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Sunday, January 9, 2011

Directional Drilling Photos

HORIZONTAL DIRECTIONAL DRILLING

Underground lines and conduit can be installed using HDD (Horizontal Directional Drilling).

This process uses drilling technology to bore a small hole from one location to the next. Once the drill rod comes to the end of the bore the new pipe is attached and pulled back eliminating open excavation. This technology can be used to install lines and conduit under roads, railroads, ponds, lakes, streams, industrial buildings, etc. without the impact of open excavation. The process can be see below.


  


Horizontal oil and gas well drilling has become one of the most valuable technologies ever introduced in the business. It is an enhanced oil recovery (EOR) or gas recovery method that is becoming more and more popular as the price per barrel of oil gets higher.

Unlike a directional well that is drilled to position a reservoir entry point, a horizontal well is commonly defined as any well in which the lower part of the well bore parallels the oil zone. The angle of inclination used to drill the well does not have to reach 90� for the well to be considered a horizontal well. Applications for horizontal wells include the exploitation of thin oil-rim reservoirs, avoidance of drawdown-related problems such as water/gas coning, and extension of wells by means of multiple drain holes.



Cost experts have agreed that horizontal wells have become a preferred method of recovering oil and gas from reservoirs in which these fluids occupy strata that are horizontal, or nearly so, because they offer greater contact area with the productive layer than vertical wells. While the cost factor for a horizontal well may be as much as two or three times that of a vertical well, the production factor can be enhanced as much as 15 or 20 times, making it very attractive.

To give an idea of the effectiveness of horizontal drilling, the U.S. Department of Energy indicates that using horizontal drilling can lead to an increase in reserves in place by 2% of the original oil in place. The production ratio for horizontal wells versus vertical wells is 3.2 to 1, while the cost ratio of horizontal versus vertical wells is only 2 to 1.

Three main types of horizontal wells:

Short Radius

Medium Radius

Long Radius



Horizontal oil drilling can be used in many situations where conventional drilling is either impossible or cost prohibitive. This is by no means an exhaustive list, but it should get you thinking about the possibilities of horizontal directional drilling.




As horizontal well drilling can be used in these scenarios:

under buildings, roads, and other surface obstructions
under active sites where surface operations precluded drilling equipment (Airports and Highways)

to efficiently extract soil vapor

to identify the causes of decreased well performance

to place leak detection sensors beneath solid or hazardous waste landfills

to install gas collection systems at landfills or similar waste dumps

to stabilizing hillsides for mine waste dumps or other unstable granular soil masses

to dewater hillsides where mudslides endanger housing developments

to install groundwater collection galleries in shallow aquifers for private or public water supply

to convey fluids between vertical wells and treatment facilities

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