GB2412130A - Arrangement and method for integrating a high pressure riser sleeve within a low pressure riser - Google Patents

Arrangement and method for integrating a high pressure riser sleeve within a low pressure riser Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2412130A
GB2412130A GB0505424A GB0505424A GB2412130A GB 2412130 A GB2412130 A GB 2412130A GB 0505424 A GB0505424 A GB 0505424A GB 0505424 A GB0505424 A GB 0505424A GB 2412130 A GB2412130 A GB 2412130A
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Prior art keywords
riser
high pressure
bop
drilling
sleeve
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GB0505424D0 (en
GB2412130B (en
Inventor
Harald Moksvold
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Subsea Developing Services A S NO
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Subsea Developing Services A S NO
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Publication of GB2412130A publication Critical patent/GB2412130A/en
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    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E21EARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; MINING
    • E21BEARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; OBTAINING OIL, GAS, WATER, SOLUBLE OR MELTABLE MATERIALS OR A SLURRY OF MINERALS FROM WELLS
    • E21B17/00Drilling rods or pipes; Flexible drill strings; Kellies; Drill collars; Sucker rods; Cables; Casings; Tubings
    • E21B17/01Risers
    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E21EARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; MINING
    • E21BEARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; OBTAINING OIL, GAS, WATER, SOLUBLE OR MELTABLE MATERIALS OR A SLURRY OF MINERALS FROM WELLS
    • E21B17/00Drilling rods or pipes; Flexible drill strings; Kellies; Drill collars; Sucker rods; Cables; Casings; Tubings
    • E21B17/02Couplings; joints
    • E21B17/08Casing joints
    • E21B17/085Riser connections
    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E21EARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; MINING
    • E21BEARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; OBTAINING OIL, GAS, WATER, SOLUBLE OR MELTABLE MATERIALS OR A SLURRY OF MINERALS FROM WELLS
    • E21B43/00Methods or apparatus for obtaining oil, gas, water, soluble or meltable materials or a slurry of minerals from wells
    • E21B43/01Methods or apparatus for obtaining oil, gas, water, soluble or meltable materials or a slurry of minerals from wells specially adapted for obtaining from underwater installations

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Geology (AREA)
  • Mining & Mineral Resources (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Environmental & Geological Engineering (AREA)
  • Fluid Mechanics (AREA)
  • General Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Geochemistry & Mineralogy (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Earth Drilling (AREA)
  • Electrical Discharge Machining, Electrochemical Machining, And Combined Machining (AREA)

Abstract

An arrangement and method for integrating a high pressure riser sleeve 60 from the upper end of a high pressure drilling and workover riser 10 which is terminated by an upper BOP 20 close to sea level in one end and by a sub-sea blowout preventer BOP or a low riser package LRP close to the seabed in the lower end. Said high pressure riser sleeve 60 being installed, connected and integrated to the high pressure drilling and workover riser 10 and extending up to and above the drill floor 90, inside a low pressure drilling riser slip joint which is connected to the drilling and workover riser 30, 40, 41. The present invention relates to offshore drilling and well activities preformed from a floating drilling or workover rig or vessel 93. The invention specify a system and a method where operations can be switched from drilling with jointed drillpipe in a conventional manner, into performing underbalanced wireline and/or coiled tubing activities with full well pressure, much more effectively than with prior art.

Description

An arrangement and method for integrating under-balanced operations into a
high pressure drilling and workover riser from a floating rig or vessel.
Description of present apparatus and methods of operation The present invention relates to offshore drilling and well activities preformed from a floating drilling or workover rig or vessel. Today, when an offshore sub-sea well is intervened (work performed inside the production tubing below a sub-sea x-mas tree) from a floating vessel, a high pressure workover riser system is used. Such work-over riser systems has been designed with a subsea shut off valve (LRP) and/or a BOP configuration, close to the seabed and includes a riser disconnect package (RDP), to allow for a riser disconnect close to seabed when situations call for it. On the surface, the high pressure riser is terminated in a surface test tree (series of valves) above the rigfloor. To allow for riser tension, the drilling rig's main blocks for lowering and hoisting drillpipe is used to pull tension on the workover riser. Above the surface test tree, the pressure control equipment (surface BOP) for the well operations is installed, for lubricating into the well all of the work-over tools used in the operation.
Presently such systems are either designed for use in open water (stand alone), or the workover riser is run inside a 21" OD low pressure marine drilling riser system, which includes a 18 3/" inside diameter subsea drilling BOP installed on top of the sub-sea x-mas tree at seabed.
If the work-over system is being used inside a 21" drilling riser, the lower shutoff valves in the workover riser system close to seabed, are controlled independent of the drilling BOP on the outside and carry independent equipment for service of the well. To run all of this equipment is very time consuming, in that the rig crew first has to run the 21" marine drilling riser and the 18 3/4"drilling BOP and suspend this system in the drilling rig's riser tension system underneath the rig floor. Then the rig crew has to run the workover riser system inside the marine drilling riser all the way to seabed and suspend this riser to the outer drilling subsea BOP in the lower end and suspend this riser system in the rig's main drilling hook by help of an elevator or lifting frame in the upper end. In doing so, the main travailing blocks/hook is occupied and will prevent the rig from being able to run jointed pipe into the workover riser.
If the high pressure riser is run as a stand alone system in open waters, the subsea blowout preventer (BOP) and the riser disconnect package (RDP) is installed on top of the subsea x-mas tree. This riser system is to date not intended for use with jointed drillpipe but intended for extending the production tubing up to the drilling rig's work deck or rigfloor, so that wireline and coil tubing can be run into the well.
This riser system is then hung off in the rig's drilling riser tensioning system and/or in the drilling hook with the help of an elevator or lifting frame. The surface BOP's for the workover riser system is then installed above the rig floor and above the elevator to the rigs main hoisting system. This will also prevent the rig from being able to run jointed drillpipe into the well, since the equipment for running jointed pipe is occupied holding tension in the riser system. Hence with prior art, it is not possible to change from running wireline or coiled tubing equipment into the well, into the process of running jointed drillpipe into the well or vice versa, without having to change out the whole riser system or disconnecting the riser from the production sub-sea x-mas tree
Description of prior art
US patent number 5,676,209 describes a low pressure drilling riser system which comprises 2 BOP stacks. The upper BOP stack is submerged below the wave affected area closer to sea level and the lower BOP placed at seabed. A marine drilling riser extending back to the drilling installation can be disconnected from the upper BOP stack so that the riser will be free standing in the ocean due to air-cans or flotation elements installed below and adjacent to the upper BOP. This riser system is fundamentally different from the high pressure drilling and workover riser specified in the present invention in that the riser specified in patent number 5,676,209 is a low pressure riser with high pressure kill and choke lines running outside and parallel to the main drilling riser bore. This riser would not be able to tolerate high pressures from the well. In order to perform workover operations, a complete new workover riser would have to be installed inside this riser and extending down to the subsea BOP. Hence this prior art would not introduce any added benefits to the invention here described.
PCT publication WO98/58152 describes an apparatus and method for drilling sub sea wells. This apparatus has no BOP at seabed and describe an apparatus where the BOP stack is moved to higher location closer to the sea level. The system introduces large buoyancy elements or air cans which is required if the drilling riser connecting the BOP to the drilling rig has to be disconnected. A system of this nature as described in the publication, could not be connected to a sub-sea production x-mas tree and hence the production tubing for underbalanced workovers. Hence, this prior art is fundamentally different from this invention.
The Norwegian patents NO 306174 (H.M0ksvold) and NO 305138 (S.Gleditsch) describes a high pressure drilling and workover riser which resembles the riser described in this invention. NO 305138 and NO 316174 describe a system where the workover coil tubing BOPs are integrated with the upper BOP which is terminated in the drilling and workover riser in the upper end. However in order to effectively be able to change between drilling with jointed drillpipe and underbalanced work with standard workover BOP equipment on a conventional drilling rig, with minimum of time used and without modifications, it will be necessary to introduce the high pressure riser extension sleeve described in this invention. The high pressure riser extension would allow for the coil tubing or wireline BOPs to be introduced only when needed and the integration process can be performed without having to disconnect the main workover riser from the sub-sea wellhead or sub-sea x-mas tree. These inventions wills hence save expensive rig time and /or prevent expensive equipment from being rigged up on top of the riser in the upper BOP when not needed.
The PCT WO 03/067023 A1 describe an arrangement and method for well completion and intervention operations where a workover riser projecting from a wellhead and up to a vessel is used, and where the upper portion of the workover riser is designed to be displaced from the upper position to a lowered position favourable for rigging work, where at least the upper displaceable portion of the workover riser essentially follows the heave motion of the vessel. This is a telescopic high pressure joint integrated with the main workover riser which is high pressure only when fully stroked out and put in tension by the rigs main hoisting equipment. This prior art is run inside a conventional drilling riser and extends all the way down to the seabed. In order to convert to drilling the whole workover riser including the sub-sea safety valves and control system for same, must be disconnected from seabed and pulled out of the well. In deeper waters this will take considerable amount of time. However integrating this prior art in the high pressure extension sleeve in this invention would allow for more easy rig-up of workover BOPs and tools on the drill floor. Time savings are hence only achieved by combining prior art with this new invention in this particular way and combination.
Brief Description of embodiments of the invention
A specific embodiment of the invention, and variations thereof, will now be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings.
The present invention specify the use of a high pressure workover and drilling riser with two BOP stacks (sub-sea and near surface), where the upper BOP (20) is placed below the rig floor (90) and is interfacing a conventional low pressure drilling riser (30) and/or sipjoint (40)(41) as seen in Fig 1. This figure also includes 1 conventional marine drilling riser (30) below the slip joint and where the whole riser system is being suspended by the rig's riser tensioning system (45), for placement of the upper BOP (20) below the wave affected zone near sea level. The purpose for this arrangement is to be able to drill with jointed drillpipe under more harsh weather conditions where rig heave need to be considered for the operation.
This invention specify the introduction of a short high pressure riser sleeve system (60) which is integrating the upper BOP (20) (inside the low pressure drilling slip joint (40)(41), which in combination with the high pressure riser system (10) described above, will make the change from running jointed drillpipe to allowing underbalanced operations with spooled equipment more effective and swift. Hence the high pressure riser sleeve can be run from the rig floor (90) down to the high pressure interface (25 in fig.3) above the upper BOP, thereby creating a HP conduit to the well. Figure 3 describe the upper BOP (20) and how it integrates to the low pressure drilling riser (30) with high pressure chokelines (50) and killine (51) with the high pressure riser integration joint (60) inside and to the top of the high pressure riser (10) with a easy make up connector (21) to the high pressure riser (10) A system providing this option is novel art and has never been performed.
Detail description of the invention
A system has been developed where the high pressure riser system carries one sub sea BOP stack including a riser disconnect package (RDP) directly above the sub sea BOP stack (not shown on the figure) with a high pressure riser (10) running back to surface, underneath the rigfloor (90). The high pressure riser is terminated in a surface BOP stack (20) above sea level (92)) at cellar deck level (91) which may require a special a special slip joint (80) in figure 2 or a sub surface BOP stack just below sea level (92) in figure 1. The differences between the surface BOP and the sub surface BOP is caused by the metocean conditions in the geographical areas where the rig is to be operated. The sub surface BOP stack (20) is arranged so that a normal low pressure drilling riser (30) is connected to the sub surface BOP stack (20) and the high pressure riser system (10). The position of the sub surface BOP stack is below Sea Level, and the purpose is to use the low pressure drilling riser with a large range / stroke slip joint (40)(41) to allow for more rig movements than a dry surface BOP stack where the heave limitation is dictated by the length of the low pressure telescopic section (80) which may be a special design above the surface BOP stack This will prevent the upper BOP to be placed in the splash zone and hence be unaffected by waves in bad weather.
The system specified in this invention includes both options of sub surface BOP stacks (fig 1) and surface BOP stacks in dry air (fig.2). Both these systems will need the high pressure riser sleeve (60 in fig 1) and described in detail in figure 4, to establish a high pressure connection between the top BOP stack (20) (sub- or surface BOP stack) and the required BOP equipment for the under-balanced work over operation. This operation may include wire line equipment such as wire line BOPs, or contain coiled tubing equipment such as BOPs and injector head. The top section of the riser sleeve will cater for interface to such equipment. The figure 4 shows the termination of the high pressure riser sleeve in that it allows for main hook elevator (68) to interface the high pressure riser sleeve in order to carry the weight of the workover BOPs and suspension (carry the weight of) for the HP riser sleeve.
The top BOP (surface/subsurface stack) (20) will carry rams which will be conditioned for the different tool strings the operation will require which can be seen in detail in figure 2. Further an annular BOP (23) and a rotating head (24) will be part of the BOP stack if required for the operation. The figure 2 explains a sub surface BOP stack (20) carrying two ram type BOPs (22), one annular BOP (23) and one rotating head(24). The ram type BOP set up will require one set of blind rams to be used as shut off device similar to a lubricator valve to allow for quick bleed off for tool entry or removal from the high pressure riser system. This avoids well pressure back to the rig when working with the tool strings.
In addition an annular BOP is proposed in order to ensure a possibility for a secondary seal if the primary seals (61) in the bottom section of the sleeve should leak.
The system will have a separate high pressure sub-sea BOP (not shown) configuration onto the well head or the X-mas tree, with a high pressure connection to the production tubing or well. A high pressure riser (10) runs from the sub-sea BOP stack to the surface- or subsurface BOP stack (20) which forms the upper termination of the high pressure riser system(10).
In order to allow for the same heave limits as normal drilling risers of today with stroke of the telescopic riser joint (41) up to 65 ft. the subsurface BOP stack is suspended in a low pressure riser (30) including the telescopic joint (41,40) and interface to the rig. This means that the high pressure riser (10) and BOP system (20) can be interfaced to any drilling rig without any major modifications to this part of the rig.
In order to allow for high pressure intervention without killing the well, the high pressure riser section to the rig floor is introduced. For normal well intervention purposes this sleeve will be terminated in a surface test tree (63 fig. 4) or similar X over section on top, allowing for interfacing to wire-line equipment, coiled tubing equipment or other equipment required for entering a well under pressure.
The high pressure riser sleeve shall have an interface to the sub surface BOP stack (25) through a pressure tight seal (61) with an easy operated locking system, which can be a threaded connection (61) or a locking system carrying a locking sleeve design either through segments or other type of profiles (65). The connection shall carry seals (61)(65) to ensure a proper sealing method throughout the period the sleeve is in use. The top section is terminated in a crossover section( 63) where the high pressure riser sleeve is suspended in an elevator (68) connected (69) to the hoisting machinery (hook and travelling blocks) in the derrick or tower. When the well is killed or in balance, the sleeve can be disconnected and removed to allow for direct access to the well through the rotary table with jointed pipe.
The purpose of using a high pressure riser sleeve like the one specified in this invention is to allow for high pressure access to the well from the drill floor (90).
The use of a sub surface BOP stack or a surface BOP (20) would only allow for high pressure integrity to the top of the upper BOP (20). By adding this high pressure riser sleeve (60), the high pressure system is extended up onto and above the drill floor(90).
The total length of the sleeve depends on the location of the upper BOP (20). If a surface BOP is used the low pressure riser section above the BOPs is short (80), if a sub surface BOP stack is used, the sleeve needs to comply with the distance from top of the high pressure BOP and up to drill floor.
Present technology and prior art would require a new riser system to be used or the high pressure riser sleeve would have to be run all the way down to the x-mas tree on seabed. Hence it is the combination of using a high pressure drilling riser with sub-sea and surface BOP and the high pressure sleeve which give the wanted effect.
Detail description of interface between high pressure sleeve and HP riser Reference is made to figure 4. The high pressure sleeve consists of a bottom section (61) or (65) which interfaces the top of the sub surface BOP stack (25). The connection shall carry seals in order to seal off between the sleeve and the high pressure section of the upper BOP (20) to prevent well fluid to leak off into the low pressure riser system In addition, the bottom section shall be locked down in order to keep the sleeve in a stationary position, independent of well pressure and pull performed by the top tension (elevators and main drilling hook).
The interface (25) to lock down the bottom section to the upper BOP stack (20) may be a threaded connection (61), "I" slot interface system or a latch mechanism (65), all performing the lock down function that is required. The figure 3 shows a threaded interface (61) and a latch type interface (25).
The seals described shall have the ability to seal offthe between the bottom section and the top of the upper BOP. The sealing arrangement shall comply with the same pressure rating as the upper BOPs.
In addition or in stead of using the said seals, the bottom section can carry a sleeve below (62) that which can interfaces the sub surface BOPs (20). The shown sleeve extension in figure 3 (62) will interface the annular preventer (23) or the ram type BOP (22), which allows for the sealing capability as listed above or form a secondary seal in addition to the seals explained above.
The top interface of the bottom section (61) (65) shall interface the tube or sleeve running back to the drill floor (90) through the rotary table. This part consist of high pressure tubing (60) in compliance to tools run in the well and at the same time keep the pressure integrity as required for the well or having the same pressure rating as the upper BOP (20).
The top termination of the sleeve shall interface the surface test tree (63) or similar equipment as the X-over section to where the wire line BOPs or coiled tubing BOPs interface will be established (64). As an example, a simplified surface test tree (63) is shown with the elevator (68) interface to carry the suspension of the sleeve and the wire line BOPs or the coiled tubing equipment required for a well intervention.
To ease the installation operation of the tool strings etc. into the sleeve or well, a telescope section can be a part of the high pressure sleeve section. Such a telescopic section can be arranged so that it forms a part of the sleeve. Such telescopic system is prior art and is described in PCT WO 03/067023 Al. The purpose will be to collapse the section, when running tools in or out of the sleeve in order to avoid moving parts caused by rig movement while carrying out this operation. When in operation the telescope will need to follow the riser part in case any shut in of the well is required. This telescope is not shown in any of the drawings.

Claims (9)

1 A riser system for operations such as sub-sea drilling, well intervention, well completion, and workover, wherein the system comprises a high pressure riser extending from a wellhead or a sub-sea production manifold to an interface arrangement closer to sea level, and a low pressure riser system with a slip joint extending from the interface arrangement up to the vessel c h a r a c t e r i z e d i n t h a t the riser system is providing for a high pressure sleeve/extension to be introduced through the low pressure riser system, and connected to the interface arrangement at its lower most end, and to a workover blow out preventer (BOP)system located on the upper most end, above the deck of the vessel
2 A riser system according to claim l, c h a r a c t e r i z e d i n t h a t the interface arrangement comprises an upper BOP stack for drillpipe close to the vessel in the uppermost section of the high pressure riser.
3 A riser system according to one of the claims 1-2 c h a r a c t e r i z e d i n t h a t the upper BOP stack is a surface BOP stack above body of water or a BOP stack below mean sea level (MSL), close to the seawater level.
4 A riser system according to one of the claims 1-3, c h a r a c t e r i z e d i n t h a t the upper BOP in the high pressure riser comprises at least one annular BOP.
A riser system according to one of the claims 1-4, c h a r a c t e r i z e d i n t h a t the high pressure riser system is connected to a lower BOP stack close to the seabed above the production manifold and which are connected to the well head.
6 A riser system according to one of the claims 1-5, c h a r a c t e r i z e d i n t h a t a connection section of the high pressure sleeve is provided with sealing arrangements and/or with locking means such as latches, threads for joining with the upper BOP stack or high pressure riser above the upper BOP.
7 A riser system according to one of the claims 1-6, characterized in thatthelower pert ofthe connection section (seal sub) is extending through the upper annular BOP in the high pressure riser, wherein a secondary seal (barrier) is created when the BOP annular element is closed around the sea sub.
8. A riser system according to one of the claims 1-7, c h a r a c t e r i z e d i n t h a t a telescope joint can be integrated in the high pressure extension sleeve to compensate for heave motion of the rig.
9. An method for changing between a conventional through tubing drilling operation with jointed drillpipe from a floating vessel or rig, to performing underbalanced and pressurized well work inside the production tubing with tools, conveyed with a reeled wireline cable or a spooled coiled tubing unit with their corresponding BOPs located above the drill floor and hung off in the drilling rigs main hoisting equipment, which would include the following steps; A high pressure riser sleeve is run through the rigfloor with the drilling rig's main hoisting equipment, said sleeve is run inside a low pressure drilling riser including a slipjoint which is arranged according to any one of claims 1 to 6, said high pressure riser sleeve is connected to an interface arrangement on top of or inside the uppermost drilling BOP near sea level, for thereby creating a high pressure conduit to an interface on top of the high pressure sleeve above rig floor where the wireline or coiled tubing BOPs can be installed.
GB0505424A 2004-03-16 2005-03-16 An arrangement and method for integrating under-balanced operations into a high pressure drilling and workover riser from a floating rig or vessel Expired - Fee Related GB2412130B (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
NO20041094A NO333539B1 (en) 2004-03-16 2004-03-16 System and method for switching between ordinary drilling and high pressure operations

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Publication Number Publication Date
GB0505424D0 GB0505424D0 (en) 2005-04-20
GB2412130A true GB2412130A (en) 2005-09-21
GB2412130B GB2412130B (en) 2006-08-30

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GB0505424A Expired - Fee Related GB2412130B (en) 2004-03-16 2005-03-16 An arrangement and method for integrating under-balanced operations into a high pressure drilling and workover riser from a floating rig or vessel

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NO (1) NO333539B1 (en)

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2009001036A1 (en) * 2007-06-25 2008-12-31 Enovate Systems Limited Improved well intervention system
WO2009131464A2 (en) 2008-04-21 2009-10-29 Subsea Developing Services As High pressure sleeve for dual bore hp riser
NO20092934A (en) * 2009-09-02 2010-12-13 Aker Oilfield Services Operation As Telescopic link for riser
US9074446B2 (en) 2011-03-24 2015-07-07 Moss Maritime As System and method for controlling the pressure in a hydrocarbon well
US11167961B2 (en) * 2019-11-21 2021-11-09 Oceaneering International, Inc. Apparatus and method for assisting deployment of coiled tubing

Families Citing this family (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
NO338827B1 (en) * 2012-07-18 2016-10-24 Aker Subsea As High pressure riser assembly

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GB2299355A (en) * 1993-12-20 1996-10-02 Shell Int Research Dual concentric string high pressure riser
US5706897A (en) * 1995-11-29 1998-01-13 Deep Oil Technology, Incorporated Drilling, production, test, and oil storage caisson
US6273193B1 (en) * 1997-12-16 2001-08-14 Transocean Sedco Forex, Inc. Dynamically positioned, concentric riser, drilling method and apparatus

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5676209A (en) * 1995-11-20 1997-10-14 Hydril Company Deep water riser assembly
GB9712537D0 (en) * 1997-06-17 1997-08-20 Sedco Forex Tech Inc Method and apparatus for drilling subsea wells

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2299355A (en) * 1993-12-20 1996-10-02 Shell Int Research Dual concentric string high pressure riser
US5706897A (en) * 1995-11-29 1998-01-13 Deep Oil Technology, Incorporated Drilling, production, test, and oil storage caisson
US6273193B1 (en) * 1997-12-16 2001-08-14 Transocean Sedco Forex, Inc. Dynamically positioned, concentric riser, drilling method and apparatus

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2009001036A1 (en) * 2007-06-25 2008-12-31 Enovate Systems Limited Improved well intervention system
US8985220B2 (en) 2007-06-25 2015-03-24 Enovate Systems Limited Well intervention system
WO2009131464A2 (en) 2008-04-21 2009-10-29 Subsea Developing Services As High pressure sleeve for dual bore hp riser
WO2009131464A3 (en) * 2008-04-21 2010-03-25 Subsea Developing Services As High pressure sleeve for dual bore hp riser
US8573307B2 (en) 2008-04-21 2013-11-05 Ocean Riser Systems As High pressure sleeve for dual bore HP riser
NO20092934A (en) * 2009-09-02 2010-12-13 Aker Oilfield Services Operation As Telescopic link for riser
US9121227B2 (en) 2009-09-02 2015-09-01 Aker Oilfield Services Operation As Telescopic riser joint
US9074446B2 (en) 2011-03-24 2015-07-07 Moss Maritime As System and method for controlling the pressure in a hydrocarbon well
US11167961B2 (en) * 2019-11-21 2021-11-09 Oceaneering International, Inc. Apparatus and method for assisting deployment of coiled tubing

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Publication number Publication date
NO20041094D0 (en) 2004-03-16
NO20041094L (en) 2005-09-19
NO333539B1 (en) 2013-07-08
GB0505424D0 (en) 2005-04-20
GB2412130B (en) 2006-08-30

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