Hydraulic Fracturing Technology in Oil and Gas Development

2014 ◽  
Vol 962-965 ◽  
pp. 560-563
Author(s):  
Bo Cai ◽  
Yun Hong Ding ◽  
Hua Shen ◽  
Zhou Qi Cui ◽  
Chun Ming He

Fracturing as a method to stimulate shallow, hard rock oil wells dates back to the 1860s. The first hydraulic fracturing technology was applied in the US states of Pennsylvania, New York, Kentucky in 1947. Hydraulic fracture was formed by pumping the fracturing fluid into the wellbore at a sufficient rate to increase downhole pressure to exceed that of the pressure gradient of the rock. In this paper, a few key techniques including hydraulic fracturing for the development of oil and gas resources were introduced. It has become a common technique to enhance the production of low-permeability formations, especially unconventional reservoirs such as tight sands, coal beds, and deep shales. Therefore hydraulic fracturing has been considered as “killer mace” for development of unconventional hydrocarbon resources in the world.

2003 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 391-406
Author(s):  
Mehdi Parvizi Amineh ◽  
Henk Houweling

AbstractThis article develops several concepts of critical geopolitics and relates them to the energy resources of the Caspian Region. Energy resources beyond borders may be accessed by trade, respectively by conquest, domination and changing property rights. These are the survival strategies of human groups in the international system. The article differentiates between demand-induced scarcity, supply-induced scarcity, structural scarcity and the creation, respectively, transfer of property rights. Together, the behaviors referred to by these concepts create a field of social forces that cross state borders involving state and a variety of non-state actors. During World War II, the US began to separate the military borders of the country from its legal-territorial borders. By dominating the world's oceans, the Anglo-Saxon power presided over the capacity to induce scarcity by interdicting maritime supplies to allies and enemies alike. Today, overland transport increasingly connects economies and energy supplies on the Eurasian continent. The US has therefore to go on land in order to pre-empt the land-based powers from unifying their economies and energy supplies.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 4 (10) ◽  
pp. e7400 ◽  
Author(s):  
Holly E. Copeland ◽  
Kevin E. Doherty ◽  
David E. Naugle ◽  
Amy Pocewicz ◽  
Joseph M. Kiesecker

2008 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 215-217 ◽  
Author(s):  
Angela V. Carter

Escaping the Resource Curse, Macartan Humphreys, Jeffrey D. Sachs and Joseph E. Stiglitz, eds., Foreword by George Soros; New York: Columbia University Press, 2007, pp. xviii, 408.Escaping the Resource Curse provides economic and political analysis of resource curse theories as well as practical policy advice to governments on managing oil and gas developments. Twelve chapters by natural resource specialists from multiple disciplines discuss a broad range of oil and gas development issues in three sections, “Dealing with Oil Corporations,” “Managing the Macroeconomy,” and “Handling the Politics.” Beyond the specific policy advice elaborated in detail throughout (relating primarily to transparency), the book succeeds in its accessible analysis of resource curse theories and state-industry tensions as well as its reinterpretation of oil wealth.


Solid Earth ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 765-783
Author(s):  
Rebecca O. Salvage ◽  
David W. Eaton

Abstract. Recent seismicity in Alberta and north-east British Columbia has been attributed to ongoing oil and gas development in the area, due to its temporal and spatial correlation. Prior to such development, the area was seismically quiescent. Here, we show evidence that latent seismicity may occur in areas where previous operations have occurred, even during a shutdown in operations. The global COVID-19 pandemic furnished the unique opportunity to study seismicity during a long period of anthropogenic quiescence. Within the Kiskatinaw area of British Columbia, 389 events were detected from April to August 2020, which encompasses a period with very little hydraulic fracturing operations. This reduction in operations was the result of a government-imposed lockdown severely restricting the movement of people as well as a downturn in the economic market causing industry stock prices to collapse. Except for a reduction in the seismicity rate and a lack of temporal clustering that is often characteristic of hydraulic fracturing induced sequences, the general characteristics of the observed seismicity were similar to the preceding time period of active operations. During the period of relative quiescence, event magnitudes were observed between ML −0.7 and ML 1.2, which is consistent with previous event magnitudes in the area. Hypocentres occurred in a corridor orientated NW–SE, just as seismicity had done in previous years, and were located at depths associated with the target Montney formation or shallower (<2.5 km). A maximum of 21 % of the detected events during lockdown may be attributable to natural seismicity, with a further 8 % potentially attributed to dynamic triggering of seismicity from teleseismic events and 6 % related to ongoing saltwater disposal and a single operational well pad. However, this leaves ∼65 % of the seismicity detected during lockdown being unattributable to primary activation mechanisms. This seismicity is unlikely to be the result of direct pore pressure increases (as very little direct injection of fluids was occurring at the time) and we see no patterns of temporal or spatial migration in the seismicity as would be expected from direct pore pressure increases. Instead, we suggest that this latent seismicity may be generated by aseismic slip as fluids (resulting from previous hydraulic fracturing injection) become trapped within permeable formations at depth, keeping pore pressures in the area elevated and consequently allowing the generation of seismicity. Alternatively, this seismicity may be the result of fault and fracture weakening in response to previous fluid injection. This is the first time that this latent seismicity has been observed in this area of British Columbia and, as such, this may now represent the new normal background seismicity rate within the Kiskatinaw area.


2015 ◽  
Vol 1092-1093 ◽  
pp. 1436-1439
Author(s):  
Yuan Zhou ◽  
De Sheng Zhou

Hydraulic fracturing technology has promoted the economic and effective development of unconventional oil and gas resources in North America, the fracture network by horizontal well hydraulic fracturing can significantly improve tight oil seepage environment and improve production rate. Taking a typical well A in Erdos dense oil basin as an example, supported fracture length is studied by matching its production history. By comparing with its actual micro seismic mapping, the proppant supported fracture length is optimized. The paper provides a technical method to optimize supported half fracture length, which is helpful in practical operation.


2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lars SØrum

Abstract The paper aims to provide insights as to what risk elements are observed in the US shale and tight oil and gas development and how they sit in a European setting. In doing so the paper explores the comparative advantages in prescriptive and performance based approaches for shale risk management and through discussing consequence based vs. risk based philosophies. The author uses metrics for below ground risks to compare risk levels. In doing so the paper aim to qualify what what is perceived as risk and what risks are measured in unconventional oil and gas exploration and production.


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