Well Control Standards
Well Control Standards
Well Control Standards
1 INTRODUCTION
This document describes the general standards and practices used for the safe and effective management of well
control operations on COMPANY locations.
2 REFERENCES
API RP 16E, API S53, API RP 64, API SPEC 6A, API SPEC 16A
3 GENERAL PRACTICES
1. Well control procedures and standards shall be in accordance with the relevant WOR and API standards and
Government Regulations.
2. All well operationsshall be carried out with the intention of avoiding kicks and/or the unintentional release of
fluids comprising either water or hydrocarbons.
3. Under balanced drilling is not allowed without dispensation.
4. A well shall be treated as ‘live’ when it has the potential to flow to surface if the barriers fail. This includes non
eruptive wells where there is a possibility of gas being trapped.
5. The well control equipment pressure rating shall be as a minimum equal to the maximum prognosed well-head
pressure plus 1000 psi.
6. The Contractors well control manual may be used provided that they comply or exceed therequirements of
COMPANY Policy, the following WOR and above references.
7. Well Operations activities will be carried out using a fluid of the appropriate density to prevent any influx of
formation fluid. Minimum static overbalance shall be 200 psi. In the case of HPHT wells with a narrow drilling
margin (difference between Pore Pressure and Frack Pressure) a lower value can be used when drilling because of
the ECD but an overbalance of 200PSI shall be restored for tripping – possibly using heavy mud cap pumped in hole
prior to tripping.
8. Unless otherwise dictated by particular conditions, the use of driller’s method is mandatory to control the well
when a kick has been taken.
9. For each section of the well, a well control sheet showing the pressure limitation and position of the different
valves of the well control circuit shall be displayed in the rig floor, the Well Supervisor and Toolpusher offices.
10. LOT or FIT data shall be used to update the well control sheet for each hole section.
11. Updated well control sheets shall be handed over to key personnel and displayed on the drilling shelter, on the
Well Operations Supervisor and Tool-Pusher offices.
12. A flapper type non-return valve (float valve) shall be used in the drill string. The valve shall be non ported.
13. The gas detection equipment, flow and volume sensors shall be fully operational and calibrated at all times
during well operations.
14. The COMPANY Well Operations Supervisor (or night supervisor) shall be present on the rig floor or work area
during each trip to observe the following critical aspects:
a. flow-check and/or start of continuous filling of a well with fluid,
b. First ten stands pulled off bottom – Ensure proper tripping practices are used
c. If the formation are unstable
d. Correct hole fill volume
e. Determine when the heavy mud pill has to be pumped so that the pipes aren’t pulled wet.
15. After completion of well kill or well testing operations a minimum of one complete hole volume shall be
circulated prior to pulling out of the hole.
16. Kick detection, shut in, stripping and circulating drills shall be held regularly prior to enter the expected pay
zone until the COMPANY Well Operations Supervisor is confident that each crew understands the well control
procedure. The rig shall be equipped to detect kick volume as low as possible, the maximum being the well
calculated kick tolerance (drilling and swab) see below § 17.
17. Thereafter, during the drilling of the reservoir section, a kick detection and shut in drill shall be held at least once
per week for each crew. Such drills shall be reported on the IADC and Daily Drilling Reports.
18. For drilling, a kick sheet shall be prepared and updated daily and at every change in mud weight or BHA. This
shall include an updated assessment of kick tolerance.
a. If kick volume tolerance limits exceed those stated in the Well Programme dispensation must be obtained prior to
continuation of drilling.
b. Kick volume tolerance will be calculated assuming a drilled kick with kick intensity of
0.5ppg (mud weight + 0.5ppg). Refer to the Casing and Tubing Design Manual.
NOTE 1: The mud weight is the Pore Pressure – additional mud weight motivated by wellbore stability must not be
taken into consideration.
c. A swabbed kick will always be considered to be less severe than a drilled kick because a swabbed kick assumes a
kick intensity of zero ppg, and the same kick volume tolerance limit will apply.
d. Surface detection: This will determine the volume of kick that the rig can normally detect.
NOTE 2: we consider a kick intensity of 0.5pp for drilling kick and 0 for swab kick.
Kick Detection method Circulation pit Trip tank
Section diameter Drill kick Swab kick
17 ½ 30 bbl 15 bbl
12 ¼ 30 bbl 15 bbl
8 ½ and below (non HP/HT) 30 bbl 15 bbl
HP/HT 10 bbl 10 bbl
19. Each well control incident or any failure of any well control equipment shall be reported immediately to the
Well Operations Manager of the affiliate and to the Group Well Operations Manager.
20. For drilling operations, slow circulating rates (including through the choke line in deepwater) shall be done once
per shift or whenever changes on affecting pressure behaviour occurred. Pump pressure readings shall be taken at
20, 30 and 40 strokes per minute and recorded on the kill work-sheet.
21. The driller shall maintain an accurate pipe tally.
22. Spare choke needles and beans shall be available on the rig.
23. A set of calibrated pressure gauges shall be available on the rig.
24. The trip tank shall be used at all times while tripping.
25. For drilling operations, trip tank volumes shall be recorded every stands for the first 10 stands and maximum
every 5 stands thereafter.
26. Flow checks shall be carried out:
a. As detailed in the Well Programme (all operations).
b. Before commencing a trip out of hole (all operations).
c. After the first ten stands has been pulled (drilling).
d. In the case of horizontal wells, after the bit has been pulled out of the horizontal section (drilling).
e. With bit at the shoe (drilling).
f. Prior to pulling tools or drill collars through the BOPs.
g. At any time when there is an anomaly in fluid of the well or mud volumes on the rig.
27. The following key personnel shall hold a current, IWCF or IADC WELLCAP well control certificate renewable
every two years, however COMPANY does not consider that a valid IWCF or IADC certificate alone is a proof of
competence.
a. COMPANY Well Operations Superintendent (Well Operations Manager when there is no Superintendent)
b. Well Operations Supervisor (and night supervisor where applicable)
c. Well Operations Engineer (on site)
d. Senior Well Operations Engineer at the operational base
e. Well Operations Engineer at the base
f. Rig Contractor Toolpusher(s).
g. Rig Contractor Drillers or Contractor Well Operation Supervisors.
h. Any Contractor Personnel directly supervising or responsible for operations that involve well
control (example coiled tubing supervisor).
i. Mud Engineer (The Affiliate Well Operations Manager can give dispensation to the mud engineer)
28. COMPANY affiliate Well Operations Managers shall ensure that the competence of key personnel is sufficient
to undergo the planned operations, he will decide if further training is necessary:
a. Comprehensive on site drills is the best method to conduct such assessment. In certain circumstances affiliates
Well Operations Manager may require personnel to undergo additional well control training (example HP/HT wells,
horizontal wells).
29. MAASP shall be notified daily by the Well Operations Supervisor in the instructions to the driller or well
operation supervisor.
30. When carrying out well control activities, bleeding off pressure to reduce the MAASP shall only be authorised
where there is a risk that fracture gradient at shoe is exceeded and gas channelling to surface could endanger rig and
rig crew.
31. Special attention must be paid when running parallel strings (tubing + control lines, electric lines, etc) or breaded
cables as no annular or pipe rams are designed to seal on it.
4 WELL SHUT-IN PRECEDURE
1. The fast shut-in method is mandatory on COMPANY operations whatever the type of rig.
During normal well operation conditions the configuration is as follows:
a. Choke is closed
b. Remote CL valve on BOP closed
c. Whilst drilling, the block valves upstream of both chokes and valves downstream of the
remote choke to the mud-gas separator shall be in an open position.
d. All other valves on choke manifold shall be closed
2. The Toolpusher or Contractor Supervisor shall ensure that, at the start of each shift, the driller or competent
person checks the correct set up of the manifold valves. The COMPANY Well Operations Supervisor shall verify
that it has been done. Operations shall not commence until this task has been carried out.
3. Well shut in sequences shall be detailed in the Contractor Well Control Manual or in the joint well operations
manual. The method varies depending on the type of rig, land/jack-up or floating and on the ongoing operation
(drilling, tripping with DP, tripping with drill collars, etc).
5 RESPONSIBILITES
At all times when the well is open the driller or comparable operations supervisor or person acting as Driller shall be
present on the rig floor or work area.
6 EQUIPMENT
1. Well Control equipment includes the following (but is not limited to):
a. Diverter systems
b. Blow out preventer stacks (BOP)
c. BOP control system
d. Secondary locking mechanisms
e. Wellhead and wellhead connector’s
f. Casing
g. Kelly cocks and kelly hose
h. Drill string safety valves (inside BOP’s)
i. Kill and choke lines
j. Choke manifold
k. Mud gas separator
l. All associated pipework and valves.
2. Casing rams are required when running full casing string in open holes where live reservoirs have been drilled.
Cavities and bonnets shall have been pressure tested. Exception to this includes:
a. When sub-sea BOP are used
b. When it is not practicable to safely change rams or to maintain barriers due to the BOP configuration
c. When running liners the provision of casing rams may be decided on a case by case basis following risk
assessment
d. If casing rams are not used special provision, procedure and equipment shall be in made such as dropping the
casing or installing waterbushing (cross over from casing pin to drill pipe box).
3. During drilling operations (exploration and development) and workover operations, onshore and offshore, Shear
Blind Rams and booster bonnets shall be provided in the BOP stack when proven or suspected eruptive
hydrocarbons exist/may exist in the well to be drilled/worked over.
4. The drilling contractor shall be responsible for performing pressure testing of all contractors supplied BOP and
associated well control equipment.
5. All modifications, design changes or weld repairs to well control equipment shall comply with API Specification.
Original manufacturer’s spare parts shall always be used.
6. When a rig has been stacked for over 6 months, a complete BOP stack dismantling and inspection shall be carried
out in a certified workshop.
7. A control shall be carried out on BOP internal bore to ensure there is no abnormal wear or key-seat. On subsea
stacks, the check should include key-seat wear on flex joint pin and wear sleeves/bushings.
8. New and clean ring gaskets shall be installed each time BOP components are re-assembled. Grease shall not be
used.
9. All master and remote operating panel handles should, at all times, be in the full open or closed position, and be
free to move into either position, i.e. the shear ram operating handles should not be locked;
10. All spare operating lines and connections which are not used in the system should be properly blocked off with
blind plugs at the hydraulic operating unit; All four way valves should be either in the fully open or fully closed
position, as required; they should not be left in the blocked or centre position.
11. All spare parts used to repair or refurbish BOP and associated equipments must be genuine BOP’s manufacturer
parts.
8 BOP TESTS
1. BOP tests shall be witnessed by the COMPANY Well Operations Supervisor, together with the contractor's
Toolpusher. Any deficiency must be reported and corrected.
2. The BOP shall be function tested at the end of every trip
3. BOP pressure test shall be carried out:
a. Prior to a DST
b. Every 14 days – In agreement with the Drilling Contractor Rig Manager, the COMPANY Affiliates Well Ops
Managers can decide to extend this period to a maximum of 21 days – In no case 21 days can be exceeded.
c. After every BOP flanging-up operation onto the wellhead
d. After landing the string on rams
e. After shearing a drill string
f. Whenever the pressure integrity of the equipment appears to be questionable
g. After running casing prior to drill out the shoe track.
4. On surface BOP’s the ram locking system shall be tested at least once per well, just after the BOP installation on
the well.
9 WELLBORE MONITORING EQUIPMENT
9.1 EQUIPMENT LEVEL
The minimum equipment levels required for monitoring warning signs during live well operations are:
a. Drillers/mudlogging PVT system
b. Drillers/mudlogging flow meters
c. Gas detection equipment
d. Pump stroke counter
e. Pressure gauges.