scholarly journals Two-Stage Geothermal Well Clustering for Oil-to-Water Conversion on Mature Oil Fields

Geosciences ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (11) ◽  
pp. 470
Author(s):  
Josipa Hranić ◽  
Sara Raos ◽  
Eric Leoutre ◽  
Ivan Rajšl

There are numerous oil fields that are approaching the end of their lifetime and that have great geothermal potential considering temperature and water cut. On the other hand, the oil industry is facing challenges due to increasingly stringent environmental regulations. An example of this is the case of France where oil extraction will be forbidden starting from the year 2035. Therefore, some oil companies are considering switching from the oil business to investing in geothermal projects conducted on existing oil wells. The proposed methodology and developed conversions present the evaluation of existing geothermal potentials for each oil field in terms of water temperature and flow rate. An additional important aspect is also the spatial distribution of existing oil wells related to the specific oil field. This paper proposes a two-stage clustering approach for grouping similar wells in terms of their temperature properties. Once grouped on a temperature basis, these clusters should be clustered once more with respect to their spatial arrangement in order to optimize the location of production facilities. The outputs regarding production quantities and economic and environmental aspects will provide insight into the optimal scenario for oil-to-water conversion. The scenarios differ in terms of produced energy and technology used. A case study has been developed where the comparison of overall fields and clustered fields is shown, together with the formed scenarios that can further determine the possible conversion of petroleum assets to a geothermal assets.

2018 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 542
Author(s):  
Abdeli D. ZHUMADILULI ◽  
Irina V. PANFILOV ◽  
Jamilyam A. ISMAILOVA

Most of oil companies today are focused on increasing the recovery factor from their oil fields. New drilling and well technologies as well as last advances in reservoir management, monitoring and Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR) methods are thought to play a major role to meet the future demand of energy. Current decline in discovery of new oilfields intensified by a decline in oil prices make industrial companies to work on development of new efficient and economic techniques that will allow better production at lower cost. One such technology developed at Kazakh National Research University is presented in this paper. The latter propose the use of specific perforated holes on tubing liners in order to control the rate of water injection into variably permeable layers and to prevent non-uniform displacement of oil. The study was initially conducted on experimental facility that proved a positive correlation between the perforation density and water flow rates. Then the simulation test was performed using the data from several Kazakhstani oil fields. The results show an increase of sweep efficiency as well as a decrease in water-cut compared to traditional well case.


2012 ◽  
Vol 594-597 ◽  
pp. 2475-2480
Author(s):  
Gui Xue Qi ◽  
Hai Xia Zhang ◽  
Mian Long ◽  
Jun Qin ◽  
Ji Cheng Zhang

Nowadays, in China nearly all the produced oil-fields have already entered the period of high water cut, and the six oil-fields of Daqing and Shengli oil-field etc. have exceeded eighty percent water cut. Beierdong Block has produced for nearly fifty years, and now it has entered into the descending output stage and its water cut has reached more than ninety percent. With oil field infill gradually in Beierdong Block, each series of well network production target getting worse gradually, intersecting with old well network stratigraphic position, and polymer flooding well network use part of water driving old well, making the contradictory of layer well network concatenate and dynamic regulation intensely. Especially as the block of infill adjustment proceeded earliest, acquired better developed effect at the beginning of regulation, but with the deep development of the field, after the phase of extra high water cut, exposed gradually some problems such as the perforating interval is too long, the contradiction of interlamination is obvious, the high water cut of multilayer is serious, bringing huge difficulty to dynamic analysis regulation.Basing on layer recombination and using the reservoir simulation method, the paper studied the distribution of remaining oil, forecast variation regular pattern of development indexes. By contrasting these indexes, the paper estimates the effect of layer recombination. It has important significance for the next period’s development.


2006 ◽  
Vol 46 (1) ◽  
pp. 35
Author(s):  
J.E. Skinner ◽  
M.J. Altmann ◽  
T.H. Wadham

The Kenmore oil field in the Eromanga Basin of southwest Queensland was discovered in 1985. Since then, a further 32 wells have been drilled and more than 12.5 MMSTB of oil has been produced from the Birkhead Formation/Hutton Sandstone. Oil production over the last year has averaged 1,220 barrels per day totalling some 0.45 million stock tank barrels (MMSTB)Oil reserves in Kenmore were originally estimated at 2.2 MMSTB following the Kenmore–1 discovery well drilled in 1985. In the following 20 years, infill drilling, a 3D seismic survey, various reservoir studies and better -than-expected recovery efficiency, have steadily increased the ultimate recoverable reserves to the current estimate of 14.3 MMSTB.The growth of reserves at Kenmore is primarily attributed to better drainage of the complex reservoir framework within the lower Birkhead Formation resulting from recognition of the variable lateral connectivity of the reservoir. Due to the initial estimate of the ultimate field reserves being significantly smaller than now recognised and the resultant conservative drilling program, the economic value of the field was not maximised. This experience has implications for the ongoing development of the Kenmore field and suggests that other Birkhead/Hutton oil fields should be developed more aggressively to prevent history repeating itself.


2021 ◽  
pp. 61-72
Author(s):  
I. G. Sabanina ◽  
T. V. Semenova ◽  
Yu. Ya. Bolshakov ◽  
S. V. Vorobjeva

Currently, most of the oil fields in the West Siberian oil and gas province are in the final stage of development. There is water-cut in production, a decrease in oil production, and the structure of residual reserves deteriorates. The search and application of the most successful scientific methods and technologies for improving oil recovery in the development of fields is quite an urgent task.It should be taken into account that hydrophobic reservoirs are common in the oil fields of Western Siberia, and when applying the method of reservoir flooding, this fact should be taken into account and a more detailed approach should be taken to the study of capillary forces to prevent flooding of productive objects. Despite the good knowledge of the West Siberian megabasin, some fundamental issues of its structure and oil and gas potential remain debatable.The article proposes methods for improving oil recovery of the BS10 formation of the Ust-Balykskoye oil field based on the study of capillary pressures in productive reservoir formations, and provides recommendations for the placement of injection wells. The study of the capillary properties of reservoir rocks will significantly improve the efficiency of exploration and field operations in oil fields.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (5) ◽  
pp. 2233-2257
Author(s):  
Perekaboere Ivy Sagbana ◽  
Ahmad Sami Abushaikha

AbstractThe production of excess water during oil recovery creates not only a major technical problem but also an environmental and cost impact. This increasing problem has forced oil companies to reconsider methods that promote an increase in oil recovery and a decrease in water production. Many techniques have been applied over the years to reduce water cut, with the application of chemicals being one of them. Chemicals such as polymer gels have been widely and successfully implemented in several oil fields for conformance control. In recent years, the application of foam and emulsions for enhanced oil recovery projects has been investigated and implemented in oil fields, but studies have shown that they can equally act as conformance control agents with very promising results. In this paper, we present a comprehensive review of the application of polymer gel, foam and emulsion for conformance control. Various aspects of these chemical-based conformance control methods such as the mechanisms, properties, applications, experimental and numerical studies and the parameters that affect the successful field application of these methods have been discussed in this paper. Including the recent advances in chemical-based conformance control agents has also been highlighted in this paper.


2021 ◽  
Vol 73 (04) ◽  
pp. 49-50
Author(s):  
Chris Carpenter

This article, written by JPT Technology Editor Chris Carpenter, contains highlights of paper OTC 30277, “Twelve-Year Field Applications of Offshore Heavy Oil Polymerflooding From Continuous Injection to Alternating Injection of Polymer and Water,” by Guangming Pan, Lei Zhang, and Jianting Huang, CNOOC, et al., prepared for the 2020 Offshore Technology Conference Asia, originally scheduled to be held in Kuala Lumpur, 2-6 November. The paper has not been peer reviewed. Copyright 2020 Offshore Technology Conference. Reproduced by permission. Polymerflooding has been considered a suitable method for reservoirs with viscosities up to 150 mPa·s. The authors of the complete paper verify that alternating injection of polymer and water in the Bohai Bay of China proved effective and economical for heavy oil fields, even offshore. This polymerflooding pilot of initially continuous, and then alternating, injection can provide a useful technical reference for similar reservoirs. Introduction Heavy oil reserves are abundant in the Bohai oil field of China. The development of the field has proved that the field with lower viscosity (less than 350 mPa·s) can be developed effectively by water-flooding, while the unconventional heavy oil reservoir with high viscosity has not formed a mature development mode. To better use interwell reserves, a pilot polymerflooding test has been conducted in the NN field since 2008. The cumulative production of nine wells in the surrounding area reached 10.80×104 m3, which confirmed that polymer fluid injection had a good displacement effect on unconventional high-viscosity crude oil. However, with the extension of continuous injection time, the pilot test area faced various problems. In order to explore the applicability of polymerflooding technology used in offshore unconventional heavy oil fields, the polymer-injection mode was studied on the basis of laboratory experimental data and field practice, and the polymer/water alternating injection mode was analyzed. Experimental Continuous Polymerflooding. Experimental Equipment and Materials. The experimental device is composed of a driving system, an experimental model, a pressure-measurement system, a produced-liquid-collection system, and a temperature-control system. According to the distribution of reservoir physical properties in the NN field, a parallel double-tube displacement experiment with a permeability ratio of 5 was designed. The experimental cores are artificial, with a tube length of 30 cm and an inner diameter of 2.54 cm. The low-permeability tube has 1624×10-3 µm2 permeability, and the high-permeability tube has 8488×10-3 µm2 permeability. The experimental temperature is 55°C, which is consistent with the formation temperature of the NN field. The polymer is partially hydrolyzed polyacrylamide. Experimental Procedure. The experimental process includes vacuum pumping, saturating formation water, obtaining core pore volume, saturating simulated oil, calculating oil saturation water drive to a specified water cut, continuously injecting polymer solution, and measuring data. The experimental injection rate is 0.2 mL/min, and the multiple of injected pore volumes (PV) is 0.6 PV. The NN field has weak edge water, and the water cut of the well group was 60 to 90% when polymerflooding was performed. Therefore, the design scheme mainly includes waterflooding and polymerflooding stages. The polymer- injection concentration was 3000 mg/L, and the injection mode is continuous, consistent with the field test.


Author(s):  
Renato F. Mendes ◽  
Kleber J. A. Porto Silva ◽  
Luiz Fernando S. Oliveira

This paper describes an analysis of the transportation reliability and economic risk associated with potential accidents during the lifetime of a brand new enterprise. The methodology was applied during the technical-financial assessment of offshore and onshore transportation from oil fields to refineries. It considered operations involving the potential for environment damage and business interruption. The case study considered two major configurations: Maritime+Pipelines: combining FPSOs (Floating Production, Storage and Offloading), tankers, terminals, and onshore pipelines; and Pure Pipelines: SSs (Semi-submersibles) and offshore and onshore pipeline system conveying oil to refineries. Each installation/activity with potential to generate an accident was represented by one block on the diagram, in the reliability study. The consequences to the transportation enterprise were defined based on economic impact. It was necessary to mine information on the environmental costs of past accidents within the company, as well as worldwide. Business interruption was considered for the transportation project and also for the refineries connected in the process. The risk for each route configuration from oil field to refinery was developed by plotting the frequency and consequence data in a spreadsheet for each activity along the transportation route. As a result we developed a comparative risk analysis table to support a major financial assessment. Beyond the traditional process of assessing projects in terms of investment and return, PETROBRAS is now considering other aspects, such as potential accidents that may play a role in assessing financial feasibility.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abdullah Al Qahtani ◽  
Sultan Al-Aklubi ◽  
Abdel BenAmara ◽  
Stephen Faux

Abstract Gas lift is becoming a big consideration in most of oil field as an economic, sustainable means of artificially lifting weak/dead oil wells. This is especially considered in high volume wells. Gas lift is employed, by injecting gas into the well tubing through gas lift valves, to reduce the hydrostatic pressure of the produced fluid column in oil wells, leading to a lower flowing bottom-hole pressure. The increased pressure differential induced across the sand face from the in situ reservoir pressure, assists in lifting the produced fluid to the surface. Optimizing the level of injected gas is important in maximizing the production, and hence the financial performance of the well. The challenge for most oil and gas producers is that they do not effectively maximize production with the most efficient use of gas lift resources. The challenge is that there is a lack of accurate and timely production data from the well tests. The optimal inject rate for a well is based on a ratio of injected gas rate to the liquid production rate. Under injecting the gas decreases the well production rate. The objective of optimization in gas-lifted wells is to achieve optimal production rate with minimal gas injection volume to spare gas for other wells, when the compression capacity is limited. Optimally allocated injection gas helps reduce unnecessary strain on your facility and maximize performance, this in turn enhances the life of production assets significantly. This paper presents a case study from Khafji Joint Operation fields, utilizing the intelligent digital gas lift valve to optimize the design and performance of the gas lift wells. The case study demonstrates the value proposition by using the digital intelligent gas lift system to maximize well performance whilst reducing injected gas, in addition to acquired real-time data that help assess the process. That optimization was achieved on well level by optimizing the well parameters such as point of injection, injection rate, and injection pressure. All these aspects have been investigated and presented in this study by using field data and flow simulations. Results showed the potential added value of the system.


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