
Wednesday, August 27, 2014
Preliminary results are in from Circle Oil on the drilling of its El Mediouni-1 well (EMD-1) well on the Mahdia Permit offshore Tunisia. The EMD-1 was spud on June 8 and drilled to a TD of 1,200 meters MD in the Upper Ketatna carbonates. The stratigraphy encountered in the well was exactly as prognosed and very good light oil shows were encountered both in the Lower Birsa carbonate primary target and the Upper Ketatna carbonates secondary target over a combined interval of 133 meters.
The company said that there were strong hydrocarbon indications encountered in the Birsa and Ketatna carbonates confirming the existence of a working petroleum system in the Mahdia Permit for this and other prospects. The robustness of the El Mediouni trap has also been proven.
The losses incurred within the target formations, as described below, give further confirmation of high quality permeability. The gross oil zone interval in the Lower Birsa is 77 meters and the Upper Ketatna has a minimum interval of 48 meters, subject to confirmation by logs. Using known reservoir and fluid parameters from equivalent formations in the Gulf of Hammamet, the internally estimated most likely recoverable prospective resources discovered by the EMD-1 well are approximately 100 million barrels of oil.
During the drilling of the target carbonates, severe mud losses occurred and multiple remedial operations to restore circulation were performed. This included the pumping of numerous CaCO3 pills, conventional lost circulation material and large volumes of sea water. The hole conditions in the well deteriorated rapidly and multiple attempts at open hole logging by wireline and tough logging conditions equipment failed. Ultimately the decision was taken to terminate further efforts and suspend the well.
Circle Oil has been granted a six-month extension to the Mahdia permit taking it until January 2015. It then has the right to elect for two additional renewals of the permit for three years each with a commitment of one well per period.
Commenting on the results of the EMD-1 well Prof. Chris Green, CEO, said: “We are extremely pleased to add this potential large discovery to our portfolio in Tunisia. It is unfortunate that the hole conditions became untenable so quickly and we were unable to conduct a full log evaluation of the hydrocarbon column in the well. Nevertheless we intend to take our appraisal effort forward on the Mahdia Permit as quickly as possible following this proof of the El Mediouni petroleum accumulation and will provide further updates of our plans in due course. We look forward to working with ETAP on the next stage of this project.”