June 20, 2023
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As drilling picks up throughout the Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin (WCSB), a lot of companies find themselves drilling in unfamiliar territory or working from an information deficit due to reductions in experienced staff. Operators are exploring new drilling opportunities in unfamiliar plays, whether from new asset acquisitions or adopting programs from acquired or consolidated companies.
When planning a drilling program, the information-gathering phase is critical to the success of the drilling project. Before a bit can break ground, you need to have an estimated drill time, an approach to take to setting kickoff point, a plan to minimize tripping, an understanding of what problems to anticipate, and an unbiased assessment of what equipment/suppliers are most likely to deliver the desired results. The necessity of this data has only been made more important with companies operating in new areas due to consolidation or the loss of institutional knowledge due to staffing reductions.
There are a lot of ways to get this information and the quality of information could be the difference between a successful vs. Unsuccessful drilling program. The three main sources of that data and why they are important are as follows:
Internal information is derived from your past experiences in the planned area. What learnings have you picked up from drilling similar wells? How much data have you accumulated firsthand? At XI, we frequently hear from clients and prospects that they know the area they’re drilling in very well, having gained hard won data and experience by drilling there for years. This gives them confidence that they know what they need to know and don’t need to look for outside sources of information for new wells in the same area.
And there’s something to this idea. Information you gain internally can be incredibly valuable. As the saying goes, experience is the best teacher, and thus there’s no replacement for the firsthand knowledge gained in an area. In addition, this keeps the data readily available, formatted to best suit the needs and workflows of your organization.
However, just relying on your own internal information, even if it’s backed by extensive experience in the area, can lead to planning in a bubble. You don’t know what you don’t know and thus will be benchmarking only against yourself, without knowing how you compare to other drills in the area. It’s difficult to know if alternative techniques or technology would improve or harm performance if all your information is based solely on your own past techniques and technology.
Additionally, internal information can only go so far in an environment where consolidation and acquisitions have many producers drilling in new areas. Access to more information can give you a more complete picture.
Another way to collect drill planning information is by seeking input from peers, suppliers, vendors, consultants, etc. There is value in the knowledge gained from suppliers and vendors with experience in an area, and from subject matter experts. This is particularly useful if your own knowledge of the area is limited. As many drilling departments saw staffing reductions over the past few years, there is now a push toward this outsourcing of information gathering and expertise.
But be careful not to blur the lines between input and decision-making. How much of your decision-making apparatus do you want outsourced to people who are not responsible for the results? If you’re relying on vendors or suppliers or bid processes to help you acquire data, how unbiased do you expect it to be? The very nature of the bidding process demands that a company position themselves in a way that convinces you to choose them. And when depending on the data collection capabilities of a third-party provider, a lot of the information you get from relationships will tend toward anecdotal, rather than fact-based and data-driven evidence.
The third major way to gather information for your drill planning is by collecting external data of past drilling in a specified area from available sources. This can provide you with a wider spread, more objective perspective given detailed information about specific wells of interest. Using public records through software solutions and data suppliers, and research and analysis based on past drilling by other operators, puts the control in your hands. OffsetAnalyst is an example of software that allows users to access and analyze nearly 180,000 digital tour reports for detailed drilling plans.
When you use external data in your drilling plans, you can benchmark your performance with competitors as well as yourself. It gives you a view of what others in the area have tried, giving you the option to test and validate ideas you might have for your upcoming drills. This data is independent and impartial, giving control to your analysts to explore and interpret it as they see fit.
For example, let’s spotlight how a prominent operator drilling Montney wells in Karr might plan to avoid/mitigate circulation losses.
A drill program designed based on only their historical experience can only draw from the 20 circulation loss instances they’d encountered. By broadening their scope and considering offsets drilled by other operators in their area, insight can be drawn from 10 other operators that recorded 580 loss circulation events!
While current conditions stress the importance of external data, it doesn’t mean there isn’t a place for internal information or relationships as valuable sources of information in drill planning. All of these sources are valuable methods of collecting information for your drill plan, complementing each other for a complete picture. No single source is sufficient by itself. The key to a successful drill plan is to find a proper balance of information sources, and to use them to validate each other.
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