Factpages Norwegian Offshore Directorate
Factpages Norwegian Offshore Directorate
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03.11.2024 - 01:26
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8/10-2

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  • General information

    General information
    Attribute Value
    Wellbore name
    Official name of wellbore based on Norwegian Offshore Directorate guidelines for designation of wells and wellbores.
    8/10-2
    Type
    Wellbore type. Legal values: EXPLORATION, DEVELOPMENT, OTHER (see 'Purpose' for more information)
    EXPLORATION
    Purpose
    Final classification of the wellbore.

    Legal values for exploration wellbores:
    WILDCAT, APPRAISAL, WILDCAT-CCS, APPRAISAL-CCS.

    Legal values for development wellbores:
    OBSERVATION, PRODUCTION, INJECTION, INJECTION-CCS, OBSERVATION-CCS.

    Legal values for other wellbores:
    SOIL DRILLING (drilling in connection with track surveys and other subsurface surveys to investigate the soil conditions prior to placement of facilities),
    SHALLOW GAS (drilling to investigate shallow gas before the first 'real' drilling on the location),
    PILOT (drilling to investigate the geology and fluid connectors for location of the main wellbore),
    SCIENTIFIC (drilling according to Law of Scientific research and exploration),
    STRATIGRAPHIC (driling according to Law of Petroleum activities §2-1).
    WILDCAT
    Status
    Status for the wellbore. Legal values are:

    BLOWOUT: A blowout has occurred in the well.
    CLOSED: A development wellbore that has been closed in a shorter or longer periode. Also applies to development wellbores where drilling is completed, but production/injection has not yet been reported.
    DRILLING: The well is in the drilling phase - can be active drilling, logging, testing or plugging,
    JUNKED: The drilling operation has been terminated due to technical problems.
    P&A: Exploration: The well is plugged and abandoned, and can not be reentered for further use. Development wells: The production/injection from/to the well is stopped and the well is plugged. The wellhead is removed or else made unavailable for further well operations.
    PLUGGED: The wellbore has been plugged, but the upper parts of the wellbore can be re-used. A sidetrack might be drilled at a later stage.
    PRODUCING: It was produced from the wellbore at the time of the operators last monthly report to the Norwegian Offshore Directorate.
    INJECTING: It was injected to the wellbore at the time of the operators last monthly report to the Norwegian Offshore Directorate.
    PREDRILLED: The upper part of the well has been drilled, usually as part of a batch-drilling campaign covering several wellbores.
    RE-CLASS TO DEV: Exploration wellbore that is reclassified to a development wellbore.
    RE-CLASS TO TEST: Exploration wellbore that is reclassified to test production.
    SUSPENDED: The drilling operation in the wellbore has been temporarily stopped. The current plan is to continue drilling later on.
    P&A
    Factmaps in new window
    Main area
    Name of the area on the Norwegian Continental Shelf where the wellbore is located. Legal values: BARENTS SEA, NORWEGIAN SEA, NORTH SEA.
    NORTH SEA
    Well name
    Official name of the parent well for the wellbore based on Norwegian Offshore Directorate guidelines for designation of wells and wellbores.
    8/10-2
    Seismic location
    Position of spud location on seismic survey lines. SP: shotpoint.
    PG 5708 SP.870
    Production licence
    Official designation of the production licence the wellbore was drilled or planned to be drilled from ( well head posistion).
    Drilling operator
    Name of the licensee starting the drilling operation on behalf of the active production license (well head position). This will usually equal the operator of the production license.
    Phillips Petroleum Company Norway
    Drill permit
    The drilling permit number together with the version of the drilling permit as stated in the drilling permit granted by the Norwegian Offshore Directorate.
    240-L
    Drilling facility
    Norwegian Offshore Directorate's name of the facility which the wellbore was drilled from.
    Drilling days
    Number of days from wellbore entry to wellbore completion.
    41
    Entered date
    The date when he wellbore was spudded. For sidetracks: The date when new formation was drilled by kicking off from the mother-wellbore,
    05.02.1980
    Completed date
    Exploration wellbores from moveable facilities:
    For floating facilities - date when anchor handling is started. For jackups - date the jacking-down started. Exploration wellbores from fixed facilities and all development wellbores:
    Date when the wellbore is at total depth, and last casing, liner or screen is set. In case of immediate plugging of the wellbore, completed date equals the date the last plug i set in the wellbore.
    Date when the wellbore is at total depth, and last casing, liner or screen is set. In case of immediate plugging of the wellbore, completed date equals the date the last plug i set in the wellbore.
    17.03.1980
    Release date
    Date when raw data which has been reported to the authorities from the wellbore is not confidential any longer. Normally 2 years after finishing the drilling. May be earlier if the area of the production license is relinquished.
    17.03.1982
    Publication date
    Date quality control of the wellbore information was completed, so it can be published on the internet as a 'Well Data Summary Sheet' wellbore with more information available than other wellbores.
    24.09.2004
    Purpose - planned
    Pre-drill purpose of the wellbore. Legal values for exploration wellbores: WILDCAT, APPRAISAL, WILDCAT-CCS, APPRAISAL-CCS. Example of legal values for development wellbores: OBSERVATION, PRODUCTION, INJECTION.
    WILDCAT
    Reentry
    Status whether the wellbore has been re-entered (YES) or not (NO). Re-entered wellbores are not included in the count when wellbores are presented in statistical overviews.
    NO
    Content
    For exploration wellbores, status of discovery.

    Legal values:
    DRY, SHOWS (trace amounts of hydrocarbons), GAS, GAS/CONDENSATE, OIL or OIL/GAS.
    SHOWS (GAS SHOWS, OIL SHOWS or OIL/GAS SHOWS) are detected as fluorescent cut (organic extract), petroleum odour, or visual stain on cuttings or cores, or as increased gas reading on the mud-loggers gas detection equipment.
    Legal values for WILDCAT-CCS and APPRAISAL-CCS: WATER

    For development wellbores, type of produced/injected fluid.
    Legal values:
    WATER, CUTTINGS, NOT AVAILABLE, OIL, GAS/CONDENSATE, OIL/GAS, CO2, GAS, WATER/GAS, NOT APPLICABLE.
    DRY
    Discovery wellbore
    Indicator which tells if the wellbore made a new discovery. Legal values: YES, NO. Prior to press-release or other information regarding drilling results, the indicator will be “NO” as a default.
    NO
    Kelly bushing elevation [m]
    Elevation of the rotary kelly bushing (RKB) above mean sea level.
    25.0
    Water depth [m]
    Depth in metres betweem mean sea level and sea floor.
    66.0
    Total depth (MD) [m RKB]
    Total measured length of wellbore from kelly bushing to total depth (driller's depth).
    2997.0
    Final vertical depth (TVD) [m RKB]
    Vertical elevation from total depth to kelly bushing. Shown only for released wells. Referred to as true vertical depth (TVD).
    2997.0
    Bottom hole temperature [°C]
    Estimated temperature at final total depth of the wellbore. Shown only for released wells. See discription.
    91
    Oldest penetrated age
    Age (according to Geologic Time Scale 2004 by F. M. Gradstein, et al. (2004)) of the oldest penetrated formation. May differ from age at TD for example in deviated wellbores. Examples of legal values: CRETACEOUS, EARLY CRETACEOUS, LATE JURASSIC, EARLY PERMIAN, EARLY TRIASSIC, EOCENE.
    LATE PERMIAN
    Oldest penetrated formation
    Name of the oldest lithostratigraphic unit penetrated by the wellbore. Shown only for released wells. In most wellbores this is formation or group at total depth. May differ from formation or group at TD for example in wellbores drilled with high deviation or through faults. Examples of legal values: AMUNDSEN FM, BALDER FM, BASEMENT, BLODØKS FM, BRYNE FM, BURTON FM, COOK FM, DRAKE FM, DRAUPNE FM, EKOFISK FM, DUNLIN GP.
    ZECHSTEIN GP
    Geodetic datum
    Reference system for coordinates. Example of legal values: ED50.
    ED50
    NS degrees
    Geographic coordinate of the wellhead, north-south degrees.
    57° 8' 6.9'' N
    EW degrees
    Geographic coordinate of the wellhead, east-west degrees.
    3° 18' 9.5'' E
    NS UTM [m]
    Universal Transverse Mercator coordinate of the wellhead, north-south.
    6332624.27
    EW UTM [m]
    Universal Transverse Mercator coordinate of the wellhead, east-west.
    518318.79
    UTM zone
    Universal Transverse Mercator zone. Examples of legal values: 31, 32, 33, 34.
    31
    NPDID wellbore
    Norwegian Offshore Directorate's unique id for the wellbore.
    226
  • Wellbore history

    General
    Well 8/10-2 was drilled on the Sørvestlandet High about 20 km east of the Ula Field. The primary objective of the well was Jurassic sandstones expected to be 122 m thick. Secondary objective was Paleocene sandstones.
    Operations and results
    Wildcat well 8/10-2 was spudded with the semi-submersible installation Nortrym on 5 February 1980 and drilled to TD at 2997 m in the Late Permian Zechstein Group.
    The first samples to the surface were from Miocene - Oligocene. They were badly contaminated with cement from the casing shoe at 461 m. First clean formation samples were collected at 503 m and they consisted of a soft grey brown clay with minor amounts of fine to medium grained sand and occasional fossil frogs. This gave way at 570 m to a totally argillaceous section, and soft grey-brown, slightly calcareous, claystone was found. This became the dominant lithology down to the 13 3/8" casing point at 1198 m. After casing point, cement contamination of samples occurred for about 10 m. The claystone gave way to a grey-green-brown, soft, sticky clay, which had occasional traces of carbonaceous material. Top Hordaland Group is set at 1265 m. At 1471 m a thin hard white limestone occurred with an associated drop in drilling rate from 61 m to 46 m per hour. Background gas also decreased during this interval. After 1494 m the dominant lithology became soft grey-brown clay, some sections of which were slightly calcareous. Occasional fossil fragments and pyrite nodules were also found in this section. There was a slow increase in the claystone content and by 1801 m a light grey claystone had become the dominant lithology. This claystone was moderately hard, slightly calcareous and micro micaceous; traces of dolomite and shelly fragments were also found. By 1951 m the soft clays had disappeared completely and were replaced by light grey and dark brown claystones, both soft to firm, the light grey claystone being non-calcareous and the brown claystone slightly to moderately calcareous in parts.
    The appearance of the light grey claystone grading to shale between 2073 m to 2103 m was tentatively marked as the top of the Eocene. The drilling rate increased during this period from 15 m per hour to 30 m per hour. The claystone was found to grade into shale in some sections. Occasional traces of fine sand, glauconite and Dolomitic limestone were also found.
    The top of the Palaeocene (Balder Formation) was found at 2158 m to 2166 m based on Electric Log data. The only visible formation change was the occurrence of minor amounts of brown to dark brown claystone, which was soft, non-calcareous and micro micaceous with a trace of disseminated pyrite. This non-calcareous brown claystone became dominant throughout the Palaeocene with minor amounts of light grey non-calcareous shale being found as well as traces of marl, pyrite and tuff.
    The first Danian Chalk was encountered at 2333 m and in the Våle Formation, a rapid increase in the drilling rate occurred at this point. Top Ekofisk Formation was set at 2364.8. The Chalk was white to cream generally soft to firm but with occasional hard streaks. Also a trace of light brown to translucent very hard flint or (chert) was found.
    The Maastrichtian marks the top of the Cretaceous at 2385 m (Tor Formation) and is dominantly chalk which is white, hard, occasionally very hard and microcrystalline. On reaching the Maastrichtian, the drilling rate dropped from 8 m per hour to 3 m per hour and there was also a slight decrease in background gas. Accessory minerals found during this section include Flint (Chert), pyrite and a trace of lignite, which may have been an isolated piece of driftwood subjected to partial coalification.
    The Lower Cretaceous (Rødby Formation) was marked at 2513 m based on both Electric Log and Mud Log data. The decrease in Chalk content was paralleled by an increase in brown to red clay, which was slightly calcareous and had traces of mica and sub-rounded Quartz grains. Downwards the red claystone graded through into a very calcareous red siltstone and then after 2626 m into a brown-grey Claystone, which was firm to moderately hard and only slightly calcareous.
    At 2657 m the shales and claystones of the Jurassic Kimmeridgian (Flekkefjord Formation) were found and an increase in drilling rate from 8 m per hour to 14 m per hour occurred. There was also a slight increase in background gas from 0.03% (6 units) to 0.07% (14 units). The claystones/shales were described as being medium to dark grey/brown, firm to moderately hard, occasionally fissile and slightly calcareous. An increase in the gamma ray count was noted on the Electric Logs at this point. The gamma ray log showed a rapid cut back after the Kimmeridge shales at 2667.2 m and suggested a shaley sand formation but the rock cuttings collected consisted of silty clays with occasional pyrite. This marks the top of the Sandnes Formation. This silty clay sequence continued until 2702 m where the drilling rate increased from 8 m per hour to 23 m per hour and the first trace of clean sand was found. There was however no obvious change in background gas levels when the sand was penetrated. The sandstone was described as being soft to friable, light grey to white, very fine-grained, sub rounded to angular and slightly calcareous. Checks for fluorescence proved to be negative. Qn the Electric logs a slight drop in the SP is noted but the Gamma Ray still indicated a fairly argillaceous sequence. The hole was in gauge suggesting a fairly competent formation and FDC and Neutron curves track fairly close together possibly again suggesting a gas free shay sand sequence. The conductivity curve rose rapidly during the sand section. Gas levels remained in the region of 0.0075 % (1.5 Units) to 0.055 % (11 Units) throughout the sand section.
    Entering into the Triassic the cuttings samples showed a gradual tailing off of sand content and a parallel rise in the % of grey-brown claystones and clays. As these clays became dominant this is probably where the Jurassic/Triassic boundary occurs. Top Triassic Group is set at 2752 m. Traces of Sandstone and Sand were found in the samples down to 2804 m but these were suspected of coming from further up the hole in the Middle Jurassic. Red Clay and Claystone remained the dominant lithologies down to 2880 m to 2886 m where there was a decrease in the amount of sample arriving at the surface and an increase in the mud chloride content was noticed suggesting we had penetrated the evaporite sequence of the Triassic. The Electric Logs later confirmed this. Top of the Halite was placed at to 2880 m to 2886 m on mud log data. Traces of soft white Anhydrite were found from 2896 m down to TD. There was a decrease in background gas at 2743 m from 0.009 % to 0.007 % and then a further rapid drop occurred at 2896 m in the Halite where the gas values fell almost to zero.
    No conventional core was cut in the well and no fluid sample taken.
    The well was permanently abandoned on 17 March as a dry well.
    Testing
    No drill stem test was performed
  • Cuttings at the Norwegian Offshore Directorate

    Cuttings at the Norwegian Offshore Directorate
    Cuttings available for sampling?
    NO
    Cuttings at the Norwegian Offshore Directorate
    Cutting sample, top depth [m]
    Cutting samples, bottom depth [m]
    460.00
    2980.00
  • Lithostratigraphy

  • Composite logs

    Composite logs
    Document name
    Document format
    Document size [MB]
    pdf
    0.37
  • Geochemical information

    Geochemical information
    Document name
    Document format
    Document size [MB]
    pdf
    2.13
  • Documents – reported by the production licence (period for duty of secrecy expired)

    Documents – reported by the production licence (period for duty of secrecy expired)
    Document name
    Document format
    Document size [MB]
    pdf
    11.81
  • Logs

    Logs
    Log type
    Log top depth [m]
    Log bottom depth [m]
    CDM
    1223
    2997
    CDM AP
    1220
    2973
    CDM AP
    1220
    2996
    DIL BHC GR
    1223
    2996
    FDC CNL GR
    1223
    2997
    ISF SONIC GR
    1223
    2996
    MLL
    2286
    2438
    MLL
    2652
    2804
    MPT
    2286
    2804
    VSP
    1222
    2996
  • Casing and leak–off tests

    Casing and leak–off tests
    Casing type
    Casing diam.
    [inch]
    Casing depth
    [m]
    Hole diam.
    [inch]
    Hole depth
    [m]
    LOT/FIT mud eqv.
    [g/cm3]
    Formation test type
    CONDUCTOR
    30
    118.0
    36
    118.0
    0.00
    LOT
    SURF.COND.
    20
    461.0
    26
    478.0
    1.53
    LOT
    INTERM.
    13 3/8
    1198.0
    17 1/2
    1211.0
    1.90
    LOT
    INTERM.
    9 5/8
    2997.0
    12 1/4
    2997.0
    0.00
    LOT
  • Drilling mud

    Drilling mud
    Depth MD [m]
    Mud weight [g/cm3]
    Visc. [mPa.s]
    Yield point [Pa]
    Mud type
    Date measured
    503
    1.09
    85.0
    seawater
    1236
    1.33
    65.0
    seawater
    2240
    1.32
    53.0
    seawater
    2534
    1.36
    55.0
    seawater
    2806
    1.34
    56.0
    seawater
    2997
    1.34
    57.0
    seawater