Rigless Well Intervention: Techniques and Best Practices

Rigless Well Intervention: Techniques and Best Practices

Course Objectives

By the end of this course, participants will be able to:

  • The varying character of well interventions is introduced.
  • Describe the inherent dangers and the importance of thorough diagnoses, planning, and oversight.
  • Describe the economic consequences of a workover in terms of preserving well output or injection capacity
  • List and discuss the coiled tubing and hydraulic workover units’ equipment and operational ideas
  • Identify, analyze, and recommend completion string functional capacity for a range of contexts. understand the concepts of well-controlled barriers
  • Methodology for identifying three impediments during good intervention
  • Understand the classification of well control barriers for various types of well intervention methods.
  • Explain the mechanisms of a smooth wireline operation.
  • List and explain the downhole wireline equipment and tools that are regularly utilized.
  • The necessary surface wireline equipment specifications should be listed and explained.
  • Explain the well pressure control and wireline safety issues.
  • Explain how depth, hole angle, and dog leg severity affect effective wireline operation.
  • Learn about wireline, coiled tubing, and workover processes and equipment.

Target Audience

This course is designed for:

  • Petroleum Engineers
  • Production Technologists
  • Production supervisors and engineers
  • Completion supervisors and engineers
  • Drilling supervisors and engineers
  • Workover and well service supervisors

Course Outline

Day 1: Fundamental Well Completion Design, Practices, and Strategies

  • Design Considerations for Well Completion
  • Considerations for Reservoirs
  • Considerations for the Mechanical
  • Completion Classification
  • Lower and higher completion string components, as well as selection criteria

Day 2: Containment and Barriers

  • Terminology for barriers
  • Obstacles and confinement devices
  • Envelope barrier
  • Testing for barrier integrity
  • Flow-controlling devices (mechanical barriers)
  • Killing techniques and principles

Day 3:Wire Line Types, Tools, and Applications

  • An Overview of Wireline
  • Wireline Types
  • Fundamental tool strings
  • An Overview of Wireline Fishing
  • Stuffing container
  • The wireline valve (bop)
  • Typical braided line rigging
  • Wireline applications and operational issues

Day 4: Coiled Tubing Equipment and Applications

  • Surface and subsurface components of coiled tubing
  • Applications for Coiled Tubing
  • CT cleaning operations -Backflow of a well (nitrogen lift)

Day 5: Well Control Devices and Procedures

  • Wireline and Coiled Tubing Pressure Control Equipment
  • Wireline and Coiled Tubing Barrier Elements
  • All barrier components were subjected to pressure testing.
  • Wire line operation emergency (wire cut on surface or downhole, tools stuck, etc)
  • Coiled Tubing Emergency (Pin hole in CT surface or downhole, CT stuck, CT crack and etc.)

Curriculum

  • 5 Sections
  • 0 Lessons
  • 5 Days
Expand all sectionsCollapse all sections
  • 0
    • 0
      • 0
        • 0
          • 0