Specialist directional coiled tubing drilling service company AnTech Ltd has launched RockView technology to provide real-time, high resolution geosteering possible for the first time
The breakthrough is expected to enable more accurate wellbore placement than ever before and provide a tangible decrease in the amount of footage drilled out of the zone. This will lead to a direct improvement in the production of a well.
Predicting the exact position of a target reservoir from the surface is difficult and utilises geosteering to analyse the cuttings returning from the bit or with logging while drilling tools positioned back from the bit. Both of these methods involve a delay between the time that the bit drills a formation and the time that the formation is identified.
The new RockView service works by using the measurements gathered from the full range of sensors on AnTech’s latest generation COLT and POLARIS BHAs. Using proprietary techniques, these can be combined to determine how hard it is to drill through a particular rock formation.
The new technology aims to provide considerable advantages over current methods of geosteering, which are accurate but suffer from limitations which create the delay in the transmission of data.
RockView has been developed to mitigate that delay in service for wells that can be drilled with coil tubing. It provides near instantaneous information about conditions at the bit and fine linear resolution. The directional driller can determine which formation is being drilled by comparing to logs prepared by the geologists.
The well trajectory can be adjusted to keep the drill bit in zone thereby avoiding the overshooting that can be caused by other geosteering methods.
“Predictability reduces the financial risk to operators and provides a much-needed increase in drilling efficiency, which has sometimes been lacking in the industry,” said Toni Miszewski, managing director of AnTech Ltd.