GREATER GREEN RIVER BASIN PRODUCTION IMPROVEMENT PROJECT
Author(s) -
Beverly Blakeney DeJarnett,
Frank H. Lim,
Lee F. Krystinik,
Mark L. Bacon
Publication year - 2001
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/810458
Subject(s) - coring , drilling , geology , completion (oil and gas wells) , hydraulic fracturing , frontier , petroleum engineering , logging , natural (archaeology) , mining engineering , structural basin , green river formation , engineering , geomorphology , paleontology , archaeology , geography , mechanical engineering , forestry
The Greater Green River Basin (GGRB) of Wyoming has produced abundant oil and gas out of multiple reservoirs for over 60 years, and large quantities of gas remain untapped in tight gas sandstone reservoirs. Even though GGRB production has been established in formations from the Paleozoic to the Tertiary, recent activity has focused on several Cretaceous reservoirs. Two of these formations, the Ahnond and the Frontier Formations, have been classified as tight sands and are prolific producers in the GGRB. The formations typically naturally fractured and have been exploited using conventional well technology. In most cases, hydraulic fracture treatments must be performed when completing these wells to to increase gas production rates to economic levels. The objectives of the GGRB production improvement project were to apply the concept of horizontal and directional drilling to the Second Frontier Formation on the western flank of the Rock Springs Uplift and to compare production improvements by drilling, completing, and testing vertical, horizontal and directionally-drilled wellbores at a common site.
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