Dover Strait and the English Channel in the south and the Norwegian Sea in the north connect it to the Atlantic Ocean....
 
8 – 12
West of Shetland 5 – 15
Southern North Sea 7 – 12
Irish Sea
Irish Sea

The Irish Sea also known as the Mann Sea or Manx Sea, separates the islands of Ireland and Great Britain. It is connected to the Celtic Sea portion of the Atlantic Ocean by St George's Channel between Republic of Ireland and Wales, and to the north by the North Channel between Northern Ireland and Scotland which forms part of...
 
2 – 3


The cost of an offshore well depends strongly on the remoteness of the location being drilled. Hence the Irish Sea (shallow water, close to the coast) is cheap in comparison to the West of Shetland (deep water, far from the coast and other facilities). The 2006 cost of a Central North Sea high pressure, high temperature well is about $35-50 million. Deep water wells in the Gulf of Mexico can cost over $100 million.

Onshore wells can be considerably cheaper, particularly if the field is at a shallow depth, where costs range from less than $1 million to $15 million for deep and difficult wells.

Reefs

Offshore platforms, the well's supporting structure, produce artificial reef
Artificial reef

An artificial reef is a man-made, underwater structure, typically built for the purpose of promoting Marine biology#Reefs in areas of generally featureless bottom....
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See also

  • Expandable tubular technology
    Expandable Tubular Technology

    Expandable tubular technology is a system for increasing the diameter of the Casing or liner of an oil well by up to 20% after it has been run down-hole....
  • Formation evaluation
    Formation evaluation

    In petroleum exploration and development, formation evaluation is used to determine the ability of a borehole to produce petroleum. Essentially, it is the process of "recognizing a commercial well when you drill one"....
  • Geosteering
    Geosteering

    In the process of well drilling, geosteering is the act of adjusting the borehole position on the fly to reach one or more geological targets....
  • Logging while drilling
    Logging While Drilling

    Logging while drilling is a technique of conveying Well logging into the well borehole downhole as part of the bottom hole assembly .LWD tools work with its MWD system to transmit partial or complete measurement results to the surface via typically a drilling mud pulser or other improved techniques, while LWD tools are still in the borehole...
  • Measurement while drilling
    Measurement While Drilling

    Measurement while drilling is a system developed to make drilling related measurements and transmit information to the surface while drilling the well....
  • Mudlogger
    Mudlogger

    A mudlogger, or mud logger in the modern oil industry positions hydrocarbons with respect to depth. Their main responsibilities are to identify downhole lithology, position hydrocarbons, monitor natural gas, and draw well logs for use by the oil company geologist....
  • Oil gusher
    Oil gusher

    An oil gusher is an uncapped oil well connected to a oil reservoir of petroleum oil that is under high pressure. The oil can shoot 200 feet or higher into the air....
  • Oil reserves
    Oil reserves

    Oil reserves are the estimated quantities of crude oil that are claimed to be recoverable under existing economic and business operations conditions....
  • Oil well fire
    Oil well fire

    File:Iraq Oil Well Fire.JPGOil well fires are oil wells, commonly oil gushers, that have caught on fire, and Combustion uncontrollably. Oil well fires can be the result of human actions, such as accidents or arson or natural events, such as lightning....
  • Well logging
    Well logging

    Well logging, also known as borehole logging is the practice of making a detailed record of the geologic formations penetrated by a borehole....
  • Spindletop
    Spindletop

    Spindletop is a salt dome oil field located in south Beaumont, Texas, Texas in the United States. On January 10, 1901, a well at Spindletop struck oil ....
  • Subsea
    Subsea

    Subsea is a general term frequently used to refer to equipment, technology, and methods employed to explore, drill, and develop oil and gas fields that exist below the ocean floors....


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