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Diversified Well Logging

Elementally Qualified

Test 31 Jan 2025, 2:20 pm

Drilling Into the Future With Robots & Lasers 26 Jan 2023, 4:31 pm

Diversified Well Logging’s mission is to ensure that drilling operations maximise their client’s production economics with its suite of high-tech drilling and geological monitoring tools. As the company celebrates its 70th anniversary, it simultaneously celebrates its robust, impressively diverse market position and service offerings that are technologically stronger than ever before. Vice President Sales Tracie Walker and CEO David Tonner spoke with Richard Hagan about the company’s impressive track record and its growing international presence.

 

Established all the way back in 1952 by the Klibert family, Diversified Well Logging celebrated its 70th anniversary in 2022. Its anniversary was also an opportunity to reflect on an era that has seen the company grow from its modest, humble roots in Reserve, Louisiana, into a global industry player and technological market leader.

By providing its clients with real-time rock and fluid chemistry, Diversified Well Logging helps its clients maximise their drilling, completion and production economics. “We interpret the data and then guide the drill bit into sweet spots, thus reducing cost and non-productive time,” explained CEO David Tonner. “Additionally, we can guide the well-construction process to the right place for casing points, coring points or well total depth, which reduces overall costs and nonproductive time.”

Decades of impressive growth

Since its establishment as a family business in Louisiana, USA, Diversified Well Logging has grown and today enjoys an impressive footprint with a presence that stretches from US land-based sites, through deepwater Gulf of Mexico to sites across the Middle East.

Diversified Well Loggings’ 180 employees are spread across the company’s eight operational facilities. These sites include its headquarters in Conroe Texas and; its Gulf Coast service centre located in Reserve, Louisiana as well as facilities in Odessa, West Texas (serving the Midland and Delaware Basin), one in Corpus Christi, South Texas (serving the Eagleford and Austin Chalk basins), one in Douglas, Wyoming (servicing the Rocky Mountains) and one in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania (serving the Marcellus UTICA). Finally, it has additional locations in Villahermosa, Mexico, and one in Doha, Qatar.

In 2010, Rockhill Capital purchased a majority share in Diversified Well Logging, providing a springboard for the company’s substantial growth that soon followed. That same year, Diversified Well Logging began operations in Mexico, an effort that has developed into a large market share in collaboration with Pemex and operators such as Fieldwood, for both onshore and offshore sites.

A major growth milestone was achiever in 2017 with the company’s initiation of two key projects: Its Robologger automation system and its XRF laser Surface Measurement While Drilling (SMWD) programme. These programmes together were a major technological leap forward for Diversified Well Logging’s capabilities, as Mr Tonner confirmed: “It moved the company firmly into the realm of high-technology and artificial intelligence.” Then in 2022, the company began operations with Qatar Energy through its partner company Jaidah and by late 2022 Diversified Well Logging was already on seven rigs in the Gulf. Simultaneously, the company was expecting to begin operations on a project in Trinidad as well as two rigs in Oman – with all of that due to come online in early 2023. This impressive geographic footprint also ensures that Diversified Well Logging is insulated from the volatility inherent to the North American market.

Excellence in high-tech

As part of Diversified Well Logging’s efforts to deepen its high-technology portfolio, the company opened its Centre of Excellence in its facility in Conroe, Texas. This facility houses the company’s Rock Laboratory which will provide XRF, XRD and CST analysis.

“Diversified’s automation and technology research will continue to grow at this new facility.” Mr Tonner explained. “Our Centre of Excellence allows us to concentrate our expertise and resources to focus on providing solutions that improve our customers’ drilling, completions and production economics. It will ensure that our technology, combined with our agility and responsiveness, continues to provide our clients with unique data and perspectives that they can’t get anywhere else.”

“Our tools and expertise are ideally suited to high-risk, high temperature, high-pressure environments,” he continued. “Providing quantitative rock and gas compositions from the surface removes a large risk factor. We don’t have expensive tools that can be lost in the hole, and it means that extreme temperatures and pressures don’t limit our measurement capabilities. So, no matter where our customer decides to drill and however challenging the environment is, we have tools and products to meet their needs.”

One of the jewels in Diversified Well Logging’s crown is its automated ‘Robologger™’ Laser Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy (‘LIBS’) which it developed in partnership with Shell. The system is based on the same technology deployed on NASA’s Mars Curiosity and Perseverance Rovers. Diversified Well Logging already has firm plans to deploy the Robologger with a major operator in South Texas, with Shell in deepwater Gulf of Mexico, and in addition with Aramco.

Extensive global projects

In late 2022, Diversified Well Logging further announced the first successful run of its real-time XRF chemostratigraphy in deepwater Gulf of Mexico. The service was being run for Quarter North Energy in the Green Canyon block and was successfully used to help pick the intermediate casing point. The next phase of the project was to involve picking a fault, being a three-way closure stratigraphic structural trap.

Mr Tonner emphasised the breadth of work that Diversified Well Logging is doing with Quarter North Energy. “Diversified Well Logging’s service delivery to Quarter North Energy’s drilling project in Green Canyon Gulf of Mexico includes operations geology, well site geology, pore pressure, real-time chemostratigraphy, mudlogging and realtime data monitoring and distribution.”

Meanwhile, Diversified Well Logging announced that it had secured an impressive order for seven mudlogging systems from Jaidah Energy. The systems would be installed in service of Qatar Energy for a project that would run for five years beginning in 2022. Simultaneously, one mudlogging unit is being supplied to the Tucker energy group in Trinidad to help service that firm’s contract with Heritage Oil and Gas.

Impressive figures

Diversified Well Logging’s list of past and present projects is extensive, to say the least, and its annual sales figures reflect as much: The company reported 100% sales growth year-on-year, between 2021 and 2022. Naturally, Mr Tonner was optimistic about the company’s prospects for the years to come: “I’m excited about the outlook not only for our business but the economy as well.”

“There’s growth in hydrocarbon exploration and production but also in CCUS carbon sequestration and capture opportunities, which will play a key role in global net zero initiatives. We believe that we’ve only touched the tip of the iceberg, especially with regard to the international market. We’re receiving enquiries for bids almost daily, so it’s all good news.” Mr Tonner certainly has the work experience pedigree to substantiate his enthusiasm for the work that Diversified Well Logging is doing. He concluded our conversation with a brief history of his career:

“I started my career as a geologist in the field in 1989 and worked several projects across Africa and the Middle East,” Mr Tonner recalled. “The work is very hard and physically demanding; it’s rife with hazards such as slips, trips, falls, chemical burns and more. For that reason, I get very excited about our ability to deliver our Robologger LIBS system with its automated rock collection and analysis system, because it takes our people out of harm’s way. I am passionate about rocks and the fact that there’s so much more to a rock than meets the eye. By knowing the rock’s composition, we can help our customers make better decisions.”

Also, he concluded; “we have robots and lasers and what’s not cool about that!”

The Alliance – DWL and Geowellex 29 Sep 2020, 8:41 pm

Two forward thinking mudlogging and geological service companies have announced an alliance to bring a fresh look to the business. The first is Diversified Well Logging, a leader in  offshore deepwater and unconventional operations in the United States and Mexico.  The second is Geowellex do Brasil, an 8-year old company and a leader in wellsite experience of the sedimentary basins of Brazil. Together, Diversified and Geowellex are committed to realizing a great future for both companies.

GEOWELLEX DO BRASIL

Geowellex is a Brazilian geological service company founded in 2012. During this time it has grown by developing technology along with its operational expertise. As a result, it has provided wellsite services on over 170 wells. Services include for example, mudlogging, petrophysics, wellsite geology, and consulting. In Brazil, Geowellex has a customer base that includes SONANGOL, ENEVA and PETRORIO. 

Importantly in Brazil, Geowellex delivers wellsite reports and logs in full accordance with the regulatory requirements of the Brazilian government as set out by the ‘Agência National do Petróleo – ANP’.

Business growth has similarly been achieved in the international market.  For instance Geowellex has operational bases in Egypt and Libya, working with AL WAHA and AGOCO. 

Geowellex is located in Rio de Janeiro.  In addition it has a  base and technology center with a test rig in Natal. The company works closely with Hohner Oil and Gas, a highly respected provider of oil and gas instrumentation. As a result Geowellex tests and uses some of the latest technology developed specifically for the oilfield industry. It also developed an advanced gas analysis system in collaboration with REPSOL. This system has been successfully tested on several offshore wells in the Gulf of Mexico.

Oil Rigs

Office

Worker at computer

Office Trailer

DIVERSIFIED WELL LOGGING

Founded in 1952, Diversified Well Logging is a major geological service and wellbore surveillance provider in the USA. Importantly, Diversified began its operations in the Gulf of Mexico, and has developed extensive deepwater expertise. Diversified's deepwater customers include oil majors such as SHELL, HESS, MURPHY, EXXON, and CHEVRON.  Currently it works with ENVEN, LLOG, BEACON, and FIELDWOOD, providing data logging, pressure monitoring, geochemistry, and remote operations support.

Diversified Well Logging is the leader in geochemical mudlogging in the USA unconventional market.  It uses automated technology, such as its Robologger cuttings-catcher.  Moreover, it has quality driven workflows that transform data from cuttings into efficient drilling and completion solutions using in-house processing and the data science of Enovate Upstream’s ‘ADA A.I.’ platform.


THE ALLIANCE

The expertise and resources available with the alliance of Diversified Well Logging and Geowellex do Brazil is significant. Their shared vision and combined focus on modern technology, service quality, and capital efficiency place them in the perfect position to fill the current and future needs of the Brazilian deepwater oilfield industry.

Deepwater-Flyer

Geowellex cover

DWL - Geowellex cover

Requests for service information and quotes may be directed to:

Diversified Well Logging - Services

Geowellex do Brasil - Services

Oil Field Evolution and Revolution 3 Sep 2020, 8:31 pm

FORMATION EVALUATION RETURNS TO THE SURFACE

Realtime formation evaluation at the wellsite used to be carried out by geologists or mud loggers examining the drilled cuttings and formation gas collected from the mud stream and “lagged” to bit depth. This was mud logging or surface logging or data logging. Over the years, technological advances and economics allowed more complex downhole measurement tools to be created and run. These MWD and LWD tools determine several formation properties indirectly but became uniquely associated with formation evaluation to the point that 'real' rock analysis in realtime was deemed insufficiently precise.

Hart E+P Plus Magazine.In today’s business climate, upstream oil and gas companies are increasingly focused on capital efficiency and return on investment (ROI). Delivery of an acceptable ROI to private and public investors is currently challenging in unconventional plays. However, these challenges also apply offshore with its high cost operations, the focus on trimming budgets, reduction of nonproductive time (NPT) and risk, and getting the best data at the best price.  Modern services - Surface Measurement While Drilling - from Diversified Well Logging combine quality and economy that are fit for today's oilfield.  It is Evolution and Revolution that will be the future of Surface Logging.

Read the article in this months Hart E+P Plus Magazine.

For more information on related services check our  Hybrid Mud Logging and Geosteering Services pages.

ALSO READ “A ROBOTIC FUTURE”.

The reinvention of mud logging was necessary to increase the geological data available to drive operational and capital efficiency, which in turn helped to create the hybrid mud logging (HML) system.  Using drill cuttings, a free byproduct of the drilling operation the system provides near real time rock composition measurements.  When combined with drilling data, A.I. methods provide an important window into the subsurface.

The full article on how Robotics and Automation are driving capital efficiency can be read in the June edition of Oilfield Technology.

And more information can be found here Robotics – Automation and here A.I. Machine Learning

A Very Valuable Resource 15 Jun 2020, 8:23 pm

In a Rigzone article on June 10th, 2020, ConocoPhillips CEO Ryan Lance was quoted as saying “Shale is not broke; shale is not gone; shale will come back.” While the third statement seems to contradict the second, we all know what he means, and we all agree. Shale and other tight unconventional hydrocarbon plays are valuable strategic resources.

Being of strategic value it makes sense that more care should be taken to assess (and indeed access) the real potential of these formations. For years we have all seen similar reports of unconventional wells underproducing, for example, “of the thousands upon thousands of unconventional wells that have been drilled, 70% do not meet their production targets and 30% of all perforation clusters fail to produce.” This was stated back in 2016. I will generously assume that the statistics have improved, but possibly not, which begs the question why?

The first answer that comes to mind is that oil production was good enough to keep investors relatively happy. “Wells drilled in past 2 years provide nearly half of U.S. oil”, was the title of Adam Wilmoth’s piece in ‘The Oklahoman’ from March 27th, 2016. I am not much good at math but if that 50% of U.S. oil was coming from 70% of the formation in only 30% of the wells drilled then the U.S. could probably have been self-sufficient in, and exporting vast quantities of oil and gas way back when. But no, and again, why?

U.S. production vs. price

U.S. production vs. price - just missing the sweet spot?

The second answer that comes to mind is that unconventional drilling being a relatively new business did not quite know what it was doing. Conventional formations were easy(ish).  Unconventional ones were proving trickier, though the elevated price of oil helped justify drilling more and more. According to data from the ‘Energent, Westwood Global Energy Group’, as quoted in ‘JPT’ from February 2019, around 32,500 unconventional wells were drilled in 2014, which seems to be a rather good number of ‘practice runs’. Early lateral wells were shorter than today’s, so if we estimate each one at an average of 6000 feet, that is an impressive 195 million feet of data available to figure out why only 30% were good and 70% were not. Although I am completely ignoring political and economic factors, it still seems that the 20,000 or so wells drilled and completed in 2019 are far from being capital-efficient monsters of production.  Once more, why?

The third answer seems to be a lack of real geologic knowledge. Certainly, we have the 195 million feet of hole drilled in 2014 and as a very, very rough estimate another 702 million to the end of 2019. Even the biggest big-data fan cannot complain about those numbers. But is the data available for study? Probably not. Due to the pressure to produce hydrocarbons and get a reasonable return on investment the focus seems to have been on capital-efficiency, that is, once pilot holes were drilled and evaluated with cores, downhole LWD tools, and wireline logs, the big money had been spent with lateral targets being simply drilled as best they could with gamma ray for geosteering and cuttings descriptions and gas for the geology.

Dump truck

There goes your big-data.

 

In conventional drilling environments, drilled cuttings and gas are of great use when observing changes in formation.  In conventional drilling the reservoirs are generally distinct from the formations that surround them.  However, the unconventional environment is not that simple even though it may appear to be – find the right formation and drill sideways through it as far as you can go. The trouble is, unconventional formations are not the homogenous things they are thought to be.  There are facies changes, isolated influxes of debris, differences in diagenesis or localized chemistry, and of course fracturing and faulting that may or may not be visible prior to drilling. When relying on the observation of cuttings to give you the best hydrocarbon potential and production information on these complex rocks, you are probably going to be disappointed. This means the 70% under-productive figure, and 30% fracture cluster failures for unconventional wells should come as no real surprise. The need for speed (and economy) has turned our valuable strategic resource into more of a drain on capital.

With cost reductions and capital efficiency and return on investment still uppermost in everyone’s minds it would appear that the possibility of getting better in-depth geological data necessary to turn unconventional drilling into a win-win every time would be slim. But no. There are solutions and economical ones at that.

Diversified Well Logging is fully invested in providing the services to provide more data, better data, and at a price that would allow any company to run those services on every well drilled. And the cost? On many wells, the service pays for itself many times over. Using elemental data from wellsite XRF analysis of cuttings, gas data, drilling data, and, for deeper analysis, advanced A.I. software we combine everything to give surface measurement while drilling solutions that match downhole MWD/LWD results. This means that the geological data that has thus far been largely missing from the roughly 900 million feet of rock drilled since 2014 can start to be collected. Again, imagine the insights that the big-data folk could get from all of this. Could we finally see every well and every fracture cluster producing as expected and hoped for?  Geology is geology so maybe not, but we would surely get close and our valuable strategic resource would REALLY be valuable.

From Cuttings to Engineered Completions collage

Cuttings to completions - value added and cost reduced.

 

Finally, even on the small scale that Surface Measurement While Drilling is being used by Diversified Well Logging currently, the financial benefits are demonstrable.  Using elemental analysis – chemostratigraphy – DWL has successfully steered through faults to pick up the target zone allowing extra formation to be opened for production and adding value. We have also called a stop to drilling after faulting completely out of zone with no way back and saving money. Elemental data has also picked rate-of-penetration sweet spots allowing faster drilling and saving bits and bit trips that were previously common-place. We have also saved trips for MWD failure by drilling to the planned section TD by using calculated elemental gamma ray – this latter cost saving benefit has also been applied in the Gulf of Mexico with even greater savings on unplanned trips.  And of course, there is the value of knowledge.  Knowledge that can increase profits even in more difficult times.

As we pass  a billion feet of unconventional rock drilled has DWL found the magic formula?  Possibly not magic, but an innovative and expertly implemented formula certainly and one that will  help maintain a profitably healthy industry by treating its valuable strategic resource with the respect it deserves.

Contact DWL for more information on Surface Measurement While Drilling™

Offshore Challenges & Realtime Wellbore Surveillance 10 Jun 2020, 8:15 pm

All wells experience problems while drilling. Problems that result in unexpected hazards that can affect the safety of workers, damage to equipment and facilities, cause environmental damage, and greatly increase cost. Offshore, and especially in deepwater environments, if you only practice reactive control, these hazards could potentially add huge direct and indirect costs to a project seriously affecting the ROI of any company.

At the height of offshore drilling activity, pre-2016, studies have suggested that at least 40% of operating cost was due to non-productive and invisible lost time and around 40% of this lost time was associated with wellbore stability and formation pressure issues. At the time, this represented an estimated $26BN per year.

Today, the old challenges of wellbore stability and formation pressure still exist but are now often further complicated by more complex well paths into structures that have changed significantly over the years due to reservoir depletion and structural stress change. To successfully counter these problems every project needs good pre-well planning, watchful surveillance while drilling with excellent communication, and, post-well, expert analysis and delivery of answers and recommendations for future wells.

With close to 70-years of offshore operational experience and innovative tools developed to drive capital efficiency in unconventional drilling environments, DWL offers its Surface Measurement While Drilling™ services in deepwater with tools to better describe the formations being drilled, tools to increase drilling efficiency, tools to lower non-productive time, and a dedicated team on geologists and engineers both at the wellsite and in one of our Remote Monitoring Centers on-hand 24/7 using those tools for Realtime Wellbore Surveillance.

With the potential cost (not purely monetary) of a major offshore incident clearly understood by Diversified Well Logging, we offer a large, varied, integrated range of products to the table.  We are fully involved in pre-well planning and post-well summation and in realtime, depending on the requirements of our clients, our workflow includes the following:

 

Wellbore Surveillance Overview

Realtime Responsibilities

Wellbore Surveillance - Geology

Wellbore Surveillance - Operations

DWL will bring an extra level of formation evaluation to the offshore environment with its Hybrid Mud Logging service. XRF elemental analysis of the cuttings allows far better geologic insight into the rock properties and their potential behavior. Using the K, Th and U from the XRF , we can derive an Elemental GR (EGR). Having two independent GR measurements can provide corroboration for both and, as has happened, EGR can be used to successfully drill ahead if problems with the downhole GR occur. Not only will this save the cost of a trip but also avoid problems that may occur when tripping through problematic formations.

Wellbore Surveillance - Workflow

Pressure Management - Workflow

Wellbore Stability - Workflow

Drilling Dysfunction - Workflow

In summary, Diversified Well Logging treats wellbore surveillance with the seriousness it deserves. Our tools collect vital information and our communication protocols assure that issues are promptly flagged and all key-players are made aware of the situation. Experience has taught us that there is no such thing as a small problem. Small problems while drilling generally do not go away, they only get bigger.

We are proud to have had a ZERO recordable incident rate in 2019, and we bring this culture of safety to all we do, Wellbore Surveillance included.

For more information and downloadable service overview ... Click Here.

Weathering the Storm 6 Jun 2020, 5:30 pm

This ‘blog’ is inspired by some excellent photography by John Wagner who captured the ‘title-image’ on one of our rigs in Oklahoma.

When difficult times hit the upstream oil industry, something which seems to be increasingly frequent, it helps that companies such as Diversified Well Logging, LLC., (DWL) can rise to the occasion and deliver innovative wellsite services that provide value to operators while keeping costs in line with tight budgets.  When geological understanding is key to the long-term economic success of a project, but cost constraints limit spending on the data that provides that geologic knowledge, DWL has the perfect, capital-efficient services to bridge the gap.

Our Oklahoma project, like many others across the North America unconventional plays, is running the Surface Measurement While Drilling (SMWD) program with Hybrid Mud Logging and Elemental Steering or chemosteering.  Hybrid Mud Logging uses realtime wellsite XRF data to model mineralogy and lithology and provide true quantitative geologic information while drilling.  While traditional mud logging delivers useful observations, Hybrid Mud Logging delivers understanding.

On SMWD jobs our customers realize the benefits of improved geology, geosteering, targeting of zones for improved rates of penetration, overall drilling efficiency, and the benefit of realtime and near-realtime data for completion strategies.

With our elemental data being collected and analyzed at the wellsite, the quality control procedures that DWL use can quickly identify possible errors or inconsistencies.  We run laboratory quality calibration standards every 5 samples and the elemental gamma ray (EGR) that is calculated is constantly compared with downhole gamma ray to assure that samples are on-depth and representative of the formations drilled.  With quality control being performed in realtime we can quickly fix issues that might take weeks or months to surface if analyzed in a traditional laboratory setting.

With drilled cuttings, formation gas, and drilling parameters – basically the ‘free’ data that every well produces – DWL can deliver the following:

  • XRF Elemental cuttings data
  • Chemostratigraphy
  • Stratigraphic changes in lithology and chemistry
  • Analysis of paleoenvironmental, depositional, and provenance indicators
  • Sequence stratigraphy
  • Calculated gamma (elemental gamma ray)
  • Modelled mineralogy
  • Facies characterization
  • Modelled total organic carbon (TOC)
  • Stratigraphic benchmarking – pick tops when gamma ray is poor
  • Select casing points
  • Geosteering (elemental steering or chemosteering)
  • Characterize the lateral – stay in zone – identify faults
  • Identify cavings and wellbore stability/instability
  • Drilling problem mitigation – chert/pyrite/clay
  • Rock physics modelling – grain density and brittleness
  • Utilize data where LWD tools are impractical or fail
  • Integrate with gas chromatography and mass spectrometry
  • Optimize target and completion program
  • Integrate drilling parameters, artificial intelligence (A.I.), statistics and modelling

 

From cuttings to completions, SMWD brings formation evaluation back to the surface.  The value to our clients has been proved over and over again. DWL has saved costs by recognizing faults and steering successfully back to the target zone for more production potential.  We have also indicated that stopping a well would be the best option when passing certain faults could not allow successful re-steering to the target. The former adds value, the latter saves money.  Confidence in our elemental data and modelling has also allowed drillers to avoid costly bit trips when expensive downhole tool have failed.  And, elemental investigation of the rocks drilled has identified ‘sweet spots’ for drilling optimization by recognizing that the ‘homogenous’ formation being drilled (homogenous under the microscope) was in fact not homogenous at all.  This recognition has recently saved at least two bit and motor runs.

Clearly, SMWD, realtime wellsite analysis of cuttings, is a service that adds value, saves money and more than pays for itself.  Of course, it also allows us to deliver high quality geological data on every well drilled for more geocertainty across a pad or field.  Geocertainty that was previously considered to be in the realm of downhole logging tools and cores.  Bringing evaluation to the surface reduces initial cost (we are a fraction of core and LWD costs) and the risk and extra cost of a failed LWD or coring tool (our replacement equipment can be on the road to the wellsite within an hour or so.)

DWL’s vision for the future is a future we deliver now.  We have evolved traditional mud logging services to create innovative methods to bring value to our customers; we bring capital-efficiency to the upstream oil industry helping to weather the storm of economic and political factors that affect us all.

(Photograph by John Wagner – DWL Field Supervisor)

Hybrid Mud Logging & Other Innovations 16 May 2020, 5:16 pm

Listen to Dave Tonner talk about DWL's innovative services, thanks to Susan Nash and the American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG) for this great opportunity to share.

Evolving for Unconventional Challenges 31 Mar 2020, 5:04 pm

In response to a couple of posts about the ‘death’ of mud logging in hard times and the scant attention paid to cuttings and gas information by oil companies, I think we need to consider a few things.

1)    In the dim and distant past mud logging was the only method of getting realtime geological data so by necessity it was a valued service which expanded into drill monitoring and pressure monitoring.

2)    MWD and LWD then came along, grew, and became extremely profitable. They basically cornered the realtime Formation Evaluation market – especially offshore where cost was no problem.

3)    Mud logging remained as an ‘afterthought’ offshore. Onshore, it dug in and continued to bag samples and find cheaper and cheaper ways to operate and make a living. The service gradually regressed back to its 1930’s roots – a gas trap and a logger trying to differentiate color changes in shales.

4)    In the present day with the rise of unconventional drilling, mud logging is again the most cost-effective way of getting realtime geological data – so, an opportunity exists.

5)    MWD and LWD are of course still around but are too expensive to be run onshore in every lateral.

6)    Unfortunately, mud logging has not risen to the new opportunities open to it. It has remained hunkered down close to its roots providing the same service – a gas trap and a logger trying to differentiate color changes in shales. To an oil company trying to stay financially afloat in a flooded market where, honestly, is the value to them of a bag of cuttings and a gas curve?

If mud logging is slowly dying it is no one’s fault but the mud logging companies.

Diversified Well Logging recognizes that to provide value to its clients it has to deliver something that will be cost effective, reduce inefficiencies, reduce geologic uncertainty, and overall show that the return on an investment in DWL services far, far, exceeds the outlay. With our Surface Measurement While Drilling™ services and our A.I. platform we take drilled cuttings, we do all of the aforementioned, and we give you completion strategies and production forecasts. That is VALUE.

When planning a new project and the checklist gets to ‘Mud Logging Company’, try to visualize the benefits of using a Surface Measurement While Drilling company instead … along with the bag of cuttings and a gas curve you will get everything you need to drill, correlate, geo-position, map hydrocarbons, plan completions and more.

Diversified Well Logging has evolved. Contact us to discover how our evolution can help you.

Why We Love Elemental Geology 20 Apr 2019, 5:03 pm

When a stereoscopic microscope, tweezers, sample probe, some chemicals, and an ultraviolet lightbox were the ‘state-of-the-art’ in cuttings evaluation equipment, mud-loggers and geologists did a very good job in identifying drilled formations all things considered. Similarly, when coach-and-horses and sailing ships were the ‘state-of-the-art’ in transportation, they also did a very good job transporting people and goods from place to place.

But times change.

In the mud-logging world, Diversified Well Logging (DWL) is embracing X-Ray Fluorescence as the new ‘normal’ for realtime sample evaluation. Driven in part by the demand for better geological information in unconventional formations that are difficult to impossible to examine accurately under the microscope, elemental analysis can be used to accurately determine the elemental, mineralogical, lithological, and geomechanical properties of a sample. With this quantitative data, we will know exactly what the formation is and where we are in it. No more fifty shades of grey, but a wide range of ‘colorful’ elements.

gchem

With what DWL is calling Hybrid Mud Logging, our field geologists will be able to respond to wellbore issues with more certainty. Where answers to downhole questions used to include a ‘maybe’ or a ‘possibly’, we will now have rock solid evidence. For example:

Q1: Why am I now drilling slowly when I am in the same formation? My gamma ray and visual cuttings descriptions are the same. Is the bit or motor failing? Are there hole cleaning issues? Do I really have to waste time and money and trip out of the hole to check?

A1: Realtime geochemical analysis with XRF will help determine the cause. Evidence of biogenic or authigenic silica – siliceous/quartz cement will affect the ROP. Evidence of carbonate cement can also affect the ROP. Subtle changes in the clay type that will lead to swelling can affect the ROP. Or no change in lithology at all would indicate there is a hole cleaning, bit or motor problem. Whatever the answer, there is evidence to back it up.

Q2: I am starting to see an increase in cavings, but where are they coming from? The cuttings seem to be the same. Do the new formations have stability issues? Are the cavings coming from destabilized formations up-hole? Is hole geometry or drill-string configuration involved? Should mud properties be changed?

A2: Hybrid Mud Logging with elemental cuttings analysis can help answer the questions. The elemental signature of the cavings will definitely confirm their origin. The exact zone the cavings are from will determine if hole or pipe geometry is a contributing factor. And a change in mineralogy / clay type of the new formation can indicate a mud property change is needed.

Q3: I am geosteering but now, 750 feet away from TD, my gamma ray tool has failed. Do I trip out of the hole to change the tool and waste time and money? Do I drill ahead blindly, possibly deviate out of the target and maybe lose the footage for production and waste money drilling? Or, shall I call TD short, definitely lose the 750 feet for production, but save the drilling costs?

A3: With Hybrid Mud Logging, the other option would be to Chemosteer the final 750 feet. A trip would be avoided, and the uncertainty surrounding the possible loss of a productive section of hole would be avoided.

These are just three examples of how quantitative elemental analysis of the cuttings can greatly improve the decision-making process and bring value that far outweighs the cost. There are many more. In general, of course, it comes down to operators wishing to improve their returns on investment. Hybrid Mud Logging will do that.

One final example with Hybrid Mud Logging and Chemosteering is estimated to have saved an operator at least $10 million. A third well on a pad intersected an unexpected change in structure above the target, identified with realtime elemental cuttings analysis. Quick interpretation allowed the well-path to be altered and by Chemosteering the reservoir target was successfully intersected. If the change in structure had not been identified, a $10MM sidetrack would have been necessary.

Diversified has embraced the future and is now pioneering its Surface Measurement While Drilling services (Hybrid Mud Logging, Chemosteering, Automated Remote Mudlogging). In short order, we believe that our clients will appreciate the new service benefits as they see their geological knowledge grow along with the profitability of their wells.

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