Equinor strikes oil near Gudrun field in North Sea
Equinor has made an oil discovery near the Gudrun field following the conclusion of the drilling of wildcat wells 15/3-12 S and 15/3-12 A in the central part of the North Sea.
Equinor received drilling permits for the two North Sea wells in November 2019. The wells are located in production license 025 where Equinor is the operator.
The wells were drilled about 11 kilometres south-east of Gudrun, four kilometres south-east of the 15/3-4 (Sigrun) oil and gas discovery and 220 kilometres west of Stavanger.
The wells were drilled as sole risk wells by Equinor and Neptune Energy Norge.
The primary and secondary exploration targets for wildcat well 15/3-12 S were to prove petroleum in Middle and Upper Jurassic reservoir rocks (the Hugin and Draupne Formations), respectively.
The well encountered three separate oil-filled reservoir zones of 9, 4 and 9 metres in the Hugin Formation, which are about 100 metres thick. The reservoir zones mainly have moderate reservoir quality. The oil/water contacts were not encountered.
The exploration target for wildcat well 15/3-12 A was to prove petroleum in Upper and Middle Jurassic reservoir rocks (the Draupne and Hugin Formations), respectively.
The well encountered the Draupne and Hugin Formations with respective thicknesses of about 85 and 120 metres. Both formations are water-bearing. There are indications of oil in a thin, three-metre sandstone layer in the Sleipner Formation in the Middle Jurassic.
Preliminary estimates place the size of the oil discovery between 1.0 and 2.7 million standard cubic metres (Sm3) of recoverable oil. The development of the discovery as a tie-in to the Gudrun field will be considered.
No formation tests were performed, but extensive volumes of data have been collected and samples have been taken.
These are the tenth and eleventh exploration wells in production licence 025, which was awarded in licensing round 2-A in 1969.
The wells 15/3-12 S and 15/3-12 A were drilled to respective vertical depths of 3,652 and 3,796 metres below sea level, and respective measured depths of 3,771 and 3,999 metres below sea level.
Both wells were terminated in the Sleipner Formation in the Middle Jurassic. The water depth at the site is 109 metres. The wells have been permanently plugged and abandoned.
The wells were drilled by the West Phoenix drilling rig, which will now drill wildcat well 6507/8-10 S in production licence 889 in the Norwegian Sea, where Neptune Energy Norge is the operator.
Source: Offshore Energy Today