Dry well for Wintershall in North Sea (Norway)

Exploration & Production
Transocean Arctic (Image: VNG Norge)
Transocean Arctic (Image: VNG Norge)

Wintershall Norge AS, operator of production licence 378, has completed the drilling of wildcat well 35/12-5 S, in the Norwegian North Sea. The well is dry. 

The well was drilled about 15 km southwest of the Gjøa field in the Norwegian North Sea and 80 kilometres southwest of Florø, Norway.

According to the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate (NPD), the purpose of the well was to prove petroleum in reservoir rocks from the Upper Jurassic (the Heather, Sognefjord and Fensfjord formations). Well 35/12-5 S encountered about 10 metres of sandstone in the Heather formation, 35 metres of sandstone in the Sognefjord formation and 32 metres of sandstone in the Fensfjord formation, all with good reservoir quality. It also encountered 9 metres of sandstone with poor reservoir quality in the Etive formation.

NPD says that data acquisition and sampling have been carried out. This is the fifth exploration well in production licence 378 which was awarded in APA 2005.

Well 35/12-5 S was drilled to a vertical depth of 3369 metres and a measured depth of 3570 metres below the sea surface and was terminated in the Oseberg formation in the Middle Jurassic.

Water depth at the site is 353 metres. The well will now be permanently plugged and abandoned, NPD said.

Well 35/12-5 S was drilled by the Transocean Arctic semi-submersible drilling rig, which is now scheduled to drill wildcat well 6406/12-4 S in production licence 586 in the Norwegian Sea, operated by VNG Norge AS.

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