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What Is Coiled Tubing Operation? | Key Process in Oil and Gas Industry

What Is Coiled Tubing Operation?

Upstream oil and gas

In the oilfield, every minute counts. Wells don’t wait — pressure builds, sand plugs up, production slows. Yet, shutting down a well just to fix a problem can cost thousands of dollars per hour. That’s where coiled tubing operations come in — a solution built on the simple idea that you can work on a live well without killing it.

Imagine a long and flexible steel pipe that is tightly wound on a gigantic reel – as an industrial size garden hose. This pipe is known as coiled tubing (CT), and is robust enough to drive through miles of wellbore and is also flexible enough to coil and uncoil without breaking. In its deployment, it glides perfectly in the well with fluids, chemicals or tools passing through its hollow core to do the job.

In the right hands, coiled tubing is one of the most efficient, cost-saving, and versatile tools in modern oil and gas operations.

How It All Works

A coiled tubing setup might look complicated at first glance, but it’s built on a simple system of precision and power.

  • The reel carries the continuous pipe.
  • The injector head grips and pushes the tubing into the well — even against thousands of pounds of downhole pressure.
  • The gooseneck bends the tubing safely from the reel into the injector.
  • Pressure control equipment (like a CT blowout preventer and stripper packer) keeps the well sealed, even as the pipe moves in and out.
  • The control cabin — the heart of the spread — is where the operator monitors weight, depth, pressure, and rate on multiple screens.
  • Power and pumping units supply the muscle, circulating fluids and running hydraulics.

From the outside, the operation looks like choreography — reels spinning, hoses hissing, pumps rumbling — all synchronized to keep the well under control and production steady.

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Why It Matters

Before coiled tubing became common, any maintenance or stimulation job required a workover rig. Crews had to pull the entire tubing string out, section by section, which could take days. Coiled tubing changed that forever.

Now, operators can perform cleanouts, acid jobs, plug milling, or even small drilling operations without dismantling the completion or halting production. That means less downtime, smaller teams, and lower costs — three words every production manager loves to hear.

As Schlumberger notes, coiled tubing is now used in nearly every phase of a well’s life, from drilling to decommissioning, precisely because it can do so much with so little disruption (source).

The Flow of a Coiled Tubing Job

Here’s how a typical operation unfolds:

  1. The plan.
    Every job begins with engineering. The team models the forces, predicts friction, and calculates tubing fatigue to make sure everything stays within safe limits.
  2. Rigging up.
    Equipment is positioned around the wellhead, lines are connected, and pressure control gear is tested. It’s a tight setup — every hose, every valve has its place.
  3. Running in hole.
    The injector feeds the tubing downward while fluid circulation begins. Depending on the job, that fluid might be acid, nitrogen, or clean brine to flush debris.
  4. Doing the work.
    Downhole tools — maybe a jetting nozzle, a mill, or a motor — get to work. Real-time data flows to the surface as the crew adjusts speed and pressure on the fly.
  5. Pulling out.
    Once the job’s done, the tubing is retracted, coiled neatly back on the reel, and the well is handed over, ready to flow again.

It’s fast, controlled, and efficient — the very reason CT has become a cornerstone of well intervention.

What You Can Do with Coiled Tubing

The list is long, but here are the most common uses:

  • Cleanouts: Removing sand, scale, and paraffin that choke production.
  • Acidizing and Stimulation: Delivering acid or chemicals directly to a specific zone — precise and cost-effective.
  • Milling: Grinding out bridge plugs, cement, or scale inside long horizontal wells.
  • Fishing: Retrieving lost wireline tools or debris.
  • Logging: Running sensors in wells that are too deviated for traditional wireline.
  • Decommissioning: Pumping cement plugs or heavy fluids during well abandonment.

Each job is different, but the principle stays the same — deliver tools and fluids exactly where they’re needed without stopping production.

Safety: The Core of Every Operation

Working on a live well means there’s no room for error. Coiled tubing crews rely on pressure control equipment to keep everything sealed and stable.

The CT blowout preventer stack and stripper packer ensure that even while the pipe moves, well pressure stays contained. Crews test these barriers before every job and monitor them constantly during the operation.

Another key concern is fatigue. Each time the tubing bends over the reel and gooseneck, it flexes — like bending a paperclip again and again. Too much bending, and it could weaken. That’s why every inch of tubing has its life cycle tracked digitally. Once it reaches its fatigue limit, it’s retired.

Safety guidelines like API RP 16ST set global standards for coiled tubing operations — covering everything from design and testing to emergency response. They exist to make sure CT jobs are not just fast, but safe.

Why Operators Keep Choosing CT

Coiled tubing has earned its place because it simply makes sense. It delivers:

  • Speed: Continuous pipe means less downtime. 
  • Flexibility: Works in vertical, deviated, and horizontal wells alike. 
  • Precision: Fluids and tools reach the exact target zone. 
  • Cost Control: Smaller footprint and rigless operation cut expenses. 
  • Real-Time Feedback: Data monitoring allows instant adjustments. 

For operators, that combination of speed, safety, and precision translates to real production gains — and less waiting around for results.

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How GET Global Group Makes It Work

At GET Global Group, coiled tubing isn’t just about running pipe — it’s about solving problems. We start by understanding your well’s story: why production dipped, what obstacles are downhole, and what outcomes you’re after.

From there, we design an operation that fits like a glove. Whether it’s a scale cleanout, a stimulation job, or a plug milling campaign, our engineers map every detail — pressure profiles, fluid programs, tool selection, and fatigue tracking.

Our CT units are tailored to your environment — compact land spreads for tight pads or modular offshore setups where space is at a premium. Each job runs under strict safety standards, and every post-job report includes data-driven insights so you know exactly what value was delivered.

The result?

Less downtime. Safer operations. Higher production. Tangible results you can measure.

Conclusion

Coiled tubing may appear to be any other oilfield equipment, but it is more than that. It is what allows the operators to wake the wells without the expensive and time-consuming workover. It’s what lets operators bring wells back to life without the heavy cost or delay of a full workover. It’s the bridge between efficiency and control — technology that keeps the energy flowing.

At GET Global Group, we’ve built our expertise around that principle: to help operators maintain well performance through smarter, faster, and safer intervention.

Have a well that needs attention?

Let’s talk about how coiled tubing can make the difference.

Contact GET Global Group and we’ll build a plan that works for your field, your budget, and your production goals.

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