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About this Training Course
While subsea well interventions share fundamental principles with land and platform operations, the subsea environment introduces significantly greater technical, logistical, and operational complexity. Accessing the subsea tree via intervention risers or conducting riserless operations requires specialized vessels, dynamic positioning systems, ROV support, and advanced control systems - all of which substantially increase operational costs. As a result, non-productive time (NPT), equipment failures, or procedural errors can quickly escalate costs and risk, potentially outweighing the production gains the intervention was intended to deliver.
This intensive 3-day course focuses on the critical aspects unique to subsea well intervention, including subsea wellheads and trees, control systems, intervention riser systems, riserless technologies, vessel operations, well integrity, and well control in a subsea environment. Emphasis is placed on operational risk management, contingency planning, disconnect scenarios, and lessons learned from real case studies to help participants understand both technical challenges and decision-making processes.
Through structured lectures, detailed system walkthroughs, animations, and real-world case studies, participants will develop a practical understanding of how subsea interventions are planned, executed, and managed safely and efficiently. This course is designed for professionals who already possess foundational knowledge of conventional well intervention techniques (wireline, coiled tubing, pumping, and stimulation) and aims to bridge that knowledge into the more complex and high-stakes subsea environment.
Subsea well intervention involves performing maintenance, diagnostics, or stimulation work on offshore wells located on the seabed. Operators use these interventions to restore production, improve reservoir performance, or protect well integrity. Unlike land-based operations, offshore intervention requires specialized vessels, subsea control systems, and remotely operated vehicles (ROVs). Water depth, pressure, and limited physical access significantly increase technical complexity and operational risk.
Offshore well intervention requires marine vessels equipped with dynamic positioning systems instead of fixed rigs. Engineers must access the well through intervention risers or riserless lubricator systems. Crews rely on ROVs for subsea valve operation and equipment installation. Weather conditions, vessel motion, and water depth directly affect safety and efficiency. These constraints demand detailed planning, contingency procedures, and strict well control management.
The configuration of the subsea Christmas tree determines how engineers access the well. The three main designs are dual-bore vertical trees, mono-bore vertical trees, and horizontal trees. Dual-bore trees provide separate production and annulus access. Mono-bore systems simplify completion architecture. Horizontal trees allow tubing hanger installation within the wellhead, which can improve intervention flexibility. Tree design influences riser selection, pressure control systems, and operational procedures.
An intervention riser system creates a pressure-controlled conduit between the surface vessel and the subsea well. It enables through-riser wireline, coiled tubing, pumping, and well testing operations. The riser allows fluid returns to surface and supports full well control barriers. Systems typically include an emergency disconnect package to protect the well during vessel drift-off or severe weather. Riser-based intervention suits high-pressure or complex offshore operations.
Riserless well intervention eliminates the need for a full marine riser. Instead, operators deploy a subsea lubricator system directly onto the tree using a light intervention vessel. This approach works well for wireline logging, production logging tools (PLT), and selected stimulation treatments. Riserless systems reduce equipment footprint and cost. However, they limit circulation capability and require strong contingency planning to manage well control risks.
Remotely operated vehicles play a critical role in subsea intervention systems. They provide visual inspection, hydraulic power, torque application, and valve manipulation. Work-class ROVs install lubricators, operate tree valves, and assist with emergency disconnect procedures. Without ROV support, most deepwater interventions would not be feasible. ROV capability directly affects operational efficiency, safety, and response time during abnormal events.
Operators increasingly adopt digital monitoring and real-time data analytics to reduce non-productive time. Lightweight intervention vessels improve flexibility and lower mobilization costs. Advances in electrohydraulic and multiplex control systems enhance reliability. The industry continues expanding into deeper and more complex reservoirs. As offshore developments mature, efficient and lower-risk intervention strategies will remain essential for asset performance.
