EGU21-10856
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10856
EGU General Assembly 2021
© Author(s) 2021. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Evaluating the well integrity of old exploration wells as a risk factor for future storage projects – an example from the Troll field in the Norwegian North Sea

Bastien Dupuy1, Benjamin Emmel1, and Simone Zonetti2
Bastien Dupuy et al.
  • 1SINTEF Industry, Applied Geoscience, Norway (bastien.dupuy@sintef.no)
  • 2SINTEF Digital, Smart Sensors Systems, Norway

More than 750 wildcat wells have been drilled in the Norwegian North Sea since 1966. Some of these wells could pose a risk for the environment, climate, and future H2 and CO2 storage projects by being preferred leakage paths for subsurface- and stored- gases (e.g., CH4, CO2 and/or H2). To ensure well integrity, these wells were secured by cement framing the well casing, and by building cement plugs at crucial positions in the well path before abandoning the well. However, in an early stage of exploration the geology of the subsurface was relatively uncertain, and the requirements for plug placing and how to abandon a well were not established and regulated. We analysed data relevant for the quality of a Plugging and Abandonment (P&A) work done on old exploration wells (1979 to 2003) from the Troll gas and oil field in the Norwegian North Sea. The data were extracted from public available well completion reports and the webpage of the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate. The dataset was analysed regarding their availability, plausibility and evaluated towards the present P&A regulations and geological knowledge for offshore Norway. Based on 12 criteria including reporting to the authorities, volumetric assessment of used cement quantities, position and length of the plugs in relation to reservoir- cap-rocks petrophysical conditions, and verification of the cementing job, a final P&A ranking of 31 exploration wells was established.

Parts of this data were used to build realistic numerical models of P&A'ed well to simulate electromagnetic responses using the finite element software COMSOL Multiphysics. Taking advantage of a dedicated implementation of low frequency ElectroMagnetics (EM), including effective formulations for thin electrical layers, it was possible to study the response of well components to external EM fields, both for the purpose of well detection and well monitoring. Results from the numerical models can be used as benchmark models in a realistic field scale well integrity monitoring approach.

In our presentation we will show results from the TOPHOLE project including realistic field distributions for different representative well configurations, examples of well detection and monitoring signals, and the ranking evaluation results.

Acknowledgments: This work is performed with support from the Research Council of Norway (TOPHOLE project Petromaks2-KPN 295132) and the NCCS Centre (NFR project number 257579/E20).

How to cite: Dupuy, B., Emmel, B., and Zonetti, S.: Evaluating the well integrity of old exploration wells as a risk factor for future storage projects – an example from the Troll field in the Norwegian North Sea, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10856, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10856, 2021.

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