This paper synthesizes lessons learned from drilling a CO2-storage stratigraphic well in the San Juan Basin (New Mexico, USA) to clarify drivers of operational incidents and to inform future well planning. A literature review of regional drilling problems was combined with pre-drill engineering based on offset-well history and a geomechanical model, including casing, cementing, and hydraulics designs developed in commercial software; these designs were compared with field execution to extract incident-specific lessons. The most frequent problems observed are lost circulation, stuck pipe, and poor control of drilling parameters, consistent with complex lithology and reservoir pressure depletion that reduces fracture pressure below anticipated values. Based on the lessons learned, three mitigations are proposed as follows: (1) update the geomechanical model with the latest pore, fracture pressure estimates; (2) apply underbalanced drilling using nitrified mud by injecting nitrogen through a parasite string while drilling intermediate and production sections; and (3) maintain operating limits (weight on bit < 44.5 kN, top-drive rotation < 45 rpm, and pump rate < 1.32 m3/min) to improve fluid returns through low-fracture-pressure intervals. Simulation results support the applicability of the proposed solutions.
Nguyen et al. (Fri,) studied this question.