I’ve told my mate the following since our last chat.
![]()
Key Findings from the Report
Then advised the following
- Post-Workover Flow Rate:
- Pre-workover: 293 BOPD (natural flow).
- Post-workover: 488 BOPD (with artificial lift using a progressive cavity pump).
- Increase: ~66% increase in oil flow rate.
- Initial Production Context:
- Unit 1B had previously flowed at 1,235 BOPD in test conditions, indicating strong potential when undamaged.
- The substantial fall to 293 BOPD had been attributed to formation damage caused by shut-in fluids and possibly the original drilling fluid.
- Remedial Work Details:
- Perforated both upper and lower Unit 1B intervals.
- Conducted acid wash and squeeze, and a second acid job was also done after installing the PCP.
- Flowed through multiple choke sizes, peaking at 4,167 BPD of total fluid during surging (short duration).
- Final average test: 488 BOPD + 7 BPD water over 12 hours at 7 PSI flowing pressure.
- Cleanup Complications:
- Heavy-weight brine and spent acid had to be lifted using a pump, as natural flow was insufficient.
- CO₂ presence during flowback indicated acid reaction with carbonate rock but may have also reduced flow efficiency until fully cleaned up.
- Formation Damage Confirmation:
- CT imaging revealed barite embedment and precipitate blockage, consistent with formation damage due to drilling and completion fluids.
- Future wells will use a non-damaging Reservoir Drilling Fluid (RDF).
- Infrastructure Limitations:
- No coiled tubing unit or nitrogen lift available—likely reduced stimulation efficiency and clean-up effectiveness.
- Acid stimulation via service rig was a compromise, and nitrogen lift could have improved outcomes.
Revised Assessment
Production Outlook:
- The post-acid average of 488 BOPD is significantly below the theoretical potential (1,200+ BOPD seen previously), indicating:
- Partial success of acid stimulation.
- Remaining formation damage or incomplete cleanup still restricting flow.
- Acid not penetrating deeply enough or wormholes not effectively intersecting key fracture networks.
Reasons for Modest Result:
- Lack of nitrogen lift and CTU likely limited acid placement and recovery.
- Formation heterogeneity and residual brine likely still impairing near-wellbore permeability.
- The fractured nature of Unit 1B suggests stimulation success is strongly geometry-dependent (i.e., intersecting live fractures).
What This Tells Us About Future Completions:
- Acid work alone, especially without CTU and nitrogen, may not achieve full potential in these conditions.
- Reservoir has good oil (19° API, low water cut), and real upside remains, but:
- Execution methods matter—mechanically optimized acid delivery and flowback systems are critical.
- Future completions should be tailored with RDF, CTU, and possibly multi-stage stimulation.
Summary & Forward Look
Item
Value
Initial post-acid flow (natural)
~293 BOPD
Post-workover flow (with PCP)
488 BOPD (+66%)
Peak total fluid (surged)
4,167 BPD
Likely production stabilisation
400–500 BOPD (short-term), gradual increase if full cleanup continues
Optimisation potential
High if CTU/nitrogen used in future
Conclusion: While the acid wash improved output, the results were constrained by equipment limitations and possible persistent formation damage. Future wells (like Amistad-2) that integrate RDF, better fluid compatibility, and proper stimulation equipment have significantly higher potential to reach the 1,000+ BOPD range again.
Let me know if you’d like to model forecast production profiles based on different stimulation and cleanup scenarios.
differences with AM 2 and Am 3.
![]()
this is what GPT reckons
Got it—this changes the outlook quite a bit. With that new context, here’s an updated take on what to expect from the next two production wells (Amistad-2 and Amistad-3):
⸻
Key Differentiators from Alameda-2:
Factor Alameda-2 (Workover) Amistad-2/3 (Production Wells)
Well Type Appraisal, with remedial acid work Purpose-built production
Net Pay Accessed ~200m perforated ~500m open hole (2.5x more)
Fracture Intensity Moderate High – 250% more fractured net pay
Formation Damage High – damaged by shut-in and drilling mud Minimal – RDF-designed to avoid damage
Stimulation Acid wash (no CTU/nitrogen) Likely no acid, but better placement via open hole
Flowback Equipment PCP post-factum Likely better-planned cleanup from the start
Structure Location Down-dip 200m up-dip (higher pressure head)
⸻
Production Outlook:
Let’s work through a qualitative and quantitative estimate:
1. Net Pay and Fracture Exposure Factor:
• Net pay exposure is 2.5x greater.
• Fracture density is also 2.5x greater.
• Combined, this could theoretically enhance deliverability by a factor of 4x to 6x, assuming other conditions (pressure, saturation) are favorable.
2. Up-dip Advantage:
• 200m higher in structure means potentially higher reservoir pressure and possibly better oil mobility.
• Could contribute another 10–20% flow increase conservatively.
3. No Formation Damage:
• Use of Melbana RDF should maintain permeability near wellbore.
• Avoids mud invasion and barite embedment seen in Alameda-2.
4. Completion Type:
• Open hole completions will allow full exposure of fractures and flow paths.
• No risk of cement sheath, liner perforation inefficiencies, or under-performing stimulations.
⸻
Estimated Flow Rates:
Assuming Alameda-2’s true undamaged potential is around 1,200 BOPD, and adjusting for:
• 2.5x more net pay
• 2.5x more fractures
• 1.1–1.2x up-dip pressure benefit
• Clean drilling with RDF
• No stimulation inefficiencies
You could expect a realistic initial production range of:
\text{Estimated IP Rate} \approx 1,200 \times 4 \text{ to } 6 = \boxed{4,800 \text{ to } 7,200 BOPD}
• Lower bound if fracture networks aren’t fully productive or RDF only partially prevents damage.
• Upper bound if fracture flow is strong and net pay is fully productive.
• Add ~5–10% for up-dip pressure and better cleanup from open hole.
⸻
Conclusion:
These next two wells are set up for success:
• Cleanest possible drilling conditions (RDF).
• Maximum reservoir access (500m net pay).
• Strong fracture connectivity (250% increase).
• Higher structural position (up-dip).
• Immediate production post-cleanup = early cash flow.
Expected IP: ~5,000–7,000 BOPD.
High confidence in achieving >3,000 BOPD, even in moderate outcomes.
Let me know if you’d like a decline curve forecast or breakeven modelling for these wells.
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