Production

High Pressure/High Temperature

High-pressure/high-temperature (HP/HT) assets are returning to development plans as operators pursue deep gas and condensate while balancing operational efficiency of the projects with the risk. The recent paper submissions suggest a shift from single-component qualification to more-integrated, cross-functional operating systems for the high temperature and pressure requirements across the well life cycle.

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High-pressure/high-temperature (HP/HT) assets are returning to development plans as operators pursue deep gas and condensate while balancing operational efficiency of the projects with the risk. The recent paper submissions suggest a shift from single-component qualification to more-integrated, cross-functional operating systems for the high temperature and pressure requirements across the well life cycle.

The advancements broadly focus on managed-pressure drilling to stay inside narrow pore-pressure/fracture-pressure windows; durability and functionality of completion hardware; perforating and conveyance in challenging environments; robust stimulation- and drilling-fluids chemistry; and higher-fidelity downhole monitoring that supports faster, safer measurements and decisions. Together, the recent industry direction points toward HP/HT asset delivery that is less intervention-heavy and more data-rich, where engineering margins are protected by both hardware and algorithmic techniques.

Three papers merit special mention for showing how HP/HT technology is focusing on precision. Paper SPE 226289 demonstrates electromagnetic look-ahead while drilling to support geosteering and well-placement decisions in offshore high-pressure gas wells with extremely narrow mud-weight windows. The technology enables detecting boundaries ahead of the bit with meter-scale resolution to place casing safely and reduce nonproductive circulating time.

Paper SPE 230027 tackles a different challenge of perforating depleted HP/HT reservoirs with large differential pressures of approximately 490 bar within reservoir layers, using an engineered wireline program to avoid coiled tubing and protect depleted intervals. The approach uses high-strength, sour-service polymer-filled cable, zone-by-zone sequencing updated with real-time pressure data, and thermal shock mitigation.

Paper SPE 229001 advances multistage stimulation in high-temperature carbonate settings through smart dissolvable, high-temperature darts that expand zonal isolation and in-situ diagnostics without adding retrieval risk. The system is rated for differential pressures of 15,000 psi during acid fracturing. This approach addresses higher stage‑count potential while eliminating post-job milling to enhance operational efficiencies for rigless project development.

Looking ahead, stronger cross-collaboration with the geothermal industry will be increasingly important as deep, hot wells converge in operating envelopes and failure modes. Shared development priorities include high-temperature materials and sensing that enable conveyance and measurements for continuous improvement of asset development with the feedback loop and coupled thermal/hydraulic/mechanical/chemical modeling for wellbore stability, fracture evolution, and long-term integrity.

Summarized Papers in This March 2026 Issue

SPE 226289 Electromagnetic Look-Ahead Service Assists Geostopping Decisions in High-Pressure Wells by Shaopeng Zhu, Zi Rao, and Jialing Ma, CNOOC, et al.

SPE 230027 Wireline-Perforation Strategy Aims for Depleted HP/HT Reservoirs by Alhadi Zahmuwl, SPE, SLB, Art Hooker, TotalEnergies, and Adil Al Busaidy, SLB, et al.

SPE 229001 Smart Multistage Technology Enhances Completion, Acid-Fracturing Stimulation by Rommel Ernesto Arias, SPE, Mariam Al Saad, and Abdullah Thuwaini, Saudi Aramco, et al.

Recommended Additional Reading

SPE 229497 First Iranian HP/HT Gas Well Completion and Testing—Lessons Learned and Practices by A. Zareiforoush, Pezhvak Energy Engineering and Services Company, et al.

IPTC 24823 Unleashing the Potential: Geomechanics and Fracture-Gradient Modeling Reshape the HP/HT Landscape in SA Gas Field, Gulf of Thailand by W. Kongsumrit, PTT Exploration and Production, et al.

SPE 229135 CO2 Storage and Enhanced Heat/Gas Recovery in Fractured Deep High-Temperature Tight-Gas Reservoirs: A Simulation Study by Baichen Fan, China University of Petroleum, et al.

Abdul Muqtadir Khan, SPE, is a digital solutions project manager at SLB in Houston, where he leads the development of stimulation digital products from inception to commercialization. His research interests include hydraulic fracturing, acidizing, intervention technologies, and the application of machine learning in petroleum engineering. Khan holds an MS degree in petroleum engineering from The University of Texas at Austin. An active contributor to the technical community, he has co-authored multiple technical papers and participates in various SPE initiatives. Khan also is an active reviewer for multiple peer-reviewed journals, including SPE Journal, and serves on the JPT Editorial Review Board.