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typical existing oil and gas fields, a condition known as "water
coning" occurs around the perforations in the production casing
in the vertical wells. As a well cones water, the oil/water or gas/water
ratio decreases, whereby the well ultimately becomes uneconomic.
After years of production, the well will be shut-in if it is producing
oil or gas at an uneconomic rate. Reentry Horizontal Drilling involves
reentering a "depleted" vertical well and drilling a 90-degree
arc above the previously water-coned area. The electronically guided
drill bit re-enters the horizontal oil or gas formation from above
the water and drills beyond the water-coned area into the remaining
potentially productive oil or gas formation. As a result, a previously
uneconomic vertical well becomes a productive horizontal well. Such
horizontal drilling may extend several thousand feet beyond the
vertical well's original drainage pattern, thereby significantly
increasing the drainage area of the new horizontal well.
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| Warren
Resources is an industry leader in horizontal reentry and horizontal
drilling. |
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Additionally,
there are very profitable applications for Reentry Horizontal Drilling
emerging in the oil and gas business. These include horizontally
drilling multiple laterals in low permeability oil and gas reservoirs,
fractured reservoirs with discontinuous porosity, enhanced waterflood
patterns, oil and gas source rock and shales and directional drilling.
These new types of low cost horizontal drilling technologies became
feasible when three related technologies were developed. These include
the development of slimhole, steerable motors, wire-line and Gamma
Ray Tools for electronically guided horizontal drilling and 3-D
Seismic Technology.

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