Method for predicting economic peak yield for a single well of coalbed methane

2008 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
pp. 521-526 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shen YANG ◽  
Yong-shang KANG ◽  
Qun ZHAO ◽  
Hong-yan WANG ◽  
Jing-ming LI
Keyword(s):  
2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-13
Author(s):  
Jinkuang Huang ◽  
Shenggui Liu ◽  
Songlei Tang ◽  
Shixiong Shi ◽  
Chao Wang

Coalbed methane (CBM) has been exploited in the deep area of the coal reservoir (>1000 m). The production of CBM vertical wells is low because of the high in situ stress, large buried depth, and low permeability of the coal reservoir. In this paper, efficient and advanced CBM development technology has been applied in the Libi Block of the Qinshui Basin. According to the characteristics of the coal reservoir in the Libi Block, the coiled tubing fracturing technology has been implemented in four cluster horizontal wells. Staged fracturing of horizontal wells can link more natural fracture networks. It could also expand the pressure drop range and control area of the single well. This fracturing technology has achieved good economic results in the Libi Block, with the maximum production of a single horizontal well being 25313 m3/d and the average single well production having increased by more than 60% from 5000 m3/d to 8000 m3/d. Based on the data regarding the bottom hole pressure, water production, and gas production, the production curves of four wells, namely, Z5P-01L, Z5P-02L, Z5P-03L, and Z5P-04L, were investigated. Furthermore, a production system with slow and stable depressurization was obtained. The bottom hole pressure drops too fast, which results in decreasing permeability and productivity. In this work, a special jet pump and an intelligent remote production control system for the CBM wells were developed; hence, a CBM production technology suitable for the Libi Block was established. The maximum release for the CBM well productivity was obtained, thus providing theoretical and technical support for CBM development with geological and engineering challenges.


2007 ◽  
Vol 10 (03) ◽  
pp. 312-331 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher R. Clarkson ◽  
R. Marc Bustin ◽  
John P. Seidle

Summary Coalbed-methane (CBM) reservoirs commonly exhibit two-phase-flow (gas plus water) characteristics; however, commercial CBM production is possible from single-phase (gas) coal reservoirs, as demonstrated by the recent development of the Horseshoe Canyon coals of western Canada. Commercial single-phase CBM production also occurs in some areas of the low-productivity Fruitland Coal, south-southwest of the high-productivity Fruitland Coal Fairway in the San Juan basin, and in other CBM-producing basins of the continental United States. Production data of single-phase coal reservoirs may be analyzed with techniques commonly applied to conventional reservoirs. Complicating application, however, is the unique nature of CBM reservoirs; coal gas-storage and -transport mechanisms differ substantially from conventional reservoirs. Single-phase CBM reservoirs may also display complex reservoir behavior such as multilayer characteristics, dual-porosity effects, and permeability anisotropy. The current work illustrates how single-well production-data-analysis (PDA) techniques, such as type curve, flowing material balance (FMB), and pressure-transient (PT) analysis, may be altered to analyze single-phase CBM wells. Examples of how reservoir inputs to the PDA techniques and subsequent calculations are modified to account for CBM-reservoir behavior are given. This paper demonstrates, by simulated and field examples, that reasonable reservoir and stimulation estimates can be obtained from PDA of CBM reservoirs only if appropriate reservoir inputs (i.e., desorption compressibility, fracture porosity) are used in the analysis. As the field examples demonstrate, type-curve, FMB, and PT analysis methods for PDA are not used in isolation for reservoir-property estimation, but rather as a starting point for single-well and multiwell reservoir simulation, which is then used to history match and forecast CBM-well production (e.g., for reserves assignment). CBM reservoirs have the potential for permeability anisotropy because of their naturally fractured nature, which may complicate PDA. To study the effects of permeability anisotropy upon production, a 2D, single-phase, numerical CBM-reservoir simulator was constructed to simulate single-well production assuming various permeability-anisotropy ratios. Only large permeability ratios (>16:1) appear to have a significant effect upon single-well production characteristics. Multilayer reservoir characteristics may also be observed with CBM reservoirs because of vertical heterogeneity, or in cases where the coals are commingled with conventional (sandstone) reservoirs. In these cases, the type-curve, FMB, and PT analysis techniques are difficult to apply with confidence. Methods and tools for analyzing multilayer CBM (plus sand) reservoirs are presented. Using simulated and field examples, it is demonstrated that unique reservoir properties may be assigned to individual layers from commingled (multilayer) production in the simple two-layer case. Introduction Commercial single-phase (gas) CBM production has been demonstrated recently in the Horseshoe Canyon coals of western Canada (Bastian et al. 2005) and previously in various basins in the US; there is currently a need for advanced PDA techniques to assist with evaluation of these reservoirs. Over the past several decades, significant advances have been made in PDA of conventional oil and gas reservoirs [select references include Fetkovich (1980), Fetkovich et al. (1987), Carter (1985), Fraim and Wattenbarger (1987), Blasingame et al. (1989, 1991), Palacio and Blasingame (1993), Fetkovich et al. (1996), Agarwal et al. (1999), and Mattar and Anderson (2003)]. These modern methods have greatly enhanced the engineers' ability to obtain quantitative information about reservoir properties and stimulation/damage from data that are gathered routinely during the producing life of a well, such as production data and, in some instances, flowing pressure information. The information that may be obtained from detailed PDA includes oil or gas in place (GIP), permeability-thickness product (kh), and skin (s), and this can be used to supplement information obtained from other sources such as PT analysis, material balance, and reservoir simulation.


2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alastair Ong ◽  
Laurent Alessio ◽  
Yassine Ben Salah ◽  
Christopher Connell ◽  
Saeed Majidaie ◽  
...  

Geofluids ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-15
Author(s):  
Xiaoji Shang ◽  
Zhizhen Zhang ◽  
Yixin Niu ◽  
Xiao Yang ◽  
Feng Gao

Multiseam coalbed methane (CBM) exploitation can not only reduce single-well investment but also increase the length of service of the well and significantly enhance the CBM economic recovery of the entire basin. To compare with and further to guide the actual project of CBM production, this study proposed a conceptual gas-water two-phase separate flow model for single coal seam considering the solubility of gas. This mathematical model was solved analytically by separation of variables and verified through history matching of the production data from the No. 3 seam of 1# test well of Jincheng and then applied to investigate the effect of gas solubility on the gas pressure. Furthermore, based on the coupled two-phase separate flow model of single seam, another two-phase separate flow model for the development of multicoal seam development was established. Similarly, the analytical solution of this model for multicoal seam layers was matched with the in situ data of TS-1 well of Liupanshui coal mine. It is found that the height difference and pressure difference between the two seams play key roles in the multiseam CBM development comprehensively.


2019 ◽  
Vol 23 (5 Part A) ◽  
pp. 2741-2748
Author(s):  
Xiao Pu ◽  
Dali Guo ◽  
Yunxiang Zhao

In most thermal coalbed methane production practices, the average single well production is low and the economic benefit is low. In order to improve the production of thermal coalbed methane, this paper presents a dual diagnosis method for fracture morphology of thermal coalbed methane reservoir to improve hydraulic fracturing effect. The study is carried out as follows: firstly, improved log-log curve method to adapt to coal seam fracturing construction, secondly, establish the inclined stress calculation model of coal seam to obtain the critical depth value, and finally, combine the improved log-log method and critical depth method to form a dual diagnosis approach. Take Baiyang River in Xinjiang as an example, obtain the traffic, rock mechanics and other parameters suitable for the Baiyang River block, the fracture morphology is verified by fracturing data. The experimental results show that the approach can diagnose fracture morphology accurately. <br><br><font color="red"><b> This article has been retracted. Link to the retraction <u><a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/TSCI191209454E">10.2298/TSCI191209454E</a><u></b></font>


Author(s):  
Yinqing Zuo ◽  
Qianhua Xiao ◽  
Zhiyuan Wang ◽  
Xiuqin Lu ◽  
Yang Song ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 361-363 ◽  
pp. 848-852
Author(s):  
Jian Yun ◽  
Feng Yin Xu ◽  
Wen Ting Zeng ◽  
Ning Ning Zhong ◽  
Jia Lin Wang

"Clean technology and low carbon" is becoming a new trend of energy development worldwide. To speed up Coalbed Methane (CBM) exploration and development is of significant importance to reduce coal mine gas accidents, to protect atmospheric environment and to improve energy structure. Greater efforts have been exerted to CBM development, and three major CBM enterprises emerged. Qinnan, Lu’an and Sanjiao cooperation modes are developed to promote the coordinated development of gas extraction and coal mining. Many exploration and development technologies, tailored for various rank coal methane and for different geological conditions, are developed. Exploring technology, in CBM buried deeper than 800m and in low-rank coal bed methane development, has achieved substantial breakthrough. Moreover, Qinnan, Hancheng, Daning-jixian and Baode four favorable blocks are all adjacent to the major existing pipelines. China is rich in CBM resources, with great potentials and promising prospects, however, two factors of technology and management are still constraining the development of China’s CBM. Based on the analysis of the key factors, four following suggestions are proposed: to adjust strategies based on the resource distribution, to further coordinate governmental policies and entrepreneur performance, to strive to make technological breakthroughs in increasing single well yield and in promoting integrated economic efficiency, to establish a unified information platform to avoid disorderly competition and repeated investment.


2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alastair Ong ◽  
Laurent Alessio ◽  
Yassine Ben Salah ◽  
Christopher Connell ◽  
Saeed Majidaie ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 318 ◽  
pp. 541-546
Author(s):  
Xiang Hao Wang ◽  
Yan Bin Wang ◽  
Sha Sha Gao ◽  
Jia Hui Cheng ◽  
Hui Jie Xu ◽  
...  

Based on the data of CBM vertical well’s exploration and development in the south block of Shizhuang. This paper applies the method of comparison and adopts the software Visual Modflow4.2. The software simulated the 8th well whose original permeability and modified permeability is both poor and the groups of wells when draining for the rule of hydrostatic transmission. Results show that the relationship between original permeability and modified permeability determine the track of hydraulic transmission. When single well is draining, the hydraulic transmission can be seen as several concentric circles whose center is wellbore, but when the groups of wells are draining, regularity is the change of water level is not obvious because of the heterogeneity of coal reservoir. After draining for a long time, the water level difference between drained area and not drained area has appeared. The potential energy of underground water has a trend that overall downward, but did not form effective interference between the wells. Therefore, the original permeability and modified permeability become the key factor whether a region has high yield or not.


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