52 Oilfield Review
New Aspects of Multilateral Well Construction
Jos Fraija 
Herv Ohmer 
Tom Pulick 
Rosharon, Texas, USA 
Mike Jardon 
Caracas, Venezuela 
Mirush Kaja 
Eni Agip 
Milan, Italy 
Ramiro Paez 
China National Offshore Operating Company
(CNOOC)
Jakarta, Indonesia 
Gabriel P. G. Sotomayor 
Petrleo Brasileiro S.A. (Petrobras) 
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 
Kenneth Umudjoro 
TotalFinaElf 
Port Harcourt, Nigeria
For help in preparation of this article, thanks to Axel
Destremau, Port Harcourt, Nigeria; Robert Dillard and J im
Fairbairn, Rosharon, Texas, USA; J ames Garner, Sugar
Land, Texas; Gary Gill, Calgary, Alberta, Canada; Heitor
Gioppo and J oe Miller, Rio de J aneiro, Brazil; TimORourke,
J akarta, Indonesia; and J ohn Spivey, University of
Wyoming, Laramie, USA. 
CBT (Cement Bond Tool), Discovery MLT, ECLIPSE,
FloWatcher, MultiPort, MultiSensor, NODAL, Phoenix,
PowerPak XP, QUANTUM, RAPID (Reliable Access
Providing Improved Drainage), RapidAccess, RapidConnect,
RapidExclude, RapidSeal, RapidTieBack, USI (UltraSonic
Imager) and VISION475 are marks of Schlumberger. 
Multiple drainholes that diverge from a main wellbore maximize reservoir contact. In addition to providing more 
drainage area than a single-bore well, these multilateral completions potentially reduce overall drilling risk and 
total cost. To meet specific field-development objectives in todays demanding oil and gas applications, operators 
require reliable junctions between primary casing in the main borehole and liners in lateral well branches. 
In  the  pursuit  of  optimal  production,  cost  reduc-
tion  and  maximum  reserve  recovery,  operating
companies in the petroleum industry are placing
increasing  emphasis  on  multilateral  comple-
tionsseparate  drainholes,  or  branches,  drilled
from a single primary borehole. More than 10% of
the  74,000  new  wells  drilled  each  year  are
candidates  for  these  types  of  completions.
Multilateral  technology  is  also  used  for  reentry
drilling applications in existing wells. 
Basic  forms  of  multilateral  wells  have  been
around  since  the  1950s,  but  early  drilling
methods  and  completion  equipment  were  suit-
able  in  only  a  few  applications.  Improvements 
in well-construction techniques during the 1990s
allowed  operators  to  drill  and  complete  an
increasing number of wells with multiple lateral
branches.
1
Today,  main  wellbores  and  laterals
can be drilled vertically, at high angles or horizon-
tally to address various subsurface conditions. 
Multilateral well configurations range from a
single drainhole to multiple well branches in hor-
izontal-fanned,  vertical-stacked  or  dual-opposed
arrangements (next  page).  Laterals  are  com-
pleted  as  openholes  and  with  uncemented  or
cemented  drop-off  linerscasing  that  is  not
connected  to  the  main  wellbore.  Other  comple-
tion  designs  use  mechanical  assemblies  to
provide  a  strong  connection,  pressure  integrity
and selective access at junctions between lateral
liners and the primary casing of a main wellbore. 
Like  any  other  well  completion,  multilateral
liners  often  include  external  casing  packers  to
ensure zonal isolation or mechanical screens for
sand  control.  Production  from  individual  laterals
can  be  commingled  or  flow  to  surface  through
separate  tubing  strings.  Today,  wells  also  may
incorporate  advanced  completion  equipment  to
monitor  and  control  flow  from  each  lateral
branch.  Accordingly,  drilling  and  completion 
risks vary with well configuration, junction com-
plexity,  well-completion  requirements  and
downhole equipment. 
Multiple  laterals  increase  productivity  by
contacting more reservoir than a single-bore well.
In  some  fields,  multilateral  technology  offers
advantages  over  other  completion  techniques,
such  as  conventional  vertical  and  horizontal
wells  or  fracture  stimulation  treatments.
Operators use multilateral wells to target several
formations or more than one reservoir and to tap
bypassed  reserves  with  a  single  main  wellbore.
Multilateral  technology  often  provides  the  only
economical  means  to  produce  isolated  reservoir
compartments, outlying satellite fields and small
reservoirs containing limited reserve volumes. 
Multilateral  wells  are  particularly  suited  for
connecting vertical and horizontal features, such
as  natural  fractures,  laminated  formations  and
layered  reservoirs.  Multiple  high-angle  or  hori-
zontal drainholes intersect more natural fractures
and often enhance production better than single-
bore  horizontal  wells  or  hydraulic  fracturing.  A
multilateral well should be considered in settings
where  directional  or  horizontal  wells  are  appro-
priate. Directional, horizontal and multilateral wells
optimize  wellbore  contact  with  a  reservoir  and
allow  higher  flow  rates  at  lower  pressure  drops
than single-bore vertical or horizontal wells. 
1. Bosworth S, El-Sayed HS, Ismail G, Ohmer H, Stracke M,
West C and Retnanto A: Key Issues in Multilateral
Technology, Oilfield Review 10, no. 4 (Winter 1998): 1428. 
2. Betancourt S, Shukla S, Sun D, Hsii J , Yan M, Arpat B,
Sinha S and J alali Y: Developments in Completion
Technology and Production Methods, paper SPE 74427,
presented at the SPE International Petroleum
Conference and Exhibition, Villahermosa, Mexico,
February 1012, 2002. 
But there are limits to how long a single hor-
izontal section can be before borehole and pipe,
or casing, friction limit well outow. Multilateral
wells  reduce  frictional  pressure  losses  during
production  by  spreading  inow  across  two  or
more shorter lateral branches. For example, dual-
opposed laterals reduce owing friction pressure
compared with a single-bore horizontal well that
has the same reservoir exposure and production
rate (see Key Design Considerations, page 68).
Multilateral  wells  require  additional  initial
investment  in  equipment,  but  potentially  reduce
total capital expenditures and development costs
as  well  as  operational  expenses  by  decreasing
the  number  of  required  wells.  This  technology
reduces  wellhead,  platform-riser  and  subsea-
completion  requirements,  which  decreases  cost
and  optimizes  slot  utilization  on  offshore  plat-
forms  or  subsea  templates.  Multilateral  wells
also  minimize  the  size,  or  footprint,  of  surface
locations  and  mitigate  environmental  impact
onshore. Fewer main wellbores reduce repeated
exposure to shallow drilling risks. 
Lateral junctions are a critical element of mul-
tilateral completions and can fail under formation
stresses, temperature-induced forces and differ-
ential pressures during production. Junctions are
Autumn 2002 53
divided into two broad groups: those that do not
provide  pressure  integrity  (Level  1,  2,  3  and  4),
and  those  that  do  (Level  5  and  6).  Multilateral
success  depends  on  junction  durability,  versatil-
ity and accessibility. 
Level 3 and Level 6 systems have emerged as
preferred  multilateral  junctions.
2
Level  3  junc-
tions incorporate a liner tieback and mechanical
connection  to  the  primary  casing  that  permit
selective access and reentry of lateral branches.
Level  6  junctions  are  an  integral  part  of  the  pri-
mary  casing  string  that  provides  pressure
integrity and lateral access. 
New  junction-construction  techniques  allow
the use of multilateral wells in a wider range of
subsurface  conditions  for  a  growing  number  of
reservoir  applications.  However,  more  complex
equipment and well congurations create techni-
cal  obstacles,  operational  risks  and  economic
concerns  that  operators  and  service  companies
must  address.  This  article  reviews  multilateral
applications and classications. We also discuss
junction  systems  and  installations  through  test-
well  results  and  eld  examples  from  the  USA,
Canada, Venezuela, Brazil, Nigeria and Indonesia. 
Reservoir Applications 
Multilateral wells replace one or more individual
wells.  For  example,  a  dual-opposed  multilateral
well replaces two conventional horizontal wells,
each  drilled  from  surface  with  separate  casing
strings  and  wellheads.  For  areas  with  shallow
drilling hazards, deep reservoirs or elds in deep
water, a single main wellbore eliminates the risk
and high cost of drilling to total depth (TD) twice.
Onshore,  this  reduces  the  number  of  wellheads
and the size of surface locations. Offshore, multi-
lateral  wells  conserve  platform  and  subsea
template  slots,  and  reduce  surface-facility  and
deck-space requirements. 
A  primary  advantage  of  multilateral  wells  is
maximum  reservoir  contact  for  increased  pro-
ductivity  or  injectivity,  and  improved  recovery
factors.  Several  lateral  drainholes  intersect  and
connect  heterogeneous  reservoir  features,  such
as natural fractures, streaks of higher permeabil-
ity,  laminated  formations  or  layered  reservoirs
and  isolated  pockets  of  oil  and  gas.  Maximizing
reservoir  contact  increases  wellbore  drainage
area  and  reduces  pressure  drawdown,  which
mitigates  sand  inux  and  water  or  gas  coning
more  effectively  than  do  conventional  vertical
and horizontal wells. 
Shallow, depleted or
heavy-oil reservoirs
Vertically
stacked laterals
Horizontally fanned
laterals
Dual-opposed
laterals
Laminated or
layered reservoirs
Main wellbore
Junctions
Low-permeability or
naturally fractured reservoirs
>
Basic multilateral congurations. Horizontally spread laterals in fork, fan or spine-rib arrangements target a single zone to maximize production from
shallow low-pressure or heavy-oil reservoirs and elds with depleted pressure. Vertically stacked laterals are effective in laminated formations or layered
reservoirs; commingling several horizons increases well productivity and improves hydrocarbon recovery. In low-permeability and naturally fractured 
formations, dual-opposed laterals can intersect more fractures than a single-bore horizontal well, especially if stress orientation is known, and can also
reduce owing friction pressure during production. 
Any new technology has elements of risk and
technical  complexity,  so  both  advantages  and
disadvantages  must  be  addressed.
3
Loss  of 
a  main  multilateral  wellbore  results  in  lost  pro-
duction  from  all  the  branches.  Multilateral
completions are mechanically more complex than
conventional wells and depend on new tools and
downhole  systems.  Well  control  during  multi-
lateral  drilling  or  completion  operations  can  be
difcult.  Also,  there  are  greater  risks  related  to
long-term  wellbore  access  for  remedial  well
work or reservoir management. 
After  consideration  of  positive  and  negative
aspects  of  multilateral  technology  as  well  as  its
long-term  impact  on  eld  development,  several
reservoir applications become evident. Wells with
multiple  laterals  are  particularly  suited  for  elds
with  heavy-oil  reserves,  low  permeability  or 
natural fractures, laminated formations or layered
reservoirs,  bypassed  hydrocarbons  in  distinct
structural  or  stratigraphic  compartments  and
mature production or depleted reservoir pressure.
4
Economic  development  of  heavy-oil  reserves
is  limited  by  low  oil  mobility,  steam-injection
sweep  efficiency  and  recovery  factors  (see
Heavy-Oil Reservoirs, page 30). For heavy-oil or
other  low-mobility  reservoirs,  lateral  drainholes
offer  advantages  similar  to  hydraulic  fracturing
treatments  in  low-permeability  gas  zones.
Increased wellbore contact with a reservoir stim-
ulates  oil  production.  Horizontal  laterals  also
reduce  pressure  drops  across  the  completion
face,  mitigate  water  coning  and  improve  steam
injection in these reservoirs (above left).
Low-permeability  and  naturally  fractured
reservoirs are frequently associated with limited
productivity, so formation anisotropy is a factor in
designing  multilateral  wells.  Hydraulic  fractures
lie  parallel,  not  perpendicular,  to  natural  frac-
tures.  As  a  result,  wells  produce  as  if  propped
fractures  were  much  shorter  than  in  a  homoge-
neous  reservoir.  Horizontal  laterals  drilled
perpendicular  to  natural  fractures  signicantly
improve  well  productivity  by  intersecting  more
fractures (above middle).
In  laminated  zones  and  layered  reservoirs  or
heterogeneous  formations,  wells  with  vertically
stacked laterals improve productivity and reserve
recovery  by  connecting  multiple  pay  intervals
separated  by  vertical  barriers  or  permeability
contrasts  and  gradations  (bottom  left).
Simultaneously  producing  multiple  zones  helps
keep  production  rates  above  the  economic  limit
of  surface  facilities  or  offshore  platforms  and
prolongs the economic life of wells and elds. 
Multilateral  wells  can  tap  and  produce
bypassed  reserves  in  distinct  reservoir  compart-
ments  created  by  depositional  environments,
formation  diagenesis  and  sealing  faults  (left).
When reserve volumes in individual blocks do not
justify  a  dedicated  single-bore  well,  multilateral
completions  can  connect  several  reservoir  com-
partments.  Reservoir  compartmentalization  also
occurs as aquifer or injected water sweeps past
low-permeability  areas,  leaving  pockets  of
bypassed  oil  and  gas  that  can  be  recovered  by
drilling and completing multilateral wells. 
In  a  similar  fashion,  multilateral  wells  allow
development  of  small  reservoirs  and  outlying
satellite  elds  that  are  not  feasible  to  produce
54 Oileld Review
>
Heavy-oil reservoirs. In addition to improving
steam injection, horizontally spread laterals
maximize production and improve recovery from
heavy-oil deposits and thin, shallow or depleted
reservoirs by increasing wellbore drainage area.
In reservoirs with thin oil columns, horizontal
laterals mitigate premature water and gas
breakthrough, or coning. 
>
Low-permeability or naturally fractured reser-
voirs. Horizontal laterals improve the likelihood 
of intersecting natural fractures and completing
an economic well in naturally fractured forma-
tions with unknown fracture orientation. If stress
orientation is known, dual-opposed laterals opti-
mize wellbore contact with the reservoir. 
>
Laminated formations or layered reservoirs. 
In layered reservoirs, several vertically stacked
laterals contact more of the reservoir than a
single-bore vertical well and can tap multiple
productive formations. Varying lateral inclination
and vertical depth of each drainhole can drain
multiple thin formations. 
>
Isolated reservoir compartments. Multilateral
wells often are more efcient than individual
wellbores for tapping bypassed hydrocarbons 
in distinct reservoir compartments or as a result
of partial reserve depletion. 
>
Satellite elds. Multilateral wells are an effec-
tive and economical means of producing outlying
fields and small reservoirs containing limited
hydrocarbon volumes. 
Autumn 2002 55
with  conventional  vertical,  high-angle  or  hori-
zontal wells (previous page, top right). Operators
also  use  multilateral  wells  to  exploit  low-
pressure and depleted reservoirs, particularly for
inll and reentry drilling.
5
In  mature  elds,  multilateral  wells  improve
inll  drilling  by  targeting  areas  that  are  not
economic  to  produce  with  a  dedicated  well-
bore. During  plateau  production,  drilling  lateral
branches from existing wellbores taps additional
hydrocarbons without abandoning current produc-
tion. This strategy improves the ow rate from a
well and increases recoverable reserves, allowing
mature reservoirs to be produced economically. 
Wells  with  multiple  branches  help  modify
reservoir  drainage  in  tertiary  water-  or  steam-
injection  projects.  Lateral  branches  sidetracked
from  existing  wells  control  inow  location  and
improve  flood  patterns  as  sweep  efficiency
changes over time. Producing previously bypassed
hydrocarbons  and  realigning  injection  patterns
with  lateral  well  branches  eliminate  the  need  to
push reserves toward existing production wells. 
Multilateral  wells  also  assist  with  reservoir
conformance  to  control  gas  and  water  inow.
Multiple  lateral  branches  drilled  with  variable
lengths  in  different  layers  improve  hydrocarbon
vertical  sweep  and  reserve  recovery.  Horizontal
laterals  mitigate  gas  and  water  coning  in  some
reservoirs,  especially  those  with  thin  oil  zones,
gas  caps  or  bottom-waterdrive.  Multilateral
wells  improve  recovery  during  gas-cap  depres-
surization  late  in  the  eld  life  cycle  and  also
improve deliverability in gas-storage projects.
6
Operators  even  use  multilateral  wells  for
exploration to sample horizontal reservoir quality
and  areal  extent,  and  appraise  stratigraphic
traps.  Another  role  is  reservoir  delineation.  By
planning  two  or  more  laterals  from  one  main
wellbore,  a  larger  area  can  be  probed  directly
from  a  single  surface  location.  This  approach
increases  exibility  during  eld  delineation  by
allowing  each  lateral  to  be  planned  based  on
knowledge  gained  from  drilling  the  main  bore-
hole and preceding laterals. 
In addition to selecting multilateral congura-
tions  to  address  specic  reservoir  applications,
engineers must determine the degree of mechan-
ical  and  hydraulic  integrity  at  lateral  junctions
that is required to optimize production and maxi-
mize  recovery  (below).
7
Schlumberger  offers
multilateral  solutions  from  reentry  drilling  and
openhole  laterals  to  advanced  RAPID  Reliable
Access  Providing  Improved  Drainage  junctions
that  provide  connectivity,  strength,  sand  exclu-
sion and pressure integrity. 
3. Vij SK, Narasaiah SL, Walia A and Singh G:
Multilaterals: An Overview and Issues Involved in
Adopting This Technology, paper SPE 39509, presented
at the SPE India Oil and Gas Conference and Exhibition,
New Delhi, India, February 1719, 1998. 
4. Ehlig-Economides CA, Mowat GR and Corbett C:
Techniques for Multibranch Well Trajectory Design 
in the Context of a Three-Dimensional Reservoir Model,
paper SPE 35505, presented at the SPE European 3-D
Reservoir Modeling Conference, Stavanger, Norway,
April 1617, 1996. 
Sugiyama H, Tochikawa T, Peden J M and Nicoll G: 
The Optimal Application of Multi-Lateral/Multi-Branch
Completions, paper SPE 38033, presented at the SPE
Asia Pacic Oil and Gas Conference, Kuala Lumpur,
Malaysia, April 1416, 1997.
5. Hill D, Neme E, Ehlig-Economides C and Mollinedo M:
Reentry Drilling Gives New Life to Aging Fields, 
Oileld Review 8, no. 3 (Autumn 1996): 417. 
6. Bary A, Crotogino F, Prevedel B, Berger H, Brown K,
Frantz J , Sawyer W, Henzell M, Mohmeyer K-U, Ren N-K,
Stiles K and Xiong H: Storing Natural Gas Underground,
Oileld Review 14, no. 2 (Summer 2002): 317. 
7. Technical Advancement of Multilaterals, Technical
Advancement of Multilaterals (TAML) Forum, Aberdeen,
Scotland, J uly 26, 1999. 
Hogg C: Comparison of Multilateral Completion
Scenarios and Their Application, paper SPE 38493,
presented at the SPE Offshore Europe Conference,
Aberdeen, Scotland, September 910, 1997. 
Brister R and Oberkircher J :The OptimumJ unction
Depth for Multilateral Wells, paper SPE 64699, pre-
sented at the SPE International Oil and Gas Conference
and Exhibition, Beijing, China, November 710, 2000. 
Westgard D: Multilateral TAML Levels Reviewed,
Slightly Modied, Journal of Petroleum Technology 54,
no. 9 (September 2002): 2228. 
Level 1 Level 2 Level 3
Level 4 Level 5 Level 6
Level 1 
Level 2 
Level 3 
Openhole sidetrack or unsupported junction. 
Cased and cemented main wellbore with openhole lateral
or drop-off liner. 
Cased and cemented main wellbore with uncemented lateral
liner mechanically connected to the main wellbore (red).
Level 4 
Level 5 
Level 6 
Cased and cemented main wellbore with cemented lateral
liner mechanically connected to the main wellbore.
Cased and cemented main wellbore and uncemented or
cemented lateral liner with hydraulic and pressure integrity
provided by additional completion equipment inside the main
wellborepackers, seals and tubulars.
Cased and cemented main wellbore and uncemented or
cemented lateral liner with hydraulic and pressure integrity
provided by the primary casing at the lateral liner intersection
without additional completion equipment inside the main wellbore.
>
J unction classications. Multilateral wells are characterized according to denitions established in the Technical Advancement of
Multilaterals (TAML) Forum held in Aberdeen, Scotland, J uly 26, 1999 and recently updated in a J uly 2002 draft proposal. These standards
classify junctions as Level 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 or 6 based on degree of mechanical complexity, connectivity and hydraulic isolation. 
Precut Windows and Junction Connectivity 
The prefabricated RapidTieBack nonmilling multi-
lateral  drilling  and  completion  system  uses
casing-exit  windows  machined  in  advance  and
covered  with  a  drillable  internal  sleeve  to  con-
struct  closely  spaced  laterals  in  new  wells
(below).  This  junction  system  can  be  installed
quickly with minimal rig downtime in wells with
inclination angles up to horizontal. A key system
advantage  is  the  capability  to  complete  quad
up to fourlaterals at right angles with adjacent
casing windows as close as 6 ft [1.8 m]. 
RapidTieBack quad junctions are designed to
locate junctions within a reservoir and drill high-
angle  drainholes  using  short-radius  drilling
assemblies. This multilateral system also can be
set  above  the  reservoir,  which  reduces  angle
build-rates  and  lateral  inclination  to  minimize
stress on junctions. 
By eliminating milling operations, precut win-
dows  provide  fast  and  consistent  casing  exits,
avoid steel-cuttings debris and reduce the risk of
casing  damage.  Drill  bits  with  hole-opening
gauges  further  reduce  risk  while  drilling  out
56 Oileld Review
3
Drill lateral
branch.
Orientation
slot
Orientation
slot
Inner drillable
sleeve
Precut
window with
composite
covering
1
Cement window
section.
Whipstock
Running
tool
Drill
bit
Mono-
positioning
tool
2
Clean out casing and
install whipstock.
Liner
Reentry
deployment
tool (RDT)
Liner tieback
Liner setting
tool
Inner sleeve
Inner
  cementing
     string
4
Install lateral liner
and tieback.
Upper profile
Urethane
filler
5 
6 
7 
Release liner setting tool and lift inner cementing string. Cement liner using dual-wiper plugs. Retrieve liner setting tool and inner cementing string. 
Wash over RDT with overshot, release monopositioning tool and retrieve RDT.
Install inner template sleeve to hold lateral liner in place. 
1 
2 
3 
4 
Install junction at proposed depth. Orient windows based on gyroscopic measurements and cement primary casing.
Drill out internal sleeve and cement. Set retrievable whipstock and monopositioning tool in profile below window section. Retrieve running tool. 
Drill lateral borehole and remove drilling assembly. Reorient whipstock to drill opposing lateral. Retrieve whipstock and monopositioning tool. 
Clean out main wellbore.Repeat for next set of windows. 
Set liner assembly, reentry deployment tool (RDT) and monopositioning tool in profile below window. Shear assembly off of RDT and run liner into lateral.
Set liner setting tool in upper profile and lock liner tieback into precut window. 
5
Optional
cemented liner.
6
Remove RDT.
7
Complete junction.
Overshot
>
Precut casing windows. Applications for RapidTieBack quad junctions include new wells that require fullbore junctions in shallow heavy-oil reservoirs,
low-permeability or naturally fractured formations and mature elds with depleted pressure. This system requires no milling of steel casing, connects
liners to the primary casing of a main wellbore and allows cementing of liners. 
Autumn 2002 57
cement and the temporary urethane-lled sleeve.
A  specially  designed  wash  tool  with  an  orienta-
tion  key  confirms  that  RapidTieBack  profile
nipples in the main casing are clear of debris. 
Installation  of  a  mechanical  tieback  sleeve
connects lateral liners with the parent casing for
added  stability  and  provides  selective  reentry
access  to  well  branches  for  remedial  work.
Laterals  can  remain  openhole  or  be  completed
with uncemented or cemented casing, slotted lin-
ers  and  sand-exclusion  screens  for  additional
borehole  stability.  A  large  internal  diameter
through  the  liner  tieback  in  the  main  wellbore
accommodates  bigger  completion  hardware,
high-volume  articial-lift  equipment  and  reentry
tools for future well operations. 
A large internal bore allows completion tools
and  equipment  with  larger  outside  diameters,
such  as  high-volume  electrical  submersible
pumps  and  hydraulically  or  electrically  operated
tubing  and  slickline-retrievable  flow-control
valves, to pass through RapidTieBack quad junc-
tions.  Placing  artificial-lift  equipment  deeper
increases pressure drawdown for additional pro-
ductivity  and  decreases  ultimate  abandonment
pressure, which improves reserve recovery. 
RapidTieBack  quad  systems  have  been  used
extensively  for  heavy-oil  applications,  but  they
are also applicable for multilateral-well comple-
tions in low-permeability, naturally fractured and
depleted  reservoirs  to  improve  well  productivity
and  reserve  recovery  by  increasing  wellbore
drainage area and reducing pressure drop across
pay intervals. 
RapidTieBack Quad: Canada and Venezuela 
Thermal  processes  for  enhanced  oil  recovery
(EOR)  inject  steam  to  heat  formations,  reduce
heavy-oil  viscosity  and  promote  ow.  Multiple
lateral  branches  maximize  reservoir  contact  and
improve  productivity  for  cyclic  steam  injection
and production, a process historically called huff
and  puff.  This  technique  typically  involves  at
least two months of steam injection and possibly
a  shut-in  and  soak  period  followed  by  six  or
more months of production. 
Although  about  four  times  more  costly  than
single-bore  wells  in  these  applications,  quad-
lateral  wells  typically  increase  well  productivity
more  than  sixfold.  These  multilateral  comple-
tions also limit environmental impact by reducing
the  number  of  wells,  which  also  minimizes
surface facilities such as steam lines and gather-
ing lines. During the past six years, RapidTieBack
quad  systems  have  been  used  successfully  to
construct  more  than  220  multilateral  junctions 
for  steam-soak  radial  wells  in  Canada  and 
cyclic  steam  stimulation  (CSS)  wells  in
Venezuela (above).
8
The RapidTieBack quad junction allows later-
als  to  be  initiated  and  drilled  through  closely
spaced exit windows in a short section of primary
casing,  which  facilitates  horizontal  steering
before reaching the bottom of a productive inter-
val. Operators use this system to drill directional
laterals  by  exiting  the  primary  casing  above  a
reservoir  and  turning  horizontal  after  entering
productive zones. 
Combining  EOR  processes  with  multilateral-
well  technology  is  extremely  effective.  In  most
cases,  production  economics  and  reserve  recov-
ery exceed expectations, so operators in Canada
and Venezuela plan to continue drilling and com-
pleting  multilateral  wells  over  the  next  few
years.  Operators  in  North  and  South  America
also are considering RapidTieBack quad systems
for  well-completion  applications  other  than
heavy-oil reservoirs. 
8. Stalder J L, York GD, Kopper RJ , Curtis CM, Cole TL 
and Copley J H: Multilateral-Horizontal Wells Increase
Rate and Lower Cost Per Barrel in the Zuata Field, 
Faja, Venezuela, paper SPE 69700, presented at the 
SPE International Thermal Operations and Heavy Oil
Symposium, Portamar, Margarita Island, Venezuela,
March 1214, 2001. 
6
 ft
L
a
te
ra
l lin
e
r
M
a
in
 w
e
llb
o
re
CANADA
USA
SOUTH
AMERICA
ALBERTA
Caracas
Calgary
VENEZUELA
>
Quad-lateral completions. Operators have installed more than 220 RapidTieBack quad junctions in
Venezuela and Canada (left). Setting precut windows in a short tangent section improves the junction-
construction process and facilitates lateral access. This system provides the option of completing up
to four laterals openhole or with liners connected to the main wellbore by a mechanical tieback sleeve
for added strength and stability at junctions (right). An oriented diverter set in a reference prole pro-
vides selective access to reenter lateral branches for remedial well interventions. 
Milling Oriented Windows 
The RapidAccess multilateral completion system
providing selective drainhole access helps orient
milled casing-exit windows for openhole laterals,
drop-off liners and more complex junction instal-
lations (below).  It  also  provides  selective  lateral
access for reentry operations. This simple, low-cost
window-milling  technique  uses  a  specially
designed  prole  nipple,  or  indexing  casing  cou-
pling  (ICC),  installed  in  parent  casing  strings  to
orient  commercially  available  retrievable  whip-
stocks.  Using  an  ICC  eliminates  the  need  to
orient precut windows by turning and positioning
a string of casing from the surface. 
The fullbore ICC provides a permanent datum
for  milling  casing  windows  and  drilling  laterals
from  7-  and  9
5
8-in.,  or  other  standard  size,  pri-
mary casing strings. Installing more than one ICC
supports construction of several lateral junctions
and  allows  multiple  reservoir  penetrations  for
optimal eld development. Five different proles
58 Oileld Review
Clean out main wellbore. Set reentry deployment tool (RDT) and selective landing tool in ICC to divert drilling assemblies and logging tools through casing window. Drill lateral borehole. 
Install liner on drillpipe guided by RDT for borehole stability and zonal isolation. Pump cement through drillpipe and liner into liner-borehole annulus to a point below the
polished-bore receptacle (PBR) on top of the liner. Release drillpipe from liner and retrieve running tool before cement hardens.
Retrieve RDT and selective landing tool.
4 
5 
6 
Place ICC in casing below proposed lateral depth and cement casing. The ICC is not oriented in advance. Cement casing.
Drill out cement. A proprietary coating prevents cement from sticking to an ICC profile. Wiper plugs typically clean the ICC, but a jetting tool is available to clean ICC profiles.
Determine ICC orientation with USI UltraSonic Imager log measurements acquired during a USI and CBT Cement Bond Tool evaluation.
Attach retrievable whipstock and selective landing tool to milling assembly. Lock selective landing tool with orienting key adjusted to properly position tools in ICC profile.
Shear off of whipstock and mill window through casing. Remove milling assembly and retrieve whipstock. 
1 
2 
3 
Reentry
deployment
tool (RDT)
ICC
Whipstock
Milling
assembly
Drill bit
Drill bit
Logging sonde
USI image
Selective
landing tool
1
Install indexing casing
coupling (ICC).
2
Clean ICC profile and
determine orientation.
3
Install retrievable whipstock
and mill casing exit.
4
Install diverter and drill
lateral branch.
5
Optional uncemented and
cemented dropoff liners.
6
Remove RDT and
selective landing tool.
Overshot
>
Milling casing windows. The RapidAccess system uses a prole nipple called an indexing casing coupling (ICC), installed in the primary casing to mill exit
windows for openhole laterals. The ICC serves as a permanent depth and directional orientation reference for drilling and reentry operations. This system
provides fullbore access in 7- and 9
5
8-in. casing, and is a key component of RapidConnect and RapidExclude junctions. 
Autumn 2002 59
provide for additional kickoff points and selective
access  to  laterals  for  optimal  well-construction,
completion  and  production  exibility.  The  ICC
proles  can  be  installed  in  any  sequence  and  at
any  depth  to  verify  tool  orientation  throughout
the life of a well. 
The  ICC  does  not  require  special  installation
or operational procedures. An ICC is installed and
run  like  a  short  joint  of  casing.  This  integral
design  with  standard  American  Petroleum
Institute  (API)  tubular  dimensions  simplifies
logistics  and  allows  conventional  cementing
operations.  The  ICC  does  not  restrict  internal
wellbore  diameter  or  limit  casing  reciprocation
and  rotation  during  cementing,  which  helps
ensure an adequate cement bond. 
After the casing is cemented, wireline or mea-
surements-while-drilling  (MWD)  survey  tools
determine ICC depth and directional orientation so
that  a  selective  landing  tool  can  orient  a  whip-
stock and milling assembly in a specic direction
at the chosen depth. The ICC position also can be
determined  from  USI  UltraSonic  Imager  log  data
often acquired during CBT Cement Bond Tool eval-
uations, which eliminates an extra logging run. 
Previous  casing-exit  techniques  required
installation  of  a  temporary  packer  to  serve  as  a
reference  and  platform  for  milling  casing  win-
dows.  With  packer-based  systems,  depth  and
directional  orientation  are  lost  after  retrieving
the  packer.  Future  access  to  the  lateral  is
extremely expensive, if not impossible. Now, the
ICC concept provides positive verication of tool
orientation  and  added  condence  during  the
multilateral well-construction process. 
A  casing  window  can  be  milled  up  to  90  ft 
[27  m]  above  an  ICC.  Two  or  three  windows 
can  be  indexed  off  of  the  same  ICC  at  different
orientations  as  long  as  they  are  within  the 
90-ft  spacing.  Redundant  tool-retrieval  features
ensure  access  to  lower  laterals.  Positioning  an
ICC at the proper depth is the primary considera-
tion during installation. 
A  two-stage  process  using  a  whipstock  fol-
lowed by a special reentry deployment tool (RDT)
further  improves  window  milling  and  junction
construction  compared  with  systems  that  just
use  a  whipstock.  The  RDT  outside  diameter  is
smaller and thus easier to retrieve than standard
equipment,  which  minimizes  debris  and  tool-
retrieval problems after drilling. 
The ICC is an important element in multilateral-
well  maintenance,  long-term  eld-development
planning  and  reservoir  management.  Setting  an
oriented  diverter  in  the  ICC  allows  selective
access  at  a  junction  for  lateral  reentry.  By  pro-
viding  a  permanent  reference  point  and  support
for through-tubing lateral access, the ICC reduces
the  cost  and  risk  of  future  remedial  work 
and  junction  construction.  RapidAccess  open-
hole  junctions  are  applicable  in  shales  and
competent,  consolidated  formations.  The  ICC
also  provides  the  foundation  for  Schlumberger
RapidConnect  multilateral  completion  system
providing selective drainhole access and connec-
tivity  and  RapidExclude  multilateral  junction  for
solids exclusion (see Junction Connectivity and
Stability,  below,  and  Junction  Strength  and
Sand Exclusion, page 63).
Junction Connectivity and Stability 
In early multilateral junctions, maintaining selec-
tive branch access was possible only with precut
windows  or  more  complex  junctions.  This  made
planning for future laterals difcult because junc-
tion  depth  had  to  be  determined  in  advance.  In
addition,  precut  windows  with  drillable  sleeves
limited casing integrity. Building on RapidAccess
window-milling  solutions,  RapidConnect  and
RapidExclude  junctions  create  a  structural  con-
nection  between  lateral  liners  and  the  primary
casing  that  allows  selective  access  to  well
branches  and  the  main  wellbore.  Each  well
branch is cased, but typically only the main well-
bore is cemented. 
Conventional  anchoring  systems  with
mechanical liner hangers or latching mechanisms
often  extended  into  the  main  wellbore,  prevent-
ing  access  to  laterals  and  the  main  wellbore.
Mill-over liners provided temporary access to the
lateral  and  main  wellbore,  but  these  junctions
eventually  collapse  under  loads  caused  by
formation  temperatures  and  stresses,  pressure
depletion,  subsidence  and  high  pressure  differ-
ential  when  high-volume  electrical  submersible
pump  are  used.  In  contrast,  RapidConnect  and
RapidExclude  designs  provide  mechanical
integrity  at  a  junction  in  the  event  of  forma-
tion instability  and  movement  over  the  life  of 
a well (above).
Junction cross section
Template
Maintains mechanical integrity after
formation collapses on junction.
RapidConnect Junction
Unsupported junction moves into
main wellbore after formation
collapses on junction. 
Junction cross section
Conventional Mill-Over Liner
Finite-element analysis
Deflection of 3.51 in. into
the main wellbore with a
10-psi load
Negligible deflection with a 1000-psi load
Finite-element analysis
Connector Liner
>
RapidConnect junction versus mill-over liner. Constructing a lateral junction by milling over the top 
of a liner that extends into the main wellbore has several disadvantages (top left). Formation forces
eventually push liners back into the main wellbore, restricting access below that point or collapsing
the junction completely. RapidConnect and RapidExclude connectors and templates improve junction
mechanical integrity and reliability (bottom left). These junctions withstand pressures 100 to 150 times
greater than a mill-over junction. Loads on the junction are transferred to the primary casing by the
connector and template interlocking proles. Finite-element analysis veried structural integrity of the
RapidConnect system. A load of 10 psi [69 kPa] on a mill-over junction results in more than 3.5 in. of
deection in 9
5
8-in. casing (top right). However, a 1000-psi [6.9-MPa] load on a RapidConnect junction
results in negligible deection (bottom right).
These  two  systems  achieve  connectivity  at
milled  casing  windows  by  assembling  junction
components  downhole  to  close  dimensional  tol-
erances. The resulting high-strength connections
are  suited  to  multilateral  applications  in  unsta-
ble,  unconsolidated,  weakly  consolidated  or
incompetent  formations.  There  are  two  main
components of these systems, a template and a
connector, that t together to provide consistent
junction connectivity. 
The template with a precut window and guide
rails  is  placed  next  to  a  milled  casing-exit  win-
dow.  These  rails  match  proles  on  a  connector.
The template is installed in an ICC as part of the
main  wellbore  completion,  and  the  precut
window  is  oriented  adjacent  to  the  previously
milled  casing  window  for  a  lateral.  Using  ICC
prole  nipples  allows  precise  tool  orientation
during installation. 
The  interlocking  guide  rails  and  connector
proles orient and divert the liner and connector
through  the  template  window  into  a  lateral. 
The top of the connector then locks into place in
the  upper  section  of  a  template  to  resist  liner
movement. The concept is similar to tongue-and-
groove connections. 
This  technique  creates  a  strong  structural
connection. The RapidConnect junction achieves
a  collapse-strength  rating  of  1500  psi  [10  MPa].
The smooth transition from main wellbore to lat-
eral  facilitates  subsequent  reentry  and  remedial
operations. Integral through-tubing lateral access
and selective isolation simplify future operations
and facilitate production control. 
An optional ICC installed in advance at mini-
mal  cost  allows  the  flexibility  to  drill  and
complete  other  lateral  branches  in  the  future.
Unlike  precut  windows,  the  ICC  provides  com-
plete  casing  integrity  until  an  exit  window  is
milled. If unplanned laterals are required in a well-
bore where  there  is  no  ICC,  the  RapidConnect
system  can  be  installed  using  a  conventional
packer as the reference datum and tool platform. 
Schlumberger  evaluated  RapidConnect  and
RapidExclude  equipment  and  procedures  in  an
experimental  well  at  the  Gas  Technology
Institute  (GTI)  facility  in  Catoosa,  Oklahoma,
USA,  to  validate  the  junction-construction  pro-
cess  for  milled  casing  windows  (above).  This
full-scale testing was in addition to conventional
component,  subassembly  and  system-level
qualication  tests  performed  during  the  stan-
dard  product-development  process.  The  system
installation  and  junction  construction  were
successful,  and  the  system  was  fully  functional
after  retrieval  from  the  test  well.  Several
60 Oileld Review
Template Connector
Profile nipple
Upper packer
RapidConnect
   template
RapidConnect
connector
Selective
through-tubing
access (STTA)
Selective
  landing
     tool
Lower packer
Set template and selective landing tool in ICC or on a packer below
milled window after running lower completion equipment. Position
template opening across casing-exit window. Retrieve template
running tools. 
Insert connector downhole until the lower end engages in the 
polished-bore receptacle (PBR) on top of drop-off liner and the upper
end lands in the template. Retrieve running tools. 
Complete junction installation.
1 
2 
3 
Set tubing and packer for upper lateral. Tie into template PBR if
hydraulic isolation is required at the junction.
Set a selective through-tubing access (STTA) device with a locking
profile and a deflector in the template to divert tools into the lateral
for remedial interventions.
Install an internal sleeve to isolate a lateral from the main wellbore.
4 
5 
6 
1
Install template.
2
Install connector.
3
Junction complete.
5
Optional lateral
access and reentry.
6
Optional isolation
of upper lateral.
4
Install remaining
completion equipment.
>
J unction connectivity and strength. The RapidConnect and RapidExclude systems use RapidAccess ICC proles to construct junctions that connect lateral
liners to milled exit windows in primary casing strings. A high-strength junction is constructed in the well, not prefabricated. Two main components are
assembled downhole to close dimensional tolerances without precut windows and orienting the casing from surface. The rst component, a template with
precut window and guide rails, is set across a milled window. The second component, a connector, physically anchors lateral liners to the template. 
Autumn 2002 61
RapidConnect  eld  installations  and  a  full-scale
RapidExclude  junction  test  at  the  Catoosa 
site conrmed junction performance and deploy-
ment procedures.
9
RapidConnect Junction: Nigeria 
In  March  2000,  TotalFinaElf  ran  the  rst  7-in.
RapidConnect  junction  in  Ofon  26,  a  new  well
located offshore Nigeria (right).
10
The main bore-
hole penetrated two productive intervals, while a
single  lateral  branch  targeted  a  fault-
isolated  section  of  the  upper  zone.  The  well
design  called  for  a  cased  and  cemented  main
wellbore with a cased lateral liner mechanically
connected  to  the  primary  casing,  but  not
cemented at the junction. 
Prior to drilling and completing the upper lat-
eral,  TotalFinaElf  individually  gravel  packed  the
two producing zones in the main wellbore below
the  proposed  lateral.  An  isolation  packer
between  the  two  screen  assemblies  allowed
selective  production  from  either  interval.  To
support  multilateral  equipment  and  comple-
tion operations,  the  7-in.  production  casing  of
the  main  wellbore,  which  was  set  at  2883  m
[9459 ft], included an ICC for depth reference and
directional orientation. 
The  operator  oriented  a  commercially  avail-
able whipstock in the ICC, milled a window in the
7-in. casing between 1916 and 1920 m [6286 and
6299  ft]  and  drilled  a  6-in.  lateral  drainhole  to
2730 m [8957 ft]. Maintaining formation stability
and lateral connectivity at this junction depth and
high angle was a major concern. 
A  lower  4-in.  drop-off  liner  attached  to  an
upper  4
1
2-in.  temporary  liner  was  run  into  the 
6-in.  lateral.  The  upper  liner  prevented  loss  of
borehole diameter or hole collapse between the
7-in. casing window and the drop-off liner during
cementing  operations.  Stand-alone  sand-
exclusion  screens  without  a  gravel  pack
controlled  sand  inux  and  stabilized  the  produc-
tive interval sufciently, but a water zone above
the  screen  depth  had  to  be  isolated  from  the
junction.  The  operator  chose  external  casing
packers  to  isolate  the  sandface  before  cement-
ing.  Ported  collars  allowed  cement  to  be  placed
in the annulus across from the water zone. 
The  4-in.  liner  assembly  included  standard
wire-wrapped screens for sand control, a primary
and a backup ECP, two ported collars, a polished-
bore  receptacle  (PBR)  for  a  subsequent  tieback
liner and a quick disconnect to release the 4
1
2-in.
liner. A 2
3
8-in. internal washpipe facilitated uid
circulation and cementing. A sliding sleeve in the
4
1
2-in.  liner  provided  a  way  to  circulate  cement
out of the annulus below the junction. 
9. Ohmer H, Brockman M, Gotlib M and Varathajan P:
Multilateral J unction Connectivity Discussion and
Analysis, paper SPE 71667, presented at the SPE Annual
Technical Conference and Exhibition, New Orleans,
Louisiana, USA, September 30October 3, 2001. 
Indexing
casing
coupling
(ICC)
9
5
8-in.
casing
QUANTUM
production packer
RapidConnect template
Selective
landing
tool
QUANTUM production packer
RapidConnect connector
Sliding sleeve
with profile nipple
Ported
collar
PBR Ported
collar
External casing
packers
Cement
Sand-
control
screens
7-in.
casing
Cement
Sand-control screens
Sand-control screens
QUANTUM gravel-pack packer
QUANTUM gravel-pack packer
Bottom packer
160
0
320
480
640
800
960
1120
1280
1440
1600
1760
1920
2080
2240
2400
0 200 400 600 800
Horizontal departure, m
4-in. lateral
liner
RapidConnect junction
T
r
u
e 
v
e
r
t
i
c
a
l 
d
e
p
t
h 
(
T
V
D
)
, 
m
1000 1200 1400 1600 1800
Lateral plan
Main wellbore actual
Main wellbore planned
1280
1120
960
800
640
480
320
160
0
0 160 320 480 640 800 960 1120 1280
N
o
r
t
h
-
S
o
u
t
h 
d
e
p
a
r
t
u
r
e
, 
m
West-East departure, m
9
5
8-in. casing
9
5
8-in. casing
24-in. casing
24-in. casing
N
AFRICA
NIGERIA
Port
Harcourt
Lagos
>
Nigeria offshore multilateral completion. TotalFinaElf installed a RapidConnect system to complete
the Ofon 26 well in Nigeria, West Africa (middle). The trajectory of the main wellbore targeted two
productive zones; a single lateral branch tapped a fault-isolated section of the upper zone (top). The
two lower zones were completed with standard sand-exclusion screens and gravel packed individu-
ally. The operator ran a drop-off liner consisting of stand-alone wire-wrapped screens, a primary and
a backup external casing packer (ECP) to isolate the sandface before cementing, two ported collars, 
a polished-bore receptacle (PBR) and a disconnect to release the running string and a temporary 
4
1
2-in. liner to stabilize the lateral during completion operations (bottom). A 4-in. tieback liner then was
set in the PBR of the drop-off liner and locked into the RapidConnect template. 
10. Ohmer et al, reference 9. 
The workstring tubing, 4
1
2-in. liner and 2
3
8-in.
washpipe  were  retrieved  after  cementing  the
drop-off  liner  and  cleaning  out  excess  cement
above the 4-in. lateral tieback PBR. This left the
4-in.  drop-off  liner  in  the  6-in.  openhole,  18  m 
[59 ft] from the 7-in. casing window. The junction
was  deployed  in  two  runs:  the  rst  to  place  a
RapidConnect  template  adjacent  to  the  7-in.
milled casing window; the second to tie back into
the drop-off liner and complete the junction with
a RapidConnect connector. 
On  the  rst  trip,  the  template  was  seated  in
the  upper  isolation  packer  below  the  junction.
The second trip stabbed a seal assembly on the
tieback  liner  into  the  4-in.  PBR  on  the  drop-off
liner and locked the connector into the template.
A  sliding  sleeve  located  in  the  RapidConnect
stinger  and  shifted  by  coiled  tubing  allowed 
special conformance-control chemical gels to be
pumped into the annulus to further seal the junc-
tion and prevent water inux. 
Production tubulars and completion equipment
for the upper main wellbore completion were con-
nected into the top of the RapidConnect template,
and  an  isolation  sleeve  was  run  across  the
RapidConnect  junction  to  isolate  the  lateral.
Multilateral technology increased productivity and
extended the economic life of this well by allow-
ing selective production from multiple zones. 
62 Oileld Review
Tie-In
N
o
r
t
h
-
S
o
u
t
h 
d
e
p
a
r
t
u
r
e
, 
f
t
West-East departure, ft
1000
2000
3000
4000
5000
6000
3000
2000
1000
0
1000
0
0 1000 2000 1000 4000 3000 6000 5000
1000 2000 3000 2000 1000
1000
0
9
5
8-in. casing
7-in. liner
9
5
8-in. casing
9
5
8-in. casing
Liner-
hanger
packer
RapidConnect template
External casing packer
RapidConnect
junction
RapidConnect
junction
13
3
8-in. casing
16-in. casing
7-in. liner
7497 ft MD
7499 ft MD
8655 ft MD
8655 ft MD
13
3
8-in. casing
16-in. casing
T
r
u
e 
v
e
r
t
i
c
a
l 
d
e
p
t
h 
(
T
V
D
)
, 
f
t 
Horizontal departure, ft
 Planned
 Actual
 Planned
 Actual
Liner-
hanger
packer
7-in. liner
RapidConnect
connector
Sand-control screens
Sand-control screens
INDONESIA
ASIA
AUSTRALIA
N
Jakarta
J
a
va Sea
>
Indonesia multilateral completion. Repsol YPF, now China National Offshore Operating Company (CNOOC), installed a RapidConnect system to complete
East Rama eld Well AC-06 in the J ava Sea, Indonesia (upper left). Each lateral branch targeted two pay intervals (left and right). The lower 6-in. lateral
was completed with a liner consisting of a 4-in. Weatherford expandable sand screen (ESS) and expandable isolation sleeve (EIS) assembly and 4
1
2-in.
blank pipe below a 7-in. liner packer at 2406 m [7894 ft] MD. The upper 6-in. lateral was completed with a liner assembly comprising 4-in. ESS, 22 m [72 ft] 
of 4-in. EIS, 4
1
2-in. blank pipe and a 4
1
2-in. TAM International external casing packer (ECP) that was connected to the main wellbore and RapidConnect tem-
plate by a tieback liner and the RapidConnect connector (middle).
Autumn 2002 63
RapidConnect Junction: Indonesia 
Developing outlying offshore fields in Southeast
Asia adds substantial oil production and recover-
able  reserves  for  the  region.  These  types  of
fields,  however,  often  are  located  beyond  exist-
ing development patterns. Operators install small
platforms  with  minimal  facilities  to  reduce  cost,
but this limits the available slots for development
and infill drilling. 
For example, the East Rama field platform in
the  Java  Sea,  Indonesia,  had  eight  wellhead
slots and limited weight capacity (previous page).
Six slots were already in use when two sacrifi-
cial  vertical  wells  drilled  by  the  Schlumberger
multipurpose service vessel (MPSV) Bima identi-
fied  an  untapped  block  of  oil  reserves.  Optimal
field development and reserve drainage required
five wellbore entry points in the reservoir. 
Repsol  YPF,  now  China  National  Offshore
Operating  Company  (CNOOC),  decided  that  two
multilateral wells were the best solution. Acting
as the primary contractor, Schlumberger collabo-
rated with Diamond Offshore Drilling, M-I Drilling
Fluids,  TAM  International  and  Weatherford  on
this  project.  Each  of  the  two  laterals  for  East
Rama AC-06, the first multilateral well, targeted
two pay intervals. This completion did not require
hydraulic isolation at the junction, so the opera-
tor chose the RapidConnect system. 
In  January  2002,  a  RapidConnect  junction
was  installed  to  complete  Well  AC-06.
11
After
cementing 9
5
8-in. intermediate casing at 1875 m
[6152  ft]  measured  depth  (MD)  and  1196  m 
[3924  ft]  true-vertical  depth  (TVD),  Diamond
Offshore Drilling drilled a directional 8
1
2-in. bore-
hole  to  2430  m  [7973  ft]  MD,  just  above  the
reservoir.  The  rig  contractor  then  cemented  a 
7-in. casing string that included a primary and a
backup  ICC  with  different  profiles.  The  first  ICC
was at 1890 m [6201 ft] MD; the second ICC was
placed 19 m [62 ft] deeper as a contingency. 
The first 6-in. lateral was drilled directionally
to  2608  m  [8557  ft]  MD  using  an  M-I  Drilling
Fluids  synthetic  oil-base  drill-in  fluid  and
Schlumberger  VISION475  4
3
4-in.  MWD/logging-
while-drilling  (LWD)  system.  After  TD  was
reached,  the  lateral  liner  with  a  4-in.
Weatherford  expandable  sand  screen  (ESS)  and
expandable  isolation  sleeve  (EIS)  assembly  and
4
1
2-in.  blank  pipe  was  installed  below  a  7-in.
liner packer at 2406 m [7894 ft] MD. 
After the liner packer was set and the ESS and
EIS assembly were expanded, a 7-in. QUANTUM
gravel-pack  packer  with  a  plug  was  set  in  the
main wellbore at 1920 m [6300 ft] MD to isolate
the  first  lateral  and  lower  completion  during
drilling  and  completion  of  the  upper  lateral.  A
high-viscosity  fluid  was  circulated  on  top  of  the
isolation packer as a debris barrier. 
A  selective  landing  tool  run  in  conjunction
with  the  Schlumberger  VISION475  system  accu-
rately  determined  the  downhole  orientation  of
the  upper  ICC.  The  next  run  set  the  selective
landing tool and a Weatherford whipstock in the
upper ICC at 1890 m MD. A 7-in. casing window
was milled from 1880 to 1884 m [6168 to 6181 ft]
MD in less than 2
1
2 hours using a Schlumberger
PowerPak  XP  extended  power  steerable  down-
hole  motor.  The  upper  6-in.  lateral  was
directionally drilled with the same type of drill-in
fluid that was used in the lower lateral. 
A 7-in. QUANTUM packer and temporary liner
were run above 78 m [256 ft] of 4-in. ESS, 22 m
[72 ft] of 4-in. EIS, 4
1
2-in. blank pipe and a 4
1
2-in.
TAM International external casing packer, which
was set at 6300 ft MD. The ESS and EIS sandface
completion  were  expanded  and  the  ECP  was
inflated  with  cement.  The  liner  disconnect  was
released,  and  the  upper  QUANTUM  packer  and
temporary  liner  were  retrieved.  The  whipstock
and QUANTUM packer plug were retrieved from
the wellbore. 
Installation  of  a  RapidConnect  template  and
connector on a tieback liner connected the upper
lateral completion assembly with the main well-
bore  and  completed  the  Level  3  junction.  An
electrical submersible pump set in 9
5
8-in. casing
above the 7-in. liner hanger finalized the comple-
tion;  production  from  each  lateral  branch  was
commingled. From start of drilling to first produc-
tion, this well was completed in a record 36 days. 
At a stabilized oil rate of 874 m
3
/d [5500 B/D]
and  128,864  m
3
/d  [4.5  MMscf/D]  of  gas,  Well
AC-06 produces three to four times more oil than
the best conventional wells in the field. This mul-
tilateral  well  also  achieved  the  highest
productivity level32 B/D/psi [0.74 m
3
/d/kPa]
for  East  Rama  field.  Well  AC-02  and  Well 
AC-03 single-bore completions produced at 7 and
12  B/D/psi  [0.16  and  0.28  m
3
/d/kPa],  respec-
tively.  The  productivity  improvement  demon-
strated  by  this  well  proved  that  multilateral 
technology is cost-effective for developing satel-
lite fields and bypassed reserves. 
Junction Strength and Sand Exclusion 
Multilateral  junctions  can  experience  connec-
tivity  problems  because  of  unstable  formations
and  high  mechanical  loads  that  adversely  affect
their  mechanical  integrity.  In  formations  that 
are  prone  to  sand  production,  solid  particles
entering  through  junctions  cause  serious  prob-
lems.  Schlumberger  developed  a  multilateral
system  to  construct  junctions  that  exclude  sand
and better support the loads that are created by
formation instability. 
Based  on  proven  RapidAccess  and
RapidConnect concepts, the RapidExclude multi-
lateral junction for solids exclusion prevents sand
influx (above).  This  system  is  an  additional
completion tool for layered, faulted and compart-
mentalized  reservoirs,  including  wells  that
11. Caretta F, Drablier D and ORourke T: Southeast Asias
First Multilateral with Expandable Sand Screens,
Offshore Engineer (April 2002): 5556. 
Tanjung E, Saridjo R, Provance SM, Brown P and
ORourke T: Application of Multilateral Technology in
Drilling an Offshore Well, Indonesia, paper SPE 77829,
presented at the SPE Asia Pacific Oil and Gas
Conference and Exhibition, Melbourne, Australia,
October 810, 2002. 
Polished-bore
receptacle (PBR)
Junction cross-
sectional views
RapidExclude
junction
>
High-strength junctions and sand exclusion. The RapidExclude system is based on RapidAccess and
RapidConnect designs. A modified guide-rail profile excludes sand and provides additional mechanical
integrity. This system resists junction loads up to 2500 psi [17 MPa] and excludes particles as small as 
40 microns. This profile view shows engagement between the template and connector of a 9
5
8-in.
RapidExclude system (top). Left to right, these cross sections represent slices from top to bottom of the
assembly(bottom). The two components begin as concentric pipes and then diverge until there are 
two separate bores. 
penetrate different pressure regimes. Continuous
engagement  between  a  modified  template-
locking  rail  and  connector  profile  excludes
formation  grains  and  solid  particles.  The
RapidExclude  system  controls  sand  influx  in
unconsolidated  or  weakly  consolidated  reser-
voirs.  This  high-strength  junction  also  provides
junction stability in unstable shales or formations
with high stresses. 
Most  conventional  junctions  exhibit  collapse
resistance in the 10 to 100 psi [0.07 to 0.7 MPa]
range  and  have  an  open  gap  of  more  than  1  in.
[2.5 cm]. This enhanced junction exhibits collapse
strength  that  exceeds  2500  psi  [17  MPa],  and
excludes  formation  sand  grains  and  solid  parti-
cles as small as 40 microns. 
A 9
5
8-in. RapidExclude system was qualied in
June  2002  at  the  GTI  Catoosa  facility  in
Oklahoma. A test well was completed with 9
5
8-in.
casing  that  included  a  RapidAccess  ICC.  Field-
proven  procedures  from  previous  RapidConnect
installations  were  used  to  mill  the  casing-exit
window and construct a junction at 970 ft [295 m]
in  a  shaly  sand.  Junction  components  were
retrieved  as  part  of  this  full-scale  qualication
test to evaluate installation reversibility. 
The  connector  was  retrieved  with  a  conven-
tional  spear  by  applying  straight  pull.  Next,  the
template  was  retrieved,  again  by  straight  pull.
Both  components  were  in  good  condition  and
fully  functional.  The  selective  reentry  deector,
intervention  tools  and  an  isolation  sleeve  were
run and retrieved successfully by a slickline unit
to  complete  the  system  qualification.  The
RapidExclude  system  performed  as  expected 
and was qualied for commercial installation. In
November  2002,  Schlumberger  successfully
installed a RapidExclude junction in Venezuela. 
Junction Pressure Integrity 
The prefabricated RapidSeal multilateral comple-
tion system providing selective drainhole access
and connectivity with a pressure-sealed connec-
tion  forms  a  high-strength  symmetrical  junction
with  hydraulic  integrity  between  two  adjacent
laterals and the main wellbore. This system was
developed  through  a  joint  research  and  devel-
opment  project  between  Agip,  a  division  of  Eni,
and Schlumberger.
Early  Level  6  junctions  consisted  of  two  full-
size  liners  attached  to  a  joint  of  primary  casing.
This  conguration  simplied  junction  construc-
tion,  but  required  a  large  borehole  that  resulted
in loss of two or more intermediate casing sizes.
The  sudden  jump  from  large  parent  casing  to
smaller lateral liners was also a limitation. 
Schlumberger  and  Agip  addressed  these
limitations  by  developing  a  novel  metal-forming
technology.  Unlike  the  RapidConnect  and
RapidExclude  systems,  which  are  assembled
downhole, a RapidSeal junction is manufactured
in  advance  as  one  piece.  Currently,  this  system
combines  two  7-in.  outlets  below  9
5
8-in.  casing
or  two  9
5
8-in.  outlets  below  13
3
8-in.  casing  to
form a junction. 
The  manufacturing  process  reduces  initial
outside  diameter  of  the  system  by  plastically
compressing the two lateral outlets to less than
their expanded diameters in a special mechanical
press.  This  ensures  even  stress  distributions,
consistent system geometry and accurate dimen-
sional  tolerances  and  allows  a  compressed
junction  to  pass  through  the  preceding  casing
string, which minimizes wellbore telescoping. 
The  unique  hybrid  design  of  this  dual-outlet
junction  increases  resistance  to  both  internal
burst  and  external  collapse  pressures.  Two  out-
lets  are  welded  onto  a  stiffener,  or  structural
member,  made  of  high-strength  material.  Only
the  ductile  outlets,  not  the  stiffener,  sustain
plastic  deformation.  A  proprietary  process
ensures full weld penetration along the stiffener-
outlet interface. 
The RapidSeal system uses a combination of
strong, ductile components to reduce failures and
tubular stresses in the outlets, and maintain the
strength of a junction after it is compressed and
reformed.  When  this  system  is  deployed  at  the
proper depth, a wireline-conveyed expansion tool
reforms  the  outlets  to  their  original  size  and
cylindrical  shape  in  a  single  trip  (next  page).
Compared  with  systems  that  use  a  mechanical
swedge,  this  technique  greatly  reduces  installa-
tion time. 
The  reforming  process,  which  takes  about 
45  minutes,  is  monitored  and  controlled  in  real
time  on  the  surface.  This  procedure  ensures  a
smooth  expansion  and  conrms  that  nal  outlet
geometry  meets  API  specications  for  internal
pipe  dimensions.  Pistons  in  the  two  saddles  of
the expansion tool apply force to simultaneously
open  and  reform  both  outlets  symmetrically.
Electric power from the wireline operates a pump
in the tool that provides sufcient hydraulic pres-
sure  to  develop  1.5  million  lbf  [6.6  million  N]  of
force in a 13
3
8-in. RapidSeal junction. 
An adapter provides a smooth transition from
a single bore to the two outlets and connects the
outlets  to  the  main  junction  bore.  The  bottom 
of  the  junction  assembly  is  a  steel  frame  inside 
a  berglass  guide  that  functions  as  a  standard
guide  shoe  and  protects  the  outlets  during
installation.  The  steel  structure  also  acts  like 
a  whipstock  to  guide  tools  out  of  the  junction 
outlets  during  drilling  and  completion  of  each
lateral branch. 
The  symmetrical  design  of  RapidSeal  junc-
tions ensures a smooth transition from the main
wellbore  to  each  branch,  allowing  standard
drilling tools and completion assemblies to pass
through the junction. Service-pressure ratings for
9
5
8-in. and 13
3
8-in. RapidSeal junctions are 1200
psi [8 MPa] and 2200 psi [15 MPa], respectively. 
After  extensive  laboratory  testing,  a
RapidSeal junction with 9
5
8-in. parent casing and
two  7-in.  outlets  was  installed,  expanded  and
cemented  successfully  in  a  deviated  experimen-
tal  well  at  the  GTI  Catoosa  test  facility  in
Oklahoma.
12
Two  6
1
8-in.  directional  branches
were drilled out of the junction. The rst branch
was  completed  with  an  uncemented  4-in.  liner;
the  second  branch  was  completed  with  a
cemented  4-in.  liner.  The  test  objective  was  to
evaluate  the  RapidSeal  system  before  the  rst
commercial  eld  installation.  Components,  tools
and  procedures  performed  successfully  during
this test installation. The 13
3
8-in. RapidSeal sys-
tem has been qualied in laboratory tests. 
RapidSeal Junctions: 
Brazil, Nigeria and Indonesia 
Petrobras  installed  the  first  commercial
RapidSeal  system  in  an  onshore  well  at  Macau,
Brazil.  This  9
5
8-in.  junction  was  oriented  and
installed  above  the  reservoir  at  518  m  [1700  ft]
MD.  The  two  outlets  were  expanded  to  original
round  geometry  within  API  dimensional  toler-
ances  and  cemented  in  place.  The  expansion
process  required  6  hours,  including  trip  time,
with  only  30  minutes  of  nonproductive 
time.  The  operator  directionally  drilled  two 
7-in.  lateral  branches  using  a  PowerPak  XP 
64 Oileld Review
12. Ohmer H, Follini J -M, Carossino R and Kaja M: Well
Construction and Completion Aspects of a Level 6
Multilateral J unction, paper SPE 63116, presented at
the SPE Annual Technical Conference and Exhibition,
Dallas, Texas, USA, October 14, 2000. 
Autumn 2002 65
1
Install junction.
3
Install cement retainer and
cement primary casing.
2
Expand junction outlets.
4
Drill out cement retainer
and wiper plugs.
7
Complete junction and
install production equipment.
5
Drill and complete
first lateral branch.
6
Drill and complete
second lateral outlet.
Clean out main wellbore to top of junction outlets. The RapidSeal profile provides a positive depth indicator.
Set and orient deflector in RapidSeal profile to divert drill bit and liner assembly into first outlet. Clean out cement and drill first lateral borehole. Run liner-hanger packer and
casing. Install slickline plug in profile nipple below liner hanger to isolate lateral. Retrieve deflector.
Set and orient a deflector in the RapidSeal profile oriented to divert bit and liner assembly into second outlet. Clean out cement and drill second lateral borehole. Run liner-hanger
packer and casing in second lateral branch. Install slickline plug in profile nipple below liner hanger to isolate lateral. Retrieve deflector. 
Set DualAccess system in main wellbore to complete both lateral branches.
4 
5 
6 
7 
Drill main borehole. Under-ream and enlarge openhole section across junction location. Set RapidSeal system on primary casing. 
Position wireline-conveyed expansion tool saddles in RapidSeal outlets. Verify junction directional orientation to ensure proper expansion of outlets. Real-time process control 
and monitoring at surface confirm simultaneous expansion and final geometry of outlets. Retrieve expansion tool. 
Using the RapidSeal profile for depth verification, set wireline-conveyed cement retainer above junction to prevent a pressure differential and increase reliability. Cement junction. 
1 
2 
3 
RapidSeal
system
Wireline-conveyed
expansion tool Cement
retainer
Wiper plugs
Drill bit
RapidSeal
profile
Liner-hanger
packer
Deflector DualAccess
packer system
>
J unction pressure integrity. The RapidSeal system is manufactured in advance, not constructed downhole, to achieve pressure integrity. This TAML 
Level 6 system includes a prefabricated section of parent casing with two smaller outlets. The symmetrical outlets are compressed to pass through the
preceding casing and then reformed to original geometry by a wireline-conveyed modular expansion tool. The expansion process is controlled and moni-
tored from surface in real time and performed in a single trip. 
positive-displacement  motor  (PDM)  and  6-in.  by
7-in.  eccentric,  bicentered  polycrystalline  dia-
mond compact (PDC) bits (above).
The rst branch with a cemented 4
1
2-in. liner
for  zonal  isolation  down  to  the  reservoir
extended  644  m  [2112  ft].  The  second  branch
with  a  cemented  4
1
2-in.  liner  extended  568  m
[1864  ft].  A  DualAccess  system  with  isolation
packers  set  in  each  lateral  and  a  multiport 
production  packer  in  the  main  wellbore  was
hydraulically  connected  by  separate  tubing
strings  to  an  Intervention  Discriminator  and  a
MultiPort  bypass  packer  with  multiple  porting
above the laterals. Hydraulic ow-control valves
allow  selective  isolation  or  production  of  upper
and  lower  lateral  branches.  FloWatcher  inte-
grated  permanent  production  sensors  monitor
pressure,  temperature  and  ow  rate  from  each
well branch. 
The  DualAccess  system  is  retrievable  for
access to the main wellbore and reentry of both
branches. After extensive and successful testing
of  both  laterals  for  pressure  integrity  and
accessibility,  DualAccess  completion  equipment
was  retrieved  to  perforate  and  complete  the
well. The rst lateral branch was completed with
3
1
2-in. production tubing and a progressing cavity
pump  (PCP).  The  second  lateral  branch  was 
completed  with  3
1
2-in.  tubing  and  an  electrical
submersible pump. 
Petrobras and Schlumberger are collaborating
together  to  develop  procedures  for  offshore
installation and operation of a 13
3
8-in. RapidSeal
66 Oileld Review
0
900
800
700
600
500
400
300
200
100
T
r
u
e 
v
e
r
t
i
c
a
l 
d
e
p
t
h 
(
T
V
D
)
, 
m
Horizontal departure, m
200 300 400 500 600 700 800
Planned
Actual
150
East-West departure, m
Zone 2
Zone 2
Zone 1
Zone 1
Zone 2
Zone 1
Zone 2
Zone 1
9
5
8-in.
RapidSeal
junction
N
o
r
t
h
-
S
o
u
t
h 
d
e
p
a
r
t
u
r
e
, 
m
0
450
300
150
0
9
5
8-in. MultiPort
production packer
9
5
8-in. casing
9
5
8-in. DualAccess
packer system 
Perforations
4
1
2-in. liner-
hanger packers
External casing
packer
4
1
2-in. liner
3
1
2-in. tubing
3
1
2-in. hydraulic flow-
control valves
3
1
2-in. FloWatcher production
monitor (pressure, temperature
and flow rate)
Pressure-relief valve
7-in. tubing
Intervention Discriminator
SOUTH
AMERICA
BRAZIL
Perforations
N
Macau
Rio de Janeiro
>
Brazil Level 6 multilateral eld test. The rst commercial installation of a 9
5
8-in. RapidSeal system
was performed onshore for Petrobras in Macau, Brazil (upper right). Each lateral targeted two produc-
tive intervals (lower right). A DualAccess completion system was installed temporarily for extensive
testing and evaluation of advanced ow-control and monitoring equipment (left). This system consists
of tubing strings with seal assemblies for each lateral liner, a packer to isolate the annulus between
production strings, and the primary casing and an Intervention Discriminator to selectively access
each lateral.
Autumn 2002 67
system in Brazil. Schlumberger has also installed
RapidSeal  systems  in  Nigeria  for  Agip,  and  in
Indonesia for CNOOC. 
Agip  recently  installed  a  Level  6  junction  to
complete the Idu ML 11 well in Idu eld onshore
Nigeria. The objective was to produce two sepa-
rate intervalsZones I and Lwith two lateral
branches  from  a  single  main  wellbore.  Agip
drilled to the proposed junction depth at 2000 m
[6562  ft]  and  under-reamed  the  hole  to  17
1
2-in.
for RapidSeal system expansion. 
The  junction  was  oriented  before  expanding
the  outlets  and  cementing  the  primary  casing.
The  operator  drilled  both  lateral  branches  with
6
1
8-in.  PDC  bits  using  synthetic  oil-base  mud
(OBM)  and  cemented  4
1
2-in.  liners  in  place.  The
rst lateral extended 693 m [2274 ft]; the second
lateral extended 696 m [2283 ft]. Each outlet was
tied  back  to  surface  independently  using  a
DualAccess  packer  system  (above).  At  initial
rates  of  2250  BOPD  [358  m
3
/d]  from  Zone  L  and
2000  BOPD  [318  m
3
/d]  from  Zone  I,  this  well  is
producing  better  than  originally  forecast  and
more like two separate directional wells. 
Advanced,  or  intelligent,  completion  compo-
nents  are  evolving  to  meet  operator  needs,  and
multilateral  completions  are  becoming  increas-
ingly  sophisticated.  Many  wells  now  include
downhole  equipment  to  monitor  production,
selectively control ow from lateral branches and
manage reservoirs more efciently. 
CNOOC  recently  drilled  and  completed  the
rst TAML Level 6 multilateral well in Indonesia
4
1
2-in. liner-
hanger packer
4
1
2-in. liner
Zone I perforations
Zone L perforations
9
5
8-in.
RapidSeal
junction
Intervention
Discriminator
Surface-controlled
subsurface safety
valve (SCSSV)
DualAccess
packer system 
9
5
8-in. casing
Profile nipple
2700
0 300
0
300
600
900
1200
1500
1800
2100
T
r
u
e 
v
e
r
t
i
c
a
l 
d
e
p
t
h 
(
T
V
D
)
, 
m
2400
18
5
8-in.
 casing
13
3
8-in.
 casing
9
5
8-in. RapidSeal
junction
Zone L Zone I
Horizontal departure, m
AFRICA
NIGERIA
0 100
100
0
100
200
13
3
8-in. casing
18
5
8-in. casing
N
o
r
t
h
-
S
o
u
t
h 
d
e
p
a
r
t
u
r
e
, 
m
East-West departure, m
Zone I
Zone L
9
5
8-in. RapidSeal
junction
Lateral 1
Lateral 2
N
Port
Harcourt
Lagos
>
Nigeria Level 6 multilateral completion. Agip drilled two lateral branches using a RapidSeal junction in the
onshore Idu ML 11 well (top). The rst branch extended 693 m [2274 ft]; the second lateral extended 696 m [2283 ft]
(right). Each outlet was tied back to surface independently using a DualAccess packer system(left).
and the worlds first Level 6 intelligent completion
to  increase  recoverable  reserves  and  reduce
well-construction  costs.  A  RapidSeal  junction
was installed to complete the NE Intan A-24 well
in the Java Sea (above). This well in 23 m [75 ft]
of  water  required  less  time  to  drilljust  25
daysand  cost  about  $1  million  less  than  the
AC-06  well,  a  Level  3  multilateral  completion  in
East Rama field drilled to about the same depth
with similar lateral lengths. 
After  the  9
5
8-in.  RapidSeal  junction  was
oriented,  expanded  and  cemented  in  place  at
2770 ft [844 m] MD, both lateral branches were
drilled  with  M-I  Drilling  Fluids  synthetic  OBM.
The first lateral extended 1655 ft [504 m] MD and
was drilled with a 6
1
8-in. PDC bit. The second lat-
eral  extending  2335  ft  [712  m]  MD  was  drilled
with  a  6-in.  by  7-in.  bicentered  bit  using  a
PowerPak  PDM  that  had  a  1.83 bent  housing.
CNOOC  completed  the  first  lateral  with  3
1
2-in.
premium  sand-control  screens.  The  second  lat-
eral  utilized  4
1
2-in.  premium  sand-control
screens.  Each  branch  included  an  ECP  for  zonal
isolation.
Advanced well-completion equipment installed
above  the  junction  included  downhole  hydraulic
valves  to  control  flow  and  sensors  to  measure
pressure,  temperature  and  flow  rate  for  each
well  branch.  A  Schlumberger  electrical  sub-
mersible  pump  with  a  downhole  MultiSensor
well monitoring unit for submersible pump com-
pletions and a variable-speed drive at the surface
lifts  hydrocarbons  to  the  surface  through  4
1
2-in.
tubing.  A  surface  control  and  data  acquisition
(SCADA) system and multiphase flow meters on
surface  monitor  pump  parameters  and  well  per-
formance,  and  transmit  data  to  CNOOC  in  real
time via the Web. 
Key Design Considerations 
The first factor to consider when planning a mul-
tilateral  completion  is  whether  it  is  a  new  or
existing  well.  New  wells  offer  engineers  the
freedom  and  flexibility  to  design  multilateral
wells  from  the  bottom  up.  NODAL  production
system  analysis  and  reservoir  modeling  help
establish  optimal  lateral  length  and  tubing  size,
which  determines  primary  and  intermediate
68 Oilfield Review
0
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
3000
0 500
Horizontal departure, ft
9
5
8-in. RapidSeal
junction
T
r
u
e 
v
e
r
t
i
c
a
l 
d
e
p
t
h 
(
T
V
D
)
, 
f
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t
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-
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o
u
t
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d
e
p
a
r
t
u
r
e
, 
f
t
1000
1000 500
East-West departure, ft
0
1500
1000
500
0
500
13
3
8-in. casing
Lateral 1
Lateral 2
13
3
8-in. casing
Lateral 1
Lateral 2
9
5
8-in. RapidSeal
junction
RapidSeal liner-
hanger packer
 RapidSeal liner-hanger packer
Polished-bore receptacle (PBR)
External casing
packers
 RapidSeal deflector
9
5
8-in. RapidSeal junction
 Electrical submersible pump
Hydraulic flow-control valve
 No-go profile
 Shear disconnect
FloWatcher sensor
Surface-controlled subsurface
safety valve (SCSSV)
MZ multizone isolation packer
 MultiSensor unit
ASIA
AUSTRALIA
INDONESIA
N
Jakarta
J
a
va Sea
>
The worlds first intelligent Level 6 multilateral completion. CNOOC recently drilled and completed the NE Intan A-24 well, the first TAML Level 6 multilat-
eral in the J ava Sea, Indonesia (lower right). After orienting, expanding and cementing the 9
5
8-in. RapidSeal junctionat 2770 ft [844 m] MD in place, the oper-
ator drilled two lateral branches (upper right). The first branch extended 1655 ft [504 m] MD; the second lateral extended 2335 ft [712 m] MD. Each lateral
was completed with an external casing packer and sand-control screens. An orienting device, or deflector, ensured correct insertion of completion equip-
ment in junction outlets. Advanced completion equipmenthydraulic flow-control valves and sensors to measure pressure, temperature and flow rate for
each well branch, a Schlumberger electrical submersible pump with a downhole Phoenix artificial-lift monitoring system and a variable-speed drive on sur-
facemade this the first intelligent Level 6 multilateral well (left).
Autumn 2002 69
casing  sizes.  Completion  options  and  well 
configurations  are  more  limited  for  existing
wells,  but  many  older  wells  are  candidates  for
reentry using multilateral technology.
Another consideration is junction type, which
depends  on  the  required  degree  of  mechanical
integrity  and  pressure  integrity  at  each  lateral,
formation  stresses,  and  the  need  for  reentry
access to individual branches. An openhole lateral
without  junction  connectivity  may  be  sufcient
when lateral production is commingled, junctions
are  in  competent  formations  or  lateral  access  is
not  required.  A  Level  6  system  may  be  more
appropriate if selective production or injection in
each lateral is desirable, if the junction is located
in  a  weakly  consolidated  formation  or  if  lateral
access is required. 
Reservoir  knowledge  is  crucial  when  plan-
ning  multilateral  wells.  In  exploration  or  early
development  wells,  there  may  not  be  enough
information  to  plan  a  complex  well  trajectory. 
In  this  situation,  operators  can  drill  a  low-cost
vertical  well  with  contingency  plans  for  one  or
more  laterals,  depending  on  information
obtained  while  drilling  and  completing  the  main
wellbore.  Horizontal  and  multilateral  wells  also
are  used  at  this  stage  to  better  delineate  the
reservoir from a single surface location. In latter
stages  of  field  development,  a  considerable
amount  of  reservoir  information  is  available,  so
more  complex  well  trajectories  can  be  designed
to  target  specic  formations,  reservoir  compart-
ments or bypassed reserves.
In  economic  terms,  multilateral  wells  do  not
represent two or more wells for the price of one.
In  a  few  cases,  multilateral  completions  double
well  output,  but  based  on  industry  averages,
increases  of  30  to  60%  are  more  likely.
Historically,  for  multilateral  wells  to  be  prof-
itable, capital expenditures should increase by no
more  than  50%.  This  means  that  overall  well-
construction economics should improve by about
40%. Optimal multilateral completions are based
on  economic  evaluation  of  several  alternatives
that rely on forecasts of reservoir performance. 
In  many  situations,  numerical  simulation
using  a  single-well  or  field-wide  model  is
required  to  provide  an  accurate  forecast  on
which  to  base  project  economic  analysis.
Numerical  simulation  requires  more  knowledge
of  the  reservoir,  takes  longer  to  set  up  and
requires more computational time than analytical
models. However, numerical models can account
for  effects  such  as  multiphase  ow  and  gravity,
complex  reservoir  geometry  and  heterogeneous
reservoirs.  The  multisegment  well  module  in
ECLIPSE  reservoir  simulation  software  models
uid  ow  and  frictional-pressure  losses  through
wellbores,  annuli,  lateral  branches  and  well-
completion  valves.
13
This  advanced  modeling
capability  provides  more  realistic  estimates  of
multilateral-well performance (above left).
Evolving Technology, 
Increasing Acceptance 
Following  a  trend  similar  to  acceptance  of  hori-
zontal  wells  in  the  early  1990s,  operators  in  the
late 1990s began to ask, Why not drill a multi-
lateral  well?  Today,  rather  than  asking  if  a
multilateral well is applicable, the question often
is,  What  type  of  well  conguration  and  multi-
lateral  system  is  best  suited  to  meet
field-development  and  production  require-
ments?  Multilateral  wells  are  not  just  an
accepted  technology,  but  an  essential  tool  for
developing hydrocarbon reserves worldwide. 
Exploiting reservoirs with multilateral wells is
a viable means of reducing total capital expendi-
tures  and  field-operating  expenses,  and
signicantly improving production in todays most
challenging  petroleum  arenas.  As  condence  in
multilateral technology grows, smaller reservoirs
like satellite elds currently under consideration
for  development  in  the  North  Sea,  and  frontier
elds  in  the  Gulf  of  Mexico,  Southeast  Asia,
West  Africa  and  the  Middle  East  will  be  devel-
oped with multilateral wells. 
Multilateral-completion  systems  vary  in
complexity.  RapidConnect  and  RapidExclude
junctions  provide  enhanced  strength  and  sand
exclusion  for  added  durability  and  more  reliable
reentry  access  to  lateral  well  branches  in  both
new and existing wells. RapidSeal systems offer
the  exibility  to  optimize  ow  from  each  lateral
for  production  and  conformance  control,  to  pro-
duce  separate  reservoirs  with  different  initial
pressures or to inject in one lateral while produc-
ing from the other. 
There is an increasing trend toward minimizing
conventional  rig  interventions.  Using  standard
coiled-tubing  equipment,  for  example,  the
Discovery  MLT  multilateral  tool  system  provides
selective access to lateral junctions. A ow-acti-
vated  bent-sub  controls  tool  orientation,  while
pressure  feedback  provides  real-time  conrma-
tion  at  surface  that  the  correct  well  branch  has
been  entered.  The  acid-resistant  tool  allows
placement  of  well-treatment  uids.  This  system
facilitates reentry, cleanout and stimulation oper-
ations  in  openhole  laterals,  drop-off  liners  or
junctions constructed in existing wellbores. 
Multilateral  completions  were  one  of  the 
key  oileld  technologies  to  emerge  during  the
past  decade.  It  is  extremely  important  to  screen
and select well-completion systems for multilat-
eral  wells  within  the  context  of  reservoir
conditions, eld-development requirements, total
cost  and  overall  risk.
14
These  techniques  serve
production  companies  best  when  thorough  risk-
reward  analysis  is  performed.  An  integrated,
multidisciplinary team is required to plan, design
and implement multilateral wells properly. 
Today, service companies continue to invest in
research and new product development to provide
operators with more reliable tools and systems for
installing multiple drainage points in reservoirs. In
the near term, two challenges remain: further opti-
mization of equipment and installation consistency.
This  technology  is  still  evolving,  but  as  long  as
improving net-present-value is a primary business
objective,  multilateral  technology  will  continue  to
be a leading source of economic gains throughout
the oil and gas industry.                              MET
13. Alaka J O, Bahamaish J , Bowen G, Bratvedt K, Holmes J A,
Miller T, Fjerstad P, Grinestaff G, J alali Y, Lucas C,
J imenez Z, Lolomari T, May E and Randall E: Improving
the Virtual Reservoir, Oileld Review 13, no. 1 (Spring
2001): 2647. 
14. Brister R: Screening Variables for Multilateral
Technology, paper SPE 64698, presented at the SPE
International Oil and Gas Conference and Exhibition,
Beijing, China, November 710, 2000. 
2
4
6
8
10
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i
l
, 
m
i
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l
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s
t
o
c
k
-
t
a
n
k 
b
a
r
r
e
l
s 
(
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T
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)
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14
16
18
20
0
0 1 2 3
Time, years
4 5 6 7
Dual-opposed
laterals
Single horizontal
drainhole
Dual-opposed
laterals
k
1
=
k
2
k
2
>
k
1
k1
Conventional
horizontal well
k2
4000 ft
2000 ft
2000 ft
Level 6 junction and
dual-opposed laterals
>
Reservoir simulation and multilateral-well mod-
eling. Using ECLIPSE reservoir simulation soft-
ware and a coarse, structured grid, this example
compares a conventional horizontal well that has
a single 4000-ft [1220-m] lateral section with a
Level 6 multilateral well that has two dual-
opposed 2000-ft [610-m] laterals (top). Cumulative
production from a dual-lateral well greatly
exceeds the output of a single-bore horizontal
well when horizontal permeability (k) varies (bot-
tom). To accurately predict production inow, the
area around a wellbore must be modeled in
detail. Each discrete wellbore segment has indi-
vidual local pressure and uid properties. The
ECLIPSE simulator also uses a ne and unstruc-
tured grid to model wellbore segments and reser-
voir ow around complex multilateral trajectories.