排放管理

无罐零排放原油生产设施的新方法

科罗拉多州韦尔德县的一个平台上部署了一种新型撬装式生产设施,该设施消除了排放,提高了运营效率,并将原油产量提高了 11.3%。

ECT 接收井口流体,并在闭环过程中结合使用热量和重力来分离水、油和天然气。
图 1——ECT 接收井口流体,并在闭环过程中结合热量和重力来分离水、油和天然气。
来源:先锋能源

美国环境保护署 (EPA) 和许多州正在出台影响石油和天然气生产商的新排放法规。此外,在利益相关者的压力下,生产商承诺其运营脱碳。其中很大一部分排放发生在油田生产现场。为了消除这些排放,先锋能源创建了一种新型撬装式生产设施。该技术部署在科罗拉多州韦尔德县的一个油田上,证明可以消除排放,提高运营效率,并将原油产量提高 11.3%。如果被业界采用,该解决方案可以大大减少石油生产的排放和碳足迹。

挑战

目前,美国有五个人口稠密地区被美国环保局指定为臭氧严重达标区。丹佛都会区和弗兰特山脉地区(也包括丹佛-朱尔斯堡 (DJ) 盆地的大部分地区)就是这些地区之一,美国环保局目前正在努力将二叠纪盆地纳入第六个未达标区。石油和天然气生产商正在积极寻求钻探和生产井的解决方案,同时显着减少地面排放,以实现这一目标。目前采用的策略包括取消原油储罐、取消天然气执行器以及整合偏置垫的处理,每一项都提供了渐进式改进,但并不能解决整个问题。目前的生产设施使用被动方式来分离石油、天然气和水。这种不完全分离导致气体残留在原油中,当这种气体离开原油时,会导致无组织排放。

解决方案

为了应对这一挑战,Pioneer Energy 开发了一种称为排放控制处理机 (ECT) 的主动分离工艺,如上图 1 所示。ECT 接收井口流体,并在闭环过程中结合使用热量和重力来分离水、油和天然气。该系统比传统工艺更有效地对碳氢化合物进行分类,从而产生完全稳定的、不含闪蒸气体的原油。另一个好处是,留在气体中的原油分子反而保留在原油中,从而增加了其体积。通过消除闪蒸气体和工艺电气化,消除了塔排放。ECT 输出管道质量的原油,如果原油中游供应商需要缓冲能力,可以直接输送到租赁自动贸易交接 (LACT) 装置或缓冲罐。

ECT 在电网供电下运行时无排放,不包含排气执行器,并且取代了几乎所有现有的生产设施设备,包括高低压分离器 (HLP)、蒸气回收装置 (VRU)、气体破坏器、蒸气回收装置塔(VRT)和储罐。它能够进行批量加工,并且当与多个滑橇并行组装时,ECT 系统可以适应各种生产概况。

科罗拉多州韦尔德县试点计划

Pioneer Energy 与 Bayswater Exploration and Production 签订合同,在科罗拉多州韦尔德县的一个八井平台上进行 500 B/D ECT 试点(图 2)。该试点的目标是展示该系统在实际生产现场的连续运行,同时展示其主要优势,包括消除排放、提高原油产量和简化操作。

ECT 试点。
图2'升降CT试验场,典型的DJ盆地生产设施。
资料来源:Bayswater 勘探与生产公司。

ECT 与现有基础设施并联连接,在试点运行期间将流量转移到系统。ECT 将稳定后的油排放到现场现有的散装油分离器中。经过散装分离器后,原油进入常压储罐,最后进入 LACT。现场的 VRU 还压缩散装油分离器和气举压缩机分离器中产生的任何低压气体。

测试期间从现场的各个点监控和收集数据。一项关键的测量是散装油分离器内的压力。在常规操作过程中,原油中的闪蒸气体会在该容器中逸出,导致其内部压力升高。一旦达到预定压力,VRU 就会启动并排出所有蒸汽。这些蒸气被压缩并发送到天然气销售管线。

组合物样品是从该过程中的几个点获得的。其中包括 ECT 输出处的稳定原油,以确定里德蒸气压 (RVP),以及 ECT 运行之前和运行期间的销售气体,以评估稳定过程的效率和原油体积增加。为了确定运营效率,在试点之前、之后和期间评估了生产商现场团队现场访问的频率以及现场的正常运行时间。

结果

ECT 在试点期间总共运行了 28 天,在试点期间从现场 8 口井中的 7 口生产了近 3,600 桶管道品质原油。第八口井继续通过其 HLP。

在整个试点过程中对装置温度进行了调整,以测试对原油 RVP 的影响。定期分析流体样品并确认可以控制原油的 RVP 以实现客户所需的产量。在 ECT 放电时,RVP 达到并保持在 12 psia 或更低。

在试点期间,观察到散装油分离器内的压力始终低于通常观察到的压力,这表明原油产生的蒸气非常少。VRU 数据证实了这一点,该数据显示与正常操作相比,利用率降低了 50%。我们将剩余的逸出蒸气归因于第八口井的生产,其流量继续由现场的 HLP 处理,并将来自压缩和现场周围各个点的不稳定的分离液直接注入散装油分离器中。在完整的 ECT 实施中,这些敲除物将被引导至 ECT 的入口进行处理和稳定。

飞行员在科罗拉多州一年中最冷的时候进行操作,当时气温经常降至冰点以下。试点运行前后,气举压缩机因寒冷天气而停机,导致运行团队几乎每天都要进行维护活动。即使在这些极端条件下,ECT运行期间,作业团队现场检查的次数也仅限于几次检查,气举压缩机一次也没有关闭,大大提高了平台的运行效率。

对销售气体的第三方成分分析显示,能量含量从 1,400 BTU/ft 3减少至 1,322 BTU/ft 3 ,表明粗分子已从气体中分离出来并进入原油中。这意味着原油产量增加了 11.3%。

结论

该试点项目证明,ECT 是减少井场排放和增加原油销量的可行解决方案。加强分离和电气化系统地消除了排放源,消除了储罐蒸汽的常规燃烧,提高了运行效率,同时使原油体积增加了 11.3%。观察到的运营效率包括改善现场气升压缩机的正常运行时间以及减少现场工作人员在平台上的存在。该试点证明,通过采用这项技术,该行业可以大幅减少排放和碳足迹,同时提高利润。

未来几个月,先锋能源公司将在其他富含液体的盆地为运营商进行更多可能具有更大容量的试验。其他设计配置包括 250 个、1,000 个和 2,000 个 B/D 系统,这些系统可以并行安装以实现所需的初始产量。

Tyler Pittenger在油田完井服务、创业和企业所有权方面拥有超过 18 年的经验。他职业生涯的大部分时间都在怀俄明州、德克萨斯州和北达科他州的油气井增产作业中度过,并拥有蒙大拿州立大学化学工程学士学位。

Anthony Maltese是一位敬业、协作的运营经理,在管理石油和天然气行业的动态项目方面拥有十多年的经验。他曾在一家大型油田服务公司担任压裂和增产现场服务经理和部署经理,并拥有蒙大拿州立大学化学工程学士学位。

自 2014 年以来,约瑟夫·帕莱亚四世(Joseph Palaia IV)一直领导 Pioneer Energy 在火炬气捕集和模块化碳氢化合物加工领域开展业务,谈判并完成国内和国际交易。他拥有新泽西理工学院的电气工程学士学位和麻省理工学院的核科学与工程硕士学位。

原文链接/jpt
Emission management

A Novel Approach to Tankless Zero-Emission Crude Oil Production Facilities

A new type of skid-mounted production facility was deployed on a pad in Weld County, Colorado, and demonstrated elimination of emissions, improved operational efficiency, and an increased crude yield of 11.3%.

The ECT receives wellhead fluid and uses a combination of heat and gravity in a closed-loop process to separate water, oil, and gas.
Fig. 1—The ECT receives wellhead fluid and uses a combination of heat and gravity in a closed-loop process to separate water, oil, and gas.
Source: Pioneer Energy

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and numerous states are introducing new emissions regulations which impact oil and gas producers. Additionally, under the pressure of stakeholders, the producers are committing themselves to decarbonize their operations. A large portion of these emissions occur at oilfield production sites. To eliminate these emissions, Pioneer Energy created a new type of skid‑mounted production facility. The technology was deployed on a pad in Weld County, Colorado, and demonstrated elimination of emissions, improved operational efficiency, and an increased crude yield of 11.3%. If adopted by the industry, this solution can dramatically reduce the emissions and carbon footprint of oil production.

The Challenge

There are five populated areas in the US that the EPA currently designates as Severe Ozone Nonattainment Zones. The Denver Metro and Front Range area, which also encompasses most of the Denver-Julesburg (DJ) Basin, is one of these areas, and the EPA is currently working to include the Permian Basin as a sixth nonattainment zone. Oil and gas producers are actively seeking solutions to drill and produce wells while significantly reducing pad-level emissions to achieve attainment. Strategies currently being employed include eliminating crude storage tanks, eliminating natural gas actuators, and consolidating processing from offset pads, each of which offer incremental improvements but do not address the whole problem. Current production facilities use passive means to separate the oil, gas, and water. This incomplete separation results in gas remaining in the crude, and when this gas leaves the crude, it results in fugitive emissions.

The Solution

To address this challenge, Pioneer Energy developed an active separation process called the Emission Control Treater (ECT) as seen in Fig. 1 above. The ECT receives wellhead fluid and uses a combination of heat and gravity in a closed-loop process to separate water, oil, and gas. The system sorts the hydrocarbons much more efficiently than traditional processes, resulting in crude which is completely stabilized, containing no flash gas. An additional benefit is that crude molecules that would be left in the gas instead remain in the crude, increasing its volume. By eliminating the flash gas, and through process electrification, pad emissions are eliminated. Pipeline-quality crude oil is output from the ECT and can be directed straight to the Lease Automatic Custody Transfer (LACT) unit or surge vessel if buffer capacity is needed for the crude midstream provider.

The ECT is emissions-free when run on grid power, contains no gas-venting actuators, and replaces nearly all existing production facility equipment, including high-low pressure separators (HLPs), vapor recovery units (VRUs), gas busters, vapor recovery towers (VRTs), and storage tanks. It is capable of bulk processing and when assembled in parallel with multiple skids, the ECT system can accommodate a wide range of production profiles.

Weld County, Colorado, Pilot Program

Pioneer Energy contracted with Bayswater Exploration and Production to conduct a pilot of the 500 B/D ECT on an eight-well pad in Weld County, Colorado (Fig. 2). The pilot’s objective was to demonstrate continuous operation of the system on an actual production site while demonstrating the key advantages including elimination of emissions, increased crude yield, and simplified operations.

ECT pilot site.
Fig. 2—ECT pilot site, a typical DJ Basin production facility.
Source: Bayswater Exploration and Production.

The ECT was connected in parallel with the existing infrastructure, with flow diverted to the system during the pilot operation. The ECT discharged the stabilized oil into the site’s existing bulk oil separator. Following the bulk separator, the crude moves into atmospheric storage tanks and finally to the LACT. A VRU on site also compressed any low-pressure gases evolving from the bulk oil separator and gas-lift compressor knockout.

Data were monitored and collected from various points across the site during the test. One crucial measurement was the pressure inside the bulk oil separator. During conventional operations, flash gas in the crude oil will escape in this vessel, causing its internal pressure to rise. Once it reaches a predefined pressure, the VRU activates and extracts any vapors. These vapors are compressed and sent to the gas sales line.

Composition samples were obtained from several points in the process. These included the stabilized crude at the output of the ECT to determine Reid vapor pressure (RVP), and the sales gas before and during ECT operation to assess the efficiency of the stabilization process and crude volume increase. To determine operational efficiency, frequency of the producer’s field team site visits and the uptime of the site were assessed before, after, and during the pilot.

Results

The ECT was in operation for a total of 28 days during the pilot test, producing nearly 3,600 bbl of pipeline-quality crude oil from seven of the eight wells on site during the pilot. The eighth well continued flowing through its HLP.

The temperature of the unit was adjusted throughout the pilot to test the impact on crude oil RVP. Fluid samples were periodically analyzed and confirmed that the RVP of the crude could be manipulated to achieve the customer,s desired output. An RVP of 12 psia and lower was achieved and held consistently at the ECT discharge.

During the pilot, the pressure inside the bulk oil separator was observed to be consistently lower than what is typically observed, indicating that the crude oil produced very little vapor. This was confirmed with VRU data which showed a 50% reduction in utilization compared to normal operations. We attributed the remaining evolved vapor to the production from the eighth well whose flow continued to be processed by the site’s HLP, and the injection of unstabilized knockout liquids from compression and various points around the site directly into the bulk oil separator. In a complete ECT implementation, these knockouts will be directed instead to the ECT’s inlet for processing and stabilization.

The pilot operated during the coldest time of the year in Colorado when temperatures routinely dropped to below freezing. Before and after the pilot operation, the gas-lift compressor experienced downtime due to the cold weather, resulting in the operations team having to perform maintenance activities on an almost daily basis. Even in these extreme conditions, while the ECT was operational, the number of operations team site visits was limited to a couple of checkups, and the gas-lift compressor did not shut down even once, greatly improving the operational efficiency of the pad.

Third-party compositional analysis of sales gas showed a reduction of energy content from 1,400 to 1,322 BTU/ft3, indicating that crude molecules had been sorted out of the gas and into the crude. This translated into a crude volume increase of 11.3%.

Conclusion

The pilot demonstrated the ECT is a viable solution for wellpad emissions reduction and increased crude oil sales. Enhanced separation and electriciation resulted in systematic elimination of emission sources, elimination of routine flaring of tank vapors, improved operational efficiency, and simultaneously resulted in an 11.3% increase in crude volume. Operational efficiencies observed included improved uptime of the site’s gas-lift compressor and reduced field crew presence on the pad. The pilot proved that by adopting this technology the industry can dramatically reduce its emissions and carbon footprint while improving the bottom line.

Pioneer Energy will be conducting additional trials for operators in other liquids-rich basins in the coming months with potentially larger capacities. Additional design configurations include 250, 1,000, and 2,000 B/D systems which can be installed in parallel to achieve the desired initial production volume.

Tyler Pittenger has over 18 years of experience in oilfield completion services, entrepreneurship, and business ownership. He spent the bulk of his career in oil and gas well stimulation operations in Wyoming, Texas, and North Dakota, and holds a BS in chemical engineering from Montana State University.

Anthony Maltese is a dedicated and collaborative operations manager with over a decade of experience managing dynamic projects in the oil and gas industry. He served in roles as a fracturing and stimulation field service manager and deployment manager for a large oilfield service company and holds a BS in chemical engineering from Montana State University.

Joseph Palaia IV has been leading Pioneer Energy’s pursuit of business in the flare-gas capture and modular hydrocarbon processing space since 2014, negotiating and closing both domestic and international deals. He holds a BS in electrical engineering from New Jersey Institute of Technology and an MS in nuclear science and engineering from MIT.