Wellesley Petroleum Makes Gas/Condensate Discovery Offshore Norway, NPD Confirms

Wednesday, July 19, 2023

Wellesley Petroleum AS, operator of production license 1148, has concluded the drilling of wildcat wells 35/10-10 S and 35/10-10 A (Carmen prospect), offshore Norway, and has made a gas/condensate discovery, the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate confirmed Tuesday.

The offshore wells were drilled about 25 km northwest of the Troll field and 150 km northwest of Bergen.

The primary exploration target for well 35/10-10 S was to prove petroleum in Middle Jurassic reservoir rocks in the Etive and Oseberg formations in the Brent Group. The secondary exploration target for well 35/10-10 S was to prove petroleum in the Early Jurassic Cook Formation.

The objective of appraisal well 35/10-10 A was to encounter the petroleum-water contact in a lower position on the structure, and to collect liquid samples from the aquifer.

Well 35/10-10 S encountered a 210-meter gas-condensate column in the Ness, Etive, and Oseberg formations, of which a total of 90 meters was sandstone reservoir with poor to moderate reservoir quality. In the Cook Formation, the well encountered a 70-meter gas-condensate column, of which a total of 23 metres was sandstone reservoir with poor reservoir quality. 

A 13-meter oil column was also encountered in the Early Jurassic Amundsen Formation in the Dunlin Group, of which a total of 13 meters was sandstone reservoir with poor reservoir quality.

Well 35/10-10 A was drilled lower on the structure, 900 meters west of the main well and encountered a 240-meter gas-condensate column in the Ness, Etive, Oseberg and Cook formations, of which 50 metres was sandstone reservoir with poor to moderate reservoir quality. Water was encountered in the Cook Formation from a vertical depth of 4158 meters below sea level.

Preliminary estimates indicate the size of the discovery is between 9 and 46 million standard cubic meters (Sm3) of recoverable oil equivalent. The licensees will initiate early-phase development studies, and are considering additional appraisal wells in the discovery.

The well 35/10-10 S was drilled to a vertical depth of 4030 meters below sea level, and was terminated in the Amundsen Formation in the Early Jurassic. Extensive data acquisition and sampling have been carried out.

Well 35/10-10 A was drilled to a vertical depth of 4212 meters below sea level, and was terminated in the Cook Formation in the Early Jurassic.

These are the first and second exploration wells in production licence 1148, awarded in APA2021.

The water depth at the site is 360 meters. The wells have been permanently plugged and abandoned.

The wells were drilled by the Deepsea Yantai semi-submersible drilling rig, which will now drill wildcat well 25/7-11 S in production licence 984 in the North Sea, where DNO Norge AS is the operator.

As previouisly reported by Offshore Engineer, Wellesley's partner DNO earlier in June announced a "significant" gas and condensate discovery on this prospect - called Carmen - claiming it to be the largest discovery offshore Norway since 2013. Read more here.

Categories: Drilling North Sea Industry News Activity Discoveries Drilling Rigs

Related Stories

Shelf Drilling’s Jack-Up Gets Suspension Notice for Ops in Saudi Arabia

Saudi Aramco Suspends Another Borr Drilling’s Jack-Up

Viaro CEO Facing Charges for Forging Documents to Steal Millions

Current News

Danos Leaders Recognized in “40 Under 40” Lists

ExxonMobil to Drill for Gas Off Cyprus in January

Mocean Energy Raising Funds to Advance Wave Energy Tech

Seadrill’s Drillships Getting Ready to Start Work Off Brazil

Subscribe for OE Digital E‑News