scholarly journals Development of gas production type curves for horizontal wells in coalbed methane reservoirs

2006 ◽  
Author(s):  
Allen Ekahnzok Nfonsam
2020 ◽  
Vol 38 (5) ◽  
pp. 1387-1408
Author(s):  
Yang Chen ◽  
Dameng Liu ◽  
Yidong Cai ◽  
Jingjie Yao

Hydraulic fracturing has been widely used in low permeability coalbed methane reservoirs to enhance gas production. To better evaluate the hydraulic fracturing curve and its effect on gas productivity, geological and engineering data of 265 development coalbed methane wells and 14 appraisal coalbed methane wells in the Zhengzhuang block were investigated. Based on the regional geologic research and statistical analysis, the microseismic monitoring results, in-situ stress parameters, and gas productivity were synthetically evaluated. The results show that hydraulic fracturing curves can be divided into four types (descending type, stable type, wavy type, and ascending type) according to the fracturing pressure and fracture morphology, and the distributions of different type curves have direct relationship with geological structure. The vertical in-situ stress is greater than the closure stress in the Zhengzhuang block, but there is anomaly in the aggregation areas of the wavy and ascending fracturing curves, which is the main reason for the development of multi-directional propagated fractures. The fracture azimuth is consistent with the regional maximum principle in-situ stress direction (NE–NEE direction). Furthermore, the 265 fracturing curves indicate that the coalbed methane wells owned descending, and stable-type fracturing curves possibly have better fracturing effect considering the propagation pressure gradient (FP) and instantaneous shut-in pressure (PISI). Two fracturing-productivity patterns are summarized according to 61 continuous production wells with different fracturing type and their plane distribution, which indicates that the fracturing effect of different fracturing curve follows the pattern: descending type > stable type > wavy type > ascending type.


2005 ◽  
Vol 127 (3) ◽  
pp. 248-256 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hossein Jahediesfanjani ◽  
Faruk Civan

Coalbed methane (CBM) reservoirs are characterized as naturally fractured, dual porosity, low permeability, and water saturated gas reservoirs. Initially, the gas, water, and coal are at thermodynamic equilibrium under prevailing reservoir conditions. Dewatering is essential to promote gas production. This can be accomplished by suitable completion and stimulation techniques. This paper investigates the efficiency and performance of the openhole cavity, hydraulic fractures, frack and packs, and horizontal wells as potential completion methods which may reduce formation damage and increase the productivity in coalbed methane reservoirs. Considering the dual porosity nature of CBM reservoirs, numerical simulations have been carried out to determine the formation damage tolerance of each completion and stimulation approach. A new comparison parameter, named as the normalized productivity index Jnp(t) is defined as the ratio of the productivity index of a stimulated well to that of a nondamaged vertical well as a function of time. Typical scenarios have been considered to evaluate the CBM properties, including reservoir heterogeneity, anisotropy, and formation damage, for their effects on Jnp(t) over the production time. The results for each stimulation technique show that the value of Jnp(t) declines over the time of production with a rate which depends upon the applied technique and the prevailing reservoir conditions. The results also show that horizontal wells have the best performance if drilled orthogonal to the butt cleats. Long horizontal fractures improve reservoir productivity more than short vertical ones. Open-hole cavity completions outperform vertical fractures if the fracture conductivity is reduced by any damage process. When vertical permeability is much lower than horizontal permeability, production of vertical wells will improve while productivity of horizontal wells will decrease. Finally, pressure distribution of the reservoir under each scenario is strongly dependent upon the reservoir characteristics, including the hydraulic diffusivity of methane, and the porosity and permeability distributions in the reservoir.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
Cheng-yong Li ◽  
Jun Zhou ◽  
Xiang-yi Yi ◽  
Yi Luo ◽  
Ping-zhi Gong

The bottom-hole pressure response which can reflect the gas flow characteristics is important to study. A mathematical model for description of gas from porous coalbed methane (CBM) reservoirs with complex boundary conditions flowing into horizontal wells has been developed. Meanwhile, basic solution of boundary elements has been acquired by combination of Lord Kelvin point source solution, the integral of Bessel function, and Poisson superimpose formula for CBM horizontal wells with complex boundary conditions. Using this model, type curves of dimensionless pressure and pressure derivative are obtained, and flow characteristics of horizontal wells in complex boundary reservoirs and relevant factors are accordingly analyzed.


2008 ◽  
Vol 11 (02) ◽  
pp. 311-325 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher R. Clarkson ◽  
Colin L. Jordan ◽  
Roger R. Gierhart ◽  
John P. Seidle

Summary Recent advances in production data analysis (PDA) techniques have greatly assisted engineers in extracting meaningful reservoir and stimulation information from well-production and flowing-pressure data. Application of these techniques to coalbed-methane (CBM) reservoirs requires the unique coal storage and transport properties to be accounted for. In recent work, the authors [ex. Clarkson et al. (2007a) and Jordan et al. (2006)] and others [ex. Gerami et al. (2007)] have demonstrated how new techniques such as the flowing material balance (FMB) and production type curves may be adapted to account for CBM storage mechanisms (i.e., adsorption), but, to date, the focus has been on relatively simple CBM reservoir behavior such as single-phase (gas) reservoirs with static effective permeability. The major contribution of the current work is the adaptation of modern PDA techniques (by use of modified material balance time/pseudotime and pseudopressure definitions) to analyze producing wells completed in CBM reservoirs exhibiting several possible flow characteristics: single-phase flow of gas in dry CBM reservoirs, single-phase flow of water (in undersaturated reservoirs), and two-phase (gas and water) flow (in saturated reservoirs). The latter reservoir type commonly exhibits effective permeability changes during depletion (because of relative and/or absolute permeability changes) and changing gas composition caused by relative adsorption effects, both of which have been accounted for in the current work. Specifically, the FMB technique is modified to include several complex CBM reservoir characteristics, and production type curves are applied to some scenarios. Although dry-CBM-well analysis was covered previously [ex. Clarkson et al. (2007a)], we will also discuss FMB development in these reservoirs for completeness. Several synthetic and field examples are given to demonstrate how FMB, type-curve analysis, and analytical simulation can be used in parallel to provide a particularly useful data-analysis toolset and workflow. These techniques were used successfully to extract quantitative reservoir information from single- and two-phase CBM-simulated and field-production pressure data. The PDA techniques developed for two-phase CBM require further evaluation, however.


Author(s):  
P. Noverri

Delta Mahakam is a giant hydrocarbon block which is comprised two oil fields and five gas fields. The giant block has been considered mature after production for more than 40 years. More than 2,000 wells have been drilled to optimize hydrocarbon recovery. From those wells, a huge amount of production data is available and documented in a well-structured manner. Gaining insight from this data is highly beneficial to understand fields behavior and their characteristics. The fields production characterization is analyzed with Production Type-Curve method. In this case, type curves were generated from production data ratio such as CGR, WGR and GOR to field recovery factor. Type curve is considered as a simple approach to find patterns and capture a helicopter view from a huge volume of production data. Utilization of business intelligence enables efficient data gathering from different data sources, data preparation and data visualization through dashboards. Each dashboard provides a different perspective which consists of field view, zone view, sector view and POD view. Dashboards allow users to perform comprehensive analysis in describing production behavior. Production type-curve analysis through dashboards show that fields in the Mahakam Delta can be grouped based on their production behavior and effectively provide global field understanding Discovery of production key information from proposed methods can be used as reference for prospective and existing fields development in the Mahakam Delta. This paper demonstrates an example of production type-curve as a simple yet efficient method in characterizing field production behaviors which is realized by a Business Intelligent application


Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 644 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xinlu Yan ◽  
Songhang Zhang ◽  
Shuheng Tang ◽  
Zhongcheng Li ◽  
Yongxiang Yi ◽  
...  

Due to the unique adsorption and desorption characteristics of coal, coal reservoir permeability changes dynamically during coalbed methane (CBM) development. Coal reservoirs can be classified using a permeability dynamic characterization in different production stages. In the single-phase water flow stage, four demarcating pressures are defined based on the damage from the effective stress on reservoir permeability. Coal reservoirs are classified into vulnerable, alleviative, and invulnerable reservoirs. In the gas desorption stage, two demarcating pressures are used to quantitatively characterize the recovery properties of permeability based on the recovery effect of the matrix shrinkage on permeability, namely the rebound pressure (the pressure corresponding to the lowest permeability) and recovery pressure (the pressure when permeability returns to initial permeability). Coal reservoirs are further classified into recoverable and unrecoverable reservoirs. The physical properties and influencing factors of these demarcating pressures are analyzed. Twenty-six wells from the Shizhuangnan Block in the southern Qinshui Basin of China were examined as a case study, showing that there is a significant correspondence between coal reservoir types and CBM well gas production. This study is helpful for identifying geological conditions of coal reservoirs as well as the productivity potential of CBM wells.


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