In-tubing wellbore sidetracking operations

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6374918
  • Patent Number
    6,374,918
  • Date Filed
    Friday, May 14, 1999
    25 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, April 23, 2002
    22 years ago
Abstract
Methods for wellbore operations in an earth wellbore with tubing within casing in an earth wellbore, the wellbore extending down into earth from an earth surface, the tubing including a tubing string with a lower end and extending down within the casing with the lower end at a point above a lower end of the casing, a tubing-casing annulus between the tubing and the casing sealed by a first sealing apparatus, the method including sealing the lower end of the tubing string with a sealing device to prevent fluid flow therethrough, and sealing the tubing casing annulus with a second sealing apparatus above and spaced apart from the first sealing apparatus. In certain aspects the sealing apparatuses provide upper and lower spaced-apart primary barriers. The methods in additional aspects include making an exit opening through the tubing and an exit opening through the casing, each exit opening located between the first sealing apparatus and the second sealing apparatus. In other aspects the methods include drilling a lateral wellbore from the exit opening through the casing. Apparatus is disclosed that is useful in such methods.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




1. Field of the Invention




The present invention is directed to wellbore operations, in-tubing sidetracking operations, wellbore milling procedures, and apparatuses and systems useful in such operations and procedures.




2. Description of Related Art




Many completed wells have one or more strings of tubing extending within casing from the surface (or from a tubing hanger) down within the well to a location above completion apparatus in a completion zone. Typically the interface at the lower end of the tubing string and the interior of well casing is sealed, e.g. with a packer or other sealing device. It is also common for a travel joint between the packer and tubing end to accommodate relative movement between the two.




Often it is desirable to produce the well from alternate zones, including, but not limited to, a location above the packer at the end of the tubing string. In several prior art methods, the tubing string is removed to accomplish a sidetracking operation above the level of the original completion zone. Once the tubing is removed a new annulus or primary barrier is installed above a new tubing-casing exit from which a new lateral wellbore extends.




In various prior art methods, new exits (exit openings through tubing, cement and casing) have been provided, an new lateral wellbores drilled therefrom, with the exits positioned below an existing annulus barrier. Such exits and lateral wellbores have been established using coiled tubing without requiring the use of a rig above the wellbore.




Often it is desirable to move up above a current completion zone due to, e.g., offset distance of a new drainage target which requires a well path beginning at a higher point in the wellbore due to maximum build angles versus the distance a well can be drilled due to friction of pipes pushed around curves in the wellbore.




There has long been a need for an efficient and effective method for re-completing a well in tubing above a previous completion location. There has long been a need for a method that efficiently and effectively provides a suitable opening or window through tubing and casing for drilling a sidetracked lateral wellbore at a desired re-completion location. There has long been a need, recognized by the present inventors, for stabilizing tubing at the desired re-completion location. There has long been a need for such a system and method wherein a new primary barrier is provided without the need to remove an entire tubing string.




SUMMARY OF THE PRESENT INVENTION




The present invention, in certain aspects, provides a method for wellbore operations in an earth wellbore with tubing within casing in an earth wellbore, the wellbore extending down into earth from an earth surface, the tubing comprising a tubing string with a lower end and extending down within the casing with the lower end at a point above a lower end of the casing, a tubing-casing annulus between the tubing and the casing sealed by a first sealing apparatus, the method including sealing the lower end of the tubing string with a sealing device to prevent fluid flow therethrough, and sealing the tubing-casing annulus with a second sealing apparatus above and spaced apart from the first sealing apparatus.




The present invention, in certain embodiments, discloses a through-tubing in-tubing system for providing a tubing/casing exit above a first completion zone in a main wellbore for drilling a new lateral wellbore from the main wellbore. In one embodiment in which a tubing-casing annulus is initially sealed off at a lower end for production below the tubing, another seal is provided within the tubing-casing annulus above and spaced apart from the lower seal. Then the tubing is perforated between the two seal areas, preferably without perforating the casing. In one aspect a travel joint, (including, but not limited to, a commercially available ELTSR receptacle from Baker Oil Tools) part of which encompasses the lower end of the tubing, is also perforated. Cement, resin or other suitable hardenable material is then pumped from the surface, down the interior of the tubing string, out through the perforations, and up into the annulus between the tubing's exterior and the casing's interior to such a level to stabilize a portion of the tubing for making one or more exit openings in the tubing and casing below that cement level.




The exit opening(s) are made with any suitable known apparatuses, equipment and methods, including, but not limited to, with a mill or mills, jet cutter(s), and explosives. In certain aspects, a diverter, mill guide, and/or whipstock is positioned and secured for directing a mill or mills against the tubing and/or casing. A suitable mill or mills are then used to make the exit opening(s) or window(s). In one aspect the mill or mills are run on a string rotatable from the surface. In another aspect, a coiled tubing string is used that includes a downhole motor for rotating a mill. Such a coiled tubing string may be used within the tubing that does not necessitate removal of the tubing string from the well or removal of a wellhead at the surface. The emplacement of the seal apparatus and perforating of the tubing can also be done without removal of the wellhead.




Once the exit opening(s) are provided, a lateral wellbore may be drilled out (“sidetracked”) from the casing exit as desired. The lateral wellbore may then be lined or cased as is well known in the art.




In another embodiment, following sealing of the tubing, cementing, and sidetracking, a jet cutter is lowered into the tubing to sever the tubing above the sealing apparatus. The entire tubing string is then raised at the surface and re-hung to provide a desired gap, e.g. of 30 feet in length, at a desired location down in the wellbore for installing a new upper primary barrier.




In yet another embodiment, following sealing of the tubing, cementing, and sidetracking as described above, an explosive device according to the present invention is run into the tubing and positioned adjacent the area at which a tubing gap is desired. One or more selectively activatable holding subs, e.g. but not limited to, the “button subs” or “hold downs” disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,785,120, are activated by pumping fluid under pressure down the tubing string to secure the explosive device in position. Alternatively mechanical anchors or the like may be used. A fluid pressure-activated firing head of the explosive device is activated by pumping fluid under pressure down the tubing string. The firing head simultaneously fires three separate charges: 1. a top charge that severs the tubing at a top level; 2. a bottom charge that severs the tubing at a bottom level; and 3. a slotting charge that fires to produce a series of longitudinal slots and corresponding fingers in and around the severed tubing. The explosive device is connected at the end of a tubing or coiled tubing string which is then lowered, pushing the housing of the explosive device down into the remaining tubing. The button sub(s) hold the severed tubing and, as the severed tubing is lowered, the fingers go down between the tubing's exterior and the casing's interior, creating an open axial gap in the tubing. The button sub(s) are then released and the housing of the explosive device is retrieved from the tubing. A sealing apparatus, e.g. an inflatable packer or, a mechanical packer, either of which may be a through-tubing packer or, is then run into the tubing on a tubing string or on coiled tubing and positioned at the gap in the tubing. Activating the packer seals off the tubing/casing annulus. The string is then released from the packer and retrieved from the wellbore.




In another embodiment a system with a mill and a downhole motor on coiled tubing is positioned with a mill adjacent the desired location for removal of a section of the tubing. The system is secured in place within the tubing with any suitable securement apparatus, including, but not limited to, one or more of the button subs discussed above. The system also includes a movement or stroking apparatus, e.g., but not limited to, as disclosed in FIGS. 1A-1E of U.S. Pat. No. 5,785,120 and accompanying text or in U.S. application Ser. No. 09/183,943 filed Oct. 31, 1998. The coiled tubing string includes a downhole motor that rotates the mill as the stroking apparatus pulls the coiled tubing and, hence, the mill upwardly to mill out the desired gap in the tubing. Depending on the length of the stroke of the stroking apparatus and the length of a desired milled gap in the tubing, more than one stroke may be needed. Alternatively any known milling or cutting system and method, including those in which a mill mills downwardly upwardly, or both and is supported from the surface and/or within the tubing below the surface may be used.




In any method described herein the stabilization and/or perforating and cementing steps may be optional. It is also to be understood that whenever a sealing apparatus is mentioned it may, within the scope of this invention, be any known suitable inflatable or mechanical packer (including but not limited to hydraulically set packers, mechanically set packers, and hydraulically set mechanical packers).




It is, therefore, an object of at least certain preferred embodiments of the present invention to provide:




New, useful, unique, efficient, and novel and nonobvious methods for re-completing a well above a previous completion zone;




Such methods which do not require removal of a wellhead and related equipment from a wellbore;




Such methods which provide a new primary barrier around a tubing string above a new completion zone;




Such methods which do not require re-installation of a drilling rig;




Such methods which employ stabilization of a portion of tubing in a wellbore prior to making a tubing exit through that tubing portion;




Such methods which do not require the removal of a tubing string to provide a new exit above a previous completion zone in an area through which a tubing string extends; and




Apparatus and equipment useful in such methods.




Certain embodiments of this invention are not limited to any particular individual feature disclosed here, but include combinations of them distinguished from the prior art in their structures and functions. Features of the invention have been broadly described so that the detailed descriptions that follow may be better understood, and in order that the contributions of this invention to the arts may be better appreciated. There are, of course, additional aspects of the invention described below and which may be included in the subject matter of the claims to this invention. Those skilled in the art who have the benefit of this invention, its teachings, and suggestions will appreciate that the conceptions of this disclosure may be used as a creative basis for designing other structures, methods and systems for carrying out and practicing the present invention. The claims of this invention are to be read to include any legally equivalent devices or methods which do not depart from the spirit and scope of the present invention.




The present invention recognizes and addresses the previously-mentioned problems and long-felt needs and provides a solution to those problems and a satisfactory meeting of those needs in its various possible embodiments and equivalents thereof. To one skilled in this art who has the benefits of this invention's realizations, teachings, disclosures, and suggestions, other purposes and advantages will be appreciated from the following description of preferred embodiments, given for the purpose of disclosure, when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings. The detail in these descriptions is not intended to thwart this patent's object to claim this invention no matter how others may later disguise it by variations in form or additions of further improvements.











DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS




A more particular description of embodiments of the invention briefly summarized above may be had by references to the embodiments which are shown in the drawings which form a part of this specification. These drawings illustrate certain preferred embodiments and are not to be used to improperly limit the scope of the invention which may have other equally effective or legally equivalent embodiments.





FIG. 1A

is a side schematic cross-section view of a wellbore with a casing and tubing string therein.





FIGS. 1B-1I

are side schematic views in cross-section showing a method according to the present invention.





FIG. 2

is a side schematic cross-section view of a wellbore cutting system according to the present invention.





FIGS. 3A-3F

are side schematic views in cross-section showing a method according to the present invention employing the system of FIG.


2


.





FIGS. 4A-4D

are side schematic cross-section views of a wellbore cutting system according to the present invention.





FIGS. 5A and 5B

are side schematic views of a sealing apparatus for use with a system according to the present invention.





FIGS. 5C and 5D

are side schematic views of a system according to the present invention using the apparatuses of FIGS.


5


A and


5


B.











DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS PREFERRED AT THE TIME OF FILING FOR THIS PATENT




Referring now to

FIG. 1A

, an earth wellbore W is cased with casing C extending down from the earth's surface to a completion zone Z from which, originally, desirable hydrocarbons are produced. Typical completion equipment is used for the zone Z. A tubing string T within the casing C has a lower end R that terminates above the completion zone Z. A packer P seals the tubing-casing annulus. For convenience the wellbore W, although present, is not shown in

FIGS. 1B-1E

and the lower end of the wellbore is also not shown in

FIGS. 1B-1I

.




As shown in

FIGS. 1B-1H

in a method according to the present invention, a system


10


is used to create an in-tubing lateral wellbore. As shown in

FIG. 1B

, the previously open lower end R of the tubing T is sealed with a sealing apparatus


12


to prevent fluid flow therethrough. This sealing apparatus may be any known suitable device, e.g. a packer or a plug. The sealing apparatus


12


may be installed using a wireline, coiled tubing, another jointed pipe or tubing string movable through the tubing string T.




As shown in

FIG. 1C

an opening


14


has been made through the tubing T (e.g. made by milling, with explosives or with a perforation device) and, optionally, a centralizing device


16


has been installed which is anchored within the tubing T. The centralizing device


16


has arms


18


which contact the casing C and centralize and stabilize the tubing T. The arms


18


are originally collapsed so that the centralizing device


16


is movable down through the tubing, e.g. on coiled tubing, on a wireline or on another tubing string. The arms expand to centralize the tubing T, particularly in an inclined wellbore if the tubing T is off-center with respect to the casing and/or laying against the casing. A body


19


of the device


16


is hollow permitting fluid flow therethrough.




As shown in

FIG. 1D

, wellbore cement


20


has been circulated down through the tubing T (or through a workstring within the tubing T such as a coiled tubing string), through the body


19


of the centralizing device


16


, out through the opening


14


, and into a tubing-casing annulus


22


to a level


24


. The cement


20


is allowed to set to stabilize the portion of the tubing T encompassed by the cement


20


. The cement


20


: secures the lower end of the tubing T to the casing C preventing relative movement between the two; stabilizes the tubing T during subsequent milling or window formation operations; defines a circulation path down the coiled tubing and up the annulus for cuttings resulting from milling, drilling, or milling-drilling; and provides a borehole path from the interior of the tubing to the new wellbore exterior of the casing through which a completion can be run into a lateral wellbore. The cement stabilizes the tubing in the casing and closes or fills voids around the tubing exterior so that the flow path during later milling, drilling, and/or milling-drilling operations has a defined confined flow area of known size so that circulating fluid velocities can be sufficiently maintained to keep cuttings in suspension and moving up-hole.




As shown in

FIG. 1E

a suitable guide, diverter, or whipstock


30


is run into the tubing T, e.g. on coiled tubing, wireline, or another tubing string, and anchored in place. Any suitable known guide, diverter, or whipstock may be used. Alternatively, openings to be made through the tubing T, cement


20


, and casing C may be made with known explosives and explosive devices, with known chemicals and chemical devices, or with known jetting cutters. The guide, diverter, or whipstock may be a permanently set device, a retrievable device, or a millable device.




As shown in

FIG. 1F

, an opening or window


40


is milled through the tubing T with any suitable known mill or milling system, as is a window


41


through the casing C and an opening


42


through the cement


20


. The mill or mill system may also progress into a formation


33


initiating a lateral wellbore


34


. In one particular aspect, the lateral wellbore


34


is extended to any desired length employing suitable drilling and directional drilling apparatuses. In one aspect the open hole section


35


is underreamed to facilitate installation of a liner (in one aspect an expandable liner) in the lateral wellbore


34


. Optionally, the whipstock


30


may now be removed.




As shown in

FIG. 1G

, a section


36


is cut out of the tubing T with any known suitable cutter or mill. As with the other devices used in the system


10


, the cutter or mill may be used on coiled tubing, a wireline, or another tubing string. Alternatively the section, according to the present invention, can be removed with known suitable explosives and explosive devices, chemicals and chemical devices, and/or with known jetting cutters.




As shown in

FIG. 1H

, a liner


50


is installed with its lower end


51


extending into the lateral wellbore


34


. A sealing apparatus


52


, including but not limited to any suitable known through-tubing packer, is installed to seal off the tubing-casing annulus


22


. In certain preferred embodiments the sealing apparatus provides a primary barrier. An expansion joint


53


(or polished bore receptacle and seal assembly) located between tubing end


54


and sealing apparatus


52


accommodates relative movement between the two, e.g., but not limited to, during subsequent production and injection (e.g. injection of water or gas in an injection well). The top of the lateral liner may be dropped off outside the window opening and, optionally, not connected to the original tubing or casing. Alternatively it may be attached to the tubing end


54


with a travel joint


53


and packer


52


all secured to the top end of the liner


50


. Optionally, cement may be emplaced on top of the apparatus


52


.





FIG. 1I

shows schematically an alternative way to cement the tubing-casing annulus


22


in which a perforation device


38


(e.g. any known suitable perforator or perforating gun) perforates through the tubing T (and through an optional travelling joint


39


if one is present; such a joint may be used in the method of FIG.


1


B). As in

FIG. 1D

, cement is then circulated through the resulting perforation or perforations into the annulus


22


. The method shown in

FIG. 1I

does not require the devices


16


or the formation of the opening


14


. The casing is, preferably, not perforated.





FIG. 2

illustrates schematically a tubing cutter system


60


according to the present invention useful in methods according to the present invention described below. The system


60


includes a selectively activatable firing initiator or head


61


, selectively activatable securement apparatus


62


; explosives


63


,


64


, and


65


; a housing


66


; and a lower end


67


. The securement apparatus


62


may be any suitable known wellbore anchoring apparatus or mechanism. As shown, a plurality of “button subs” (as previously mentioned herein) are used. The explosives


63


are used to sever a section of the tubing at an upper level; the explosives


65


for severing the section of tubing at a lower level; an the explosives


64


for producing a series of longitudinal slots and corresponding fingers around the severed tubing section. A detonation cord


68


interconnected between the head


61


and explosives provides for simultaneously firing of all the explosives.




The system


60


is used, as shown in

FIGS. 3A-3F

to cut and move a section of the tubing T (e.g. the section


36


as shown in FIG.


1


G). The system


60


is lowered within the tubing T to a desired location (it being understood that the wellbore W of

FIG. 3A

is the wellbore W of FIG.


1


A and that the same completion zone Z, etc. are present). The firing head


61


is activated (e.g. by a fluid pressure pulse or by an electrical signal), firing the explosives


63


,


64


,


65


. The tubing T is severed at a top level


47


and at a bottom level


48


creating a severed tubing section


46


. Fingers


49


are formed with slots between them. The fingers


49


are free to move outwardly. As shown in

FIG. 3B

, lowering of the system


60


, which is secured to the severed tubing section


46


by the securement apparatus


62


, results in lowering of the severed tubing section


46


. The lower ends of the fingers


49


encounter an upper end


45


of the tubing T and move outwardly as the system


60


and tubing section


46


are lowered (see FIG.


3


C). optionally, a telescopically collapsing apparatus as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,905,759 may be used as the stroking movement apparatus to facilitate lowering of severed casing. The pressure differential across the stroking apparatus's piston then strokes the tubing section


46


downward without lowering the coiled tubing.




As shown in

FIG. 3D

, pressure has been relieved releasing the button subs and the system


60


has been removed and the severed tubing section


46


has been lowered to expose a desired gap


44


between ends


45


and


43


of the tubing T. As shown in

FIG. 3E

a selectively activatable sealing apparatus


70


, (e.g. any suitable known sealing device, packer, etc.) is moved down through the tubing T and positioned between the tubing end


43


and a top end of the severed tubing section. As shown in

FIG. 3F

, the sealing apparatus


70


is activated to seal off the wellbore W. A tubular string or coiled tubing supporting the sealing apparatus


70


is released therefrom and retrieved from the wellbore.





FIGS. 4A-4D

show a system


80


according to the present invention useful in severing a tubing section (and creating a gap in the tubing, e.g. as in FIG.


1


G). The system


80


includes selectively activatable securement apparatus


82


for selectively anchoring the system


80


in tubing such as the tubing T; movement apparatus


81


for moving part of the system


80


upwardly; a downhole motor system


83


for rotating a mill system; and a mill system


84


for milling out the tubing section to create a desired gap therein. The system


80


has a lower end


85


. Appropriate internal flow channels in the systems of the system


80


permit fluid to flow from the top to the bottom of the system to selectively activate the securement apparatus


82


, to selectively activate and power the movement apparatus


81


, to selectively activate and power the downhole motor system


83


, and to selectively activate and power the mill system


84


. Fluid may flow out from a channel


86


through the end


85


.




The securement apparatuses


82


may be “button subs” as previously mentioned herein which are selectively activatable by pumping fluid under pressure down to the system


80


and through a channel


87


in a top sub


88


that is in fluid communication with fluid flow channels to the apparatuses


82


.




The movement apparatus


81


may be any suitable downhole movement apparatus. In one aspect the movement apparatus is a stroke section mechanism as disclosed in U.S. application Ser. No. 09/183,943 filed Oct. 31, 1998, co-owned with the present invention and incorporated fully herein for all purposes.




The downhole motor system


83


is any suitable known downhole motor including, but not limited to a commercially available PDM motor or MacDrill motor of Rotech Holdings, Ltd.




The mill system


84


may be any known suitable mill or mill system, including, but not limited to, the tool of U.S. Pat. No. 5,735,359 issued Apr. 7, 1998, co-owned with the present invention and incorporated fully herein for all purposes.





FIG. 5A

shows a sealing apparatus


100


with a body


101


, a lower end or “stinger”


102


, lower slips


103


for engaging a tubing's interior, a packer element


104


, upper slips


105


for engaging a tubing's interior, locking teeth or threads


107


(or with typical threads for threadedly engaging the apparatus


110


), and seals


106


.





FIG. 5B

shows a sealing apparatus


110


with a body


111


, a lower end or “stinger”


112


, a packing element


114


, with locking threads or teeth


117


for locking engagement with the teeth


107


of the apparatus


100


(or with typical threads) and a seal bore


115


with an interior surface


116


.




As shown in

FIG. 5C

, the apparatuses of

FIGS. 5A and 5B

may be used to both provide the primary barrier above the end of the severed tubing


55


(created as in

FIG. 1G

above) and to seal off the annulus between the interior of the upper tubing end


54


and the exterior of the apparatus


100


. The apparatus


100


is connected to and above the apparatus


110


and then the two are lowered on a tubular string, wireline, or coiled tubing


120


so that the stinger


112


of the apparatus


110


enters the lower severed tubing end


55


. Optionally a running tool


130


may be used. The apparatuses are configured, sized and positioned so that the packing element


114


when activated provides a primary barrier across the casing C and the packing element


104


seals off the annulus between the interior of the tubing end


54


and the exterior of the apparatus


100


.




As shown in

FIG. 5D

, the slips


103


,


105


of the apparatus


100


have been selectively activated as is well known in the art to anchor the apparatus


100


in place in the tubing end


54


; the stinger


102


has sealingly engaged the seal bore


115


; the packing elements


104


and


114


have been selectively activated to effect the desired sealing; and the string


120


has been released from the apparatus


100


and retrieved from the wellbore W.




Alternatively, the apparatus


110


may be moved into the wellbore and located as shown in FIG.


5


C and its packing element activated. Then the apparatus


100


is lowered and positioned as shown in FIG.


5


C and its packing element is activated. The tubular string (wireline, coiled tubing)


120


is then released from the apparatus


100


.




Each of the elements of the sytem described above has a fluid flow channel therethrough from top to bottom to provide fluid pumoped through the surface through the apparatus


100


, through the apparatus


110


, and down into the tubing


55


and therebelow selectively as desired. Either sealing apparatus in any system disclosed herein may have appropriate landing surfaces or landing nipples for receiving plugs or other apparatus pumped onto them. These plugs may be any known suitable plug, with or without anti-rotating structure, and/or they may be retrievable and/or drillable.




The present invention, therefore, provides in certain, but not necessarily all embodiments, a method for wellbore operations in an earth wellbore with tubing within casing in an earth wellbore, the wellbore extending down into earth from an earth surface, the tubing including a tubing string with a lower end and extending down within the casing with the lower end at a point above a lower end of the casing, a tubing-casing annulus between the tubing and the casing sealed by a first sealing apparatus, the method including sealing the lower end of the tubing string with a sealing device to prevent fluid flow therethrough, and sealing the tubing-casing annulus with a second sealing apparatus above and spaced apart from the first sealing apparatus. Such a method may include one, some (in any possible combination) or all of the following: making an exit opening or openings through the tubing and an exit opening or openings through the casing, each exit opening located above the first sealing apparatus; stabilizing the tubing at a location above the first sealing apparatus; perforating the tubing string at a level above a level of the first sealing apparatus producing at least one perforation, introducing a hardenable material into the tubing-casing annulus through the at least one perforation and flowing the hardenable material within said annulus up to a level spaced-apart from and above the level of the first sealing apparatus; hardening the hardenable material; wherein the hardenable material is cement; wherein the at least one perforation is a plurality of perforations; wherein the wellbore includes a first completion zone located below the lower end of the tubing; wherein the second sealing apparatus is a primary barrier; the first sealing device and the second sealing apparatus constitute a primary barrier; wherein, prior to sealing the tubing-casing annulus with the second sealing apparatus, the method includes removing a section of the tubing above the first sealing apparatus, moving the second sealing apparatus down through the tubing to the area from which the section of tubing has been removed, and activating the second sealing apparatus to seal off the tubing-casing annulus; wherein the exit opening or openings are made with a mill; wherein the mill is on a tubular string extending from the earth surface and the mill is rotated for milling by the tubular string; the mill is moved downwardly by moving the tubular string downwardly or the mill is moved upwardly by moving the tubular string upwardly, or both; wherein the mill is connected to a downhole motor on a tubular string in the wellbore and the downhole motor rotates the mill for milling and wherein the mill is moved downwardly by moving the tubular string downwardly or wherein the mill is moved upwardly by moving the tubular string upwardly, or both; wherein the downhole motor is interconnected with movement apparatus that is anchorable in the tubing at a point below the earth surface, the movement apparatus for moving, upwardly and/or downwardly, the downhole motor and mill during milling; wherein the downhole motor is interconnected with movement apparatus anchorable in the tubing at a point below the earth surface, the movement apparatus for moving the downhole motor and the mill upwardly and/or downwardly during milling; wherein the section of tubing is made by explosive means for severing the tubing at two spaced-apart locations; wherein the explosive means is on a movable tubular string on the wellbore and includes a securement apparatus securable within the tubing at the location of the section of tubing to be removed, the securement apparatus remaining secured with the section of tubing following severing of the tubing by the explosive means, the method including lowering the section of tubing to expose a gap in the tubing into which the second sealing apparatus may be moved; making a tubing opening in the tubing above the first sealing apparatus, installing a centralizer for centralizing the tubing within the casing, the centralizer having a hollow body through which hardenable material is pumpable out through the centralizer, through the tubing opening, and into the tubing-casing annulus; installing a whipstock within the tubing for directing a mill for making the exit opening(s); removing the whipstock after the exit openings are made; and/or drilling a lateral wellbore from the exit opening through the casing; installing a liner in at least a portion of the lateral wellbore.




In conclusion, therefore, it is seen that the present invention and the embodiments disclosed herein and those covered by the appended claims are well adapted to carry out the objectives and obtain the ends set forth. Certain changes can be made in the subject matter without departing from the spirit and the scope of this invention. It is realized that changes are possible within the scope of this invention and it is further intended that each element or step recited in any of the following claims is to be understood as referring to all equivalent elements or steps. The following claims are intended to cover the invention as broadly as legally possible in whatever form it may be utilized. The invention claimed herein is new and novel in accordance with 35 U.S.C. § 102 and satisfies the conditions for patentability in § 102. The invention claimed herein is not obvious in accordance with 35 U.S.C. § 103 and satisfies the conditions for patentability in § 103. This specification and the claims that follow are in accordance with all of the requirements of 35 U.S.C. § 112. The inventors may rely on the Doctrine of Equivalents to determine and assess the scope of their invention and of the claims that follow as they may pertain to apparatus not materially departing from, but outside of, the literal scope of the invention as set forth in the following claims.



Claims
  • 1. A method for completing an earth wellbore, the wellbore having a first production zone to be abandoned, and the wellbore having tubing extending down within casing therein and forming a tubing-casing annulus, the tubing having a lower end at a point above a lower end of the casing, and the tubing-casing annulus being sealed by a first sealing apparatus above the first production zone, the method comprising the steps of:sealing the lower end of the tubing with a sealing device to prevent fluid flow therethrough; creating a lower opening in the tubing above the first sealing apparatus; inserting cement into the tubing-casing annulus through said lower opening in the tubing; creating an exit opening through both the tubing and the casing above said lower end of the tubing; forming said lateral wellbore through said exit opening; severing the tubing above said lateral wellbore; creating an upper opening in the tubing above said lateral wellbore, said tubing now having a new lower end above said lateral wellbore; and setting a second sealing apparatus in the wellbore above said lateral wellbore so as to sealing off the tubing-casing annulus.
  • 2. The method for completing an earth wellbore of claim 1 wherein said second sealing apparatus provides a primary barrier to the first production zone.
  • 3. The method for completing an earth wellbore of claim 1 wherein said step of creating an exit opening through both the tubing and the casing comprises the steps of:affixing a mill onto the lower end of a tubular string; lowering said tubular string into the tubing; urging said mill against the tubing and the casing so as to mill a window through the tubing and the casing at a depth above said lower opening so as to form said exit opening and to begin a lateral wellbore; and removing said tubular string and mill.
  • 4. The method for completing an earth wellbore of claim 3 further comprising the step of setting a diverter in the tubing at the depth desired for beginning said lateral wellbore before said lateral wellbore is formed; and wherein said step of urging said mill against the tubing and the casing further comprises the steps of:rotating said mill; and moving said tubular string downward against said diverter thereby urging said mill against the production tubing and the casing so as to form said exit opening.
  • 5. The method for completing an earth wellbore of claim 4 wherein said mill is rotated by a downhole motor on the tubular string in the wellbore.
  • 6. The method for completing an earth wellbore of claim 4 wherein said mill is rotated by rotating the tubular string in the wellbore.
  • 7. The method for completing an earth wellbore of claim 1 further comprising the step of running a liner through said severed tubing and into said lateral wellbore, said liner having an upper end and a lower end, said upper end essentially extending into said upper opening and being in fluid communication with the tubing.
  • 8. The method for completing an earth wellbore of claim 7 wherein said second sealing apparatus is connected to said liner.
  • 9. The method for completing an earth wellbore of claim 8 wherein said second sealing apparatus is a through-tubing packer, and is connected to said liner proximal to said upper end of said liner.
  • 10. The method for completing an earth wellbore of claim 9 wherein said second sealing apparatus resides intermediate said upper end of said liner and said new lower end of the tubing.
  • 11. The method for completing an earth wellbore of claim 9 wherein said upper end of said liner is sealingly placed in fluid communication with said new lower end of the tubing by means of an expansion joint so as to accommodate relative movement between said new lower end of the tubing and said second sealing apparatus.
  • 12. The method for completing an earth wellbore of claim 11 wherein said expansion joint defines a polished bore receptacle and seal assembly.
  • 13. The method for completing an earth wellbore of claim 1 wherein said step of creating a lower opening in the tubing above the first sealing apparatus comprises the steps of:severing the tubing above the first sealing apparatus; and partially raising the tubing from the surface in order to create said lower opening between the tubing and the first sealing apparatus.
  • 14. The method for completing an earth wellbore of claim 13 further comprising the step of stabilizing the tubing at a location above the first sealing apparatus before cement is inserted into the tubing-casing annulus.
  • 15. The method for completing an earth wellbore of claim 14 wherein said step of stabilizing the tubing compriseslowering a centralizing device through the tubing and down to the lower end of the tubing, said centralizing device having arms and a hollow body for permitting fluid to flow therethrough; and activating said arms of said centralizing device against the casing so as to centralize the tubing at its lower end.
  • 16. The method for completing an earth wellbore of claim 1 wherein the step of creating said lower opening in the tubing comprises the step of perforating the tubing at a level above the first sealing apparatus.
  • 17. The method for completing an earth wellbore of claim 1 wherein the step of creating an upper opening in the tubing above said lateral wellbore is performed by partially raising the tubing from the surface.
  • 18. The method for completing an earth wellbore of claim 1 wherein the step of creating an upper opening in the tubing above said lateral wellbore is performed by removing a section of tubing.
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