Spreading CSS to multi-well flood

Hopes to increase recovery between wells

diagram of warm solvent recoveryAfter successful cyclical steam recovery in one pad, the applicant proposes to steam between the wells. He proposes to change his huff and puff scheme into a continuous steam injection operation to push steam over 160m through heavy oil to other wells. By flooding the unswept formation between the wells, he hopes to increase recovery another 10%. This recovery mechanism is being used in a 20m thick formation where the operator has decided that SAGD will be uneconomic.

Each AER application contains your neighbor's perspective on the exploitation of oil and gas formations. Applications contain more technical data even than SPE papers.

Would you like to see what other operators in your areas are thinking about seismic, commercial schemes, experimental schemes and recovery? AppIntel can help.

Subscribers can view this application by pasting the following link into their browser after logging into AppIntel. http://app.appintel.info/AOW.php?pxnrg=786y7o37353837313731347x56

Tags: Flood, Thermal, Heavy Oil

Granger Low  11 Feb 2016



Measuring the rate of oil and gas technology growth

Energy transition inside the oil industry

AppIntel AI shows SAGD type logs

Check out the picks and cap rock

AppIntel AI hit alerts

Ignite your insight

Supercharge 2026 with exploration AI skills that matter

Found a corner shot in thermal scheme

Don't blow the lid

Fracking into a neighboring well causes a blowout

Continuing Canadian thermal innovation doubled oil production

Experimental Propane Solvent co-injection in thermal

Shale in SAGD

How shale much is too much shale? Ask AppIntel AI.

This page last updated 27 February 2026.
Copyright 2011-2026 by Regaware Systems Ltd.
  Calgary, Alberta, Canada
AppIntel is an AI service for getting intelligence from industry submissions vetted by government. Nothing on this page may be construed as engineering or geoscience advice. If you spot any errors on this site, please email our webmaster.
  Share