Energy resource (Coal, Shale Gas, Geothermal, Oil, Gas)

2022 ◽  
pp. 1-4
Keyword(s):  
2013 ◽  
Vol 706-708 ◽  
pp. 416-419
Author(s):  
Li Jun Cheng ◽  
Hong Yu Du ◽  
Zhi Guo Xie ◽  
Pei Wu Liu ◽  
Shuai Huang

Shale gas is an important unconventional energy resource. However its only achieved successful commercial exploitation in the United States and Canada. Shale gas well QY1 was carried out in southeast Chongqing.Taking this well as a case, the fracturing design optimization workflow and its practice are described in this paper. The fracturing feasibility of well QY1 was firstly determined by referencing all the physical parameters of target formation. Then the reservoir stress model was revised and reservoir stress profile was established as well. The reservoir simulation software (Eclipse) was applied to build reservoir geological model for predicting the gas production and determine the optimized permeability enhanced area (PEA). The unconventional fracturing model (UFM) was used to optimize the fluid volume and fracturing scale. And the final fracturing plan was made based on the optimized conclusions. This optimization workflow and the good result provide reliable technique support for the development of the shale gas reservoir in this area. Key Words: Shale gas, PEA, Fracture propagation model, UFM, Production predicting model, Optimization


China Geology ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 193-194
Author(s):  
Xi-jie Chen ◽  
Li-Qiong Jia

2013 ◽  
Vol 734-737 ◽  
pp. 1253-1256 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pu Dong ◽  
Si You Wang

Recently,accelerating shale gas development and utilization is of great significance to safeguard the security of energy supply. As a new energy resource, shale gas has great development prospects, but to develop and to make use of this resource is quite difficult and has high risks due to the exploitation technology, environmental protection, the market, and so forth. It can help the shale gas companies get better development by focusing on the prospective risks that they may face and looking for the solutions. This paper analyzes the various risks that the shale gas development companies may face and puts forward the measurements to deal with these risks.


Author(s):  
Casey Quinn ◽  
Daniel Zimmerle ◽  
Daniel B. Olsen

Many natural gas well sites produce significant quantities of oil as a byproduct of gas production. Producers use standard gas separation techniques to recover gas dissolved in the oil, but additional light hydrocarbons are released during final depressurization and storage of the oil at atmospheric pressure. Gas produced in oil storage is often contaminated with air, cannot be introduced into midstream pipelines, and is flared at the well site. The flare gas represents a significant energy resource that could be utilized to improve overall site efficiency. This work documents a comprehensive energy analysis performed on a non-electrified site in Colorado. Data collection and simulations demonstrated that energy available in flare gas is sufficient to support the major energy loads at the well site. However, due to low flare gas pressures, high and variable air contamination, and temporal misalignment between the gas availability and energy needs, on-site utilization requires modified engine technology and application of energy buffering. Simulation results are presented, along with conceptual designs for well site modifications.


Author(s):  
Eswaran Padmanabhan ◽  
Ranjith Pathegama Gamage ◽  
Evelynlove Fosuduah

Shale gas has been considered as an unconventional resource to date due to economics and technical challenges encountered. Under current circumstances, shale gas has and is receiving increasing attention as it is being quickly known as a viable energy resource. Countries who have been out of the energy game so far have an opportunity to be key players in the same industry. Current enhancement in technology and improved methods for fracking have proven that recovering shale gas is a viable and economically sound option in this century.


Geofluids ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
Fei Wang ◽  
Yonghao Zhang ◽  
Xin Li ◽  
Xue Han

Shale gas is an important unconventional energy resource that needs large-scale fracturing to form industrial deliverability. The evaluation of reservoir fracability plays a key role in the optimization of the sweet spot, the design of multistage fracturing, and the prediction of economic benefit. Based on volumetric fracturing, the study proceeded from the fracture complexity of the fractured core, and the bursting pressure experiment technology using the constant strain rate method was established. After the core has fractured, the fracture morphology was extracted and the fracture parameters including fracture area ratio and fracture declination dispersion were calculated to construct the fracture complexity of the pressed core. Combined with the core strength, the fracability index of the core was determined to evaluate the reservoir fracability. This method can represent not only the fracturing effect but also the fracturing difficulty. Compared with the monitoring data of hydrofracture-induced microseism of the sample well, the core fracturing index was found to be in good agreement with the actual fracturing effect. This method is more reasonable than the traditional brittleness index method and rock mechanics parameter method.


2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jamal A. Madi ◽  
Elhadi M. Belhadj

Abstract Oman's petroleum systems are related to four known source rocks: the Precambrian-Lower Cambrian Huqf, the Lower Silurian Sahmah, the Late Jurassic Shuaiba-Tuwaiq and the Cretaceous Natih. The Huqf and the Natih have sourced almost all the discovered fields in the country. This study examines the shale-gas and shale-oil potential of the Lower Silurian Sahmah in the Omani side of the Rub al Khali basin along the Saudi border. The prospective area exceeds 12,000 square miles (31,300 km2). The Silurian hot shale at the base of the Sahmah shale is equivalent to the known world-class source rock, widespread throughout North Africa (Tannezouft) and the Arabian Peninsula (Sahmah/Qusaiba). Both thickness and thermal maturities increase northward toward Saudi Arabia, with an apparent depocentre extending southward into Oman Block 36 where the hot shale is up to 55 m thick and reached 1.4% vitrinite reflectance (in Burkanah-1 and ATA-1 wells). The present-day measured TOC and estimated from log signatures range from 0.8 to 9%. 1D thermal modeling and burial history of the Sahmah source rock in some wells indicate that, depending on the used kinetics, hydrocarbon generation/expulsion began from the Early Jurassic (ca 160 M.a.b.p) to Cretaceous. Shale oil/gas resource density estimates, particularly in countries and plays outside North America remain highly uncertain, due to the lack of geochemical data, the lack of history of shale oil/gas production, and the valuation method undertaken. Based on available geological and geochemical data, we applied both Jarvie (2007) and Talukdar (2010) methods for the resource estimation of: (1) the amount of hydrocarbon generated and expelled into conventional reservoirs and (2) the amount of hydrocarbon retained within the Silurian hot shale. Preliminary results show that the hydrocarbon potential is distributed equally between wet natural gas and oil within an area of 11,000 square mile. The Silurian Sahmah shale has generated and expelled (and/or partly lost) about 116.8 billion of oil and 275.6 TCF of gas. Likewise, our estimates indicate that 56 billion of oil and 273.4 TCF of gas are potentially retained within the Sahmah source rock, making this interval a future unconventional resource play. The average calculated retained oil and gas yields are estimated to be 6 MMbbl/mi2 (or 117 bbl oil/ac-ft) and 25.3 bcf/mi2 (or 403 mcf gas/ac-ft) respectively. To better compare our estimates with Advanced Resources International (EIA/ARI) studies on several Silurian shale plays, we also carried out estimates based on the volumetric method. The total oil in-place is 50.2 billion barrels, while the total gas in-place is 107.6 TCF. The average oil and gas yield is respectively 7 MMbbl/mi2 and 15.5 bcf/mi2. Our findings, in term of oil and gas concentration, are in line or often smaller than all the shale oil/gas plays assessed by EIA/ARI and others.


Daedalus ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 141 (2) ◽  
pp. 72-80 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel P. Schrag

Shale gas is a new energy resource that has shifted the dominant paradigm on U.S. hydrocarbon resources. Some have argued that shale gas will play an important role in reducing greenhouse gas emissions by displacing coal used for electricity, serving as a moderate-carbon “bridge fuel.” Others have questioned whether methane emissions from shale gas extraction lead to higher greenhouse gas emissions overall. I argue that the main impact of shale gas on climate change is neither the reduced emissions from fuel substitution nor the greenhouse gas footprint of natural gas itself, but rather the competition between abundant, low-cost gas and low-carbon technologies, including renewables and carbon capture and storage. This might be remedied if the gas industry joins forces with environmental groups, providing a counterbalance to the coal lobby, and ultimately eliminating the conventional use of coal in the United States.


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