压裂/压力泵送

Quidnet Energy 寻找合作伙伴在德克萨斯州建造约 100 个储能井

Hunt Energy Network 向 Quidnet 投资 1000 万美元,帮助该公司将地压能源存储概念扩大到 300 兆瓦。

潜在的共置太阳能电池阵列和地质力学能存储站点的效果图。
潜在的共置太阳能电池阵列和地下能源存储站点的效果图。
来源:Quidnet Energy。

Quidnet Energy 最近从 Hunt Energy Network (HEN) 获得了 1000 万美元的股权投资,以扩大其地压储能概念并在德克萨斯州创建 300 兆瓦的地质力学储能项目。

总部位于休斯顿的 Quidnet 成立于 2013 年,该公司开发了一种方法,依靠现有的石油和天然气钻探技术以及水力发电设备来储存发电厂或可再生能源系统的多余能源。这些储存的能源可以在高峰需求期间返回电网。

该过程包括钻入目标储层(例如浅层、热不成熟的页岩层),然后对其进行水力压裂以形成储存空间。水被注入开放的裂缝网络,并受到岩石变形和上覆应力的压力。当加压水流回地面时,它会通过涡轮机发电。

过去几年,Quidnet 在美国和加拿大的不同地点测试了其技术。基于这项前期工作(部分细节已在 2023 年的会议论文 ( SPE 212347 ) 中分享),该公司认为,单个储能井可以实现 1 至 10 MW 的功率输出,持续 10 小时或更长时间。

Quidnet 推动商业化是在德克萨斯州等地电池热潮的背景下进行的,德克萨斯州的电池存储容量从 2020 年几乎没有增长到今年年初的 4,000 兆瓦以上。到今年年底,这一数字预计将上升到 10,000 兆瓦以上,即超过 10 吉瓦,使德克萨斯州成为美国电池安装容量最大的州,超过加利福尼亚州。

Quidnet 首席执行官 Joe Zhou 并不担心这些预测,他指出,大多数电网规模的电池的续航时间约为一小时。他说,这凸显了长续航储能系统的巨大机遇。

周先生曾在工业电池领域工作,他告诉 JPT:“尽管我们投入了数十年时间和五千亿美元,但就我们广泛的存储需求而言,锂离子电池仍无法满足我们的需求。从成本和规模的角度来看,我们需要一些完全不同的东西,而这最终是我们在这里要扮演的角色。”

周先生表示,新近宣布的300兆瓦目标可能会导致在德克萨斯州钻探多达100口储电井,该州官员正在寻求解决方案来缓解该州电网的压力。

Quidnet 正在走与另一家总部位于休斯顿的公司 Sage Geosystems 类似的道路。今年 2 月,Sage Geosystems 获得了 1700 万美元的股权融资,用于在德克萨斯州建造一个 3 兆瓦的地质力学储能系统,并且还在为美国国防部进行一项单独的可行性研究。

Quidnet 在达到这一数字方面面临的最大挑战之一是其在给定地质构造内维持足够存储量和压力的能力。

人们担心的并不是流体泄漏到基质中,而是裂缝尖端,周将其描述为储层内的关键“断裂点”。他补充道:“我们花了很多时间来控制这一点,因为至少从我们在现场看到的情况来看,[裂缝]尖端本身不会抑制压力。”

该公司在其最近的 SPE 论文中分享了其缓解措施,该论文介绍了一种由膨润土和减摩剂混合物制成的粘性密封泥浆的测试。在一个案例中,该泥浆将泄漏率降低了 80%,同时在 24 小时内保持了超过 85% 的初始注入后压力,而未经处理的岩石中只有不到 30%。

Quidnet 和 HEN 之间的协议被称为建设和转让合作。Quidnet 将设计项目,然后将其移交给 HEN,HEN 将提供建设和拥有存储站点的资金。

他们将合作的项目包括与公用事业公司 CPS Energy 达成的一项协议,该协议于 2022 年选定 Quidnet,在德克萨斯州圣安东尼奥周边提供高达 15 兆瓦的存储容量。

HEN 成立于 2018 年,总部位于达拉斯,是行业巨头 Hunt Energy 的母公司 Hunt Consolidated 旗下子公司,拥有开发储能项目的经验。周表示,这一背景对于 Quidnet 在电力领域的商业化努力至关重要,因为电力行业的细微差别和许可流程可能需要数年时间才能完成,即使是最有经验的公司也是如此。

“让油井开始工作是一回事,但实际上让这些油井上线并接入电网则是另一回事,需要完全不同的能力,”他表示,并补充说,HEN 拥有“大量可以教给我们的潜在知识”。

作为协议的一部分,Hunt Energy 首席创新官 Todd Benson 已加入 Quidnet 董事会。Benson 此前曾在钻井承包商 Helmerich & Payne 担任高管,该公司于 2017 年收购了 Motive Drilling Technologies,后者是 Benson 创立并担任首席执行官的一家软件公司。

来自HEN 的新资金使得 Quidnet 筹集的私人资本总额达到 4500 万美元,加上政府合同金额达到 2000 万美元。

进一步阅读

SPE 212347水力压裂中的地质力学抽水蓄能,作者:H. Schmidt、S. Wright、C. Mauroner、H. Lau、B. Hill 和 J. Zhou,Quidnet Energy;以及 A. Bunger,匹兹堡大学。

原文链接/JPT
Fracturing/pressure pumping

Quidnet Energy Finds Partner To Create Around 100 Energy Storage Wells in Texas

Hunt Energy Network invested $10 million into Quidnet to help scale up the company’s concept for geopressured energy storage to the tune of 300 MW.

A rendering of a potential co-located solar array and geomechanical energy storage site.
A rendering of a potential co-located solar array and subsurface energy storage site.
Source: Quidnet Energy.

Quidnet Energy recently secured a $10-million equity investment from Hunt Energy Network (HEN) to scale up its geopressured energy storage concept and create 300 MW of geomechanical energy storage projects across Texas.

Founded in 2013, Houston-based Quidnet has developed a method that relies on existing oil and gas drilling technologies alongside hydropower equipment to store excess energy from power plants or renewable systems. This stored energy can be returned to the grid during periods of peak demand.

The process involves drilling into a target reservoir, such as shallow, thermally immature shale formations, and hydraulically fracturing it to create a storage space. Water is injected into the open fracture network and pressurized by rock deformation and overburden stresses. When the pressurized water is flowed back to the surface, it is run through a turbine to generate power.

Over the past several years, Quidnet has tested its technology in various locations in the US and Canada. Based on this prior work, some details of which were shared in a 2023 conference paper (SPE 212347), the company believes it can achieve power outputs of 1 to 10 MW for 10 hours or longer from a single storage well.

Quidnet’s push to commercialize comes amid a battery boom in places like Texas, which went from virtually no battery storage in 2020 to more than 4,000 MW of capacity at the start of the year. That figure is expected to rise to more than 10,000 MW, or over 10 GW, by the end of the year, making Texas the US leader in installed battery capacity over California.

Joe Zhou, CEO of Quidnet, remains undaunted by such projections, noting that most grid-scale batteries have durations of about an hour. He said this highlights a significant opportunity for long-duration storage systems.

“Despite the decades and half a trillion dollars that’s gone into it, lithium ion is just not going to get us there in terms of the extensive storage needs that we have,” Zhou, who previously worked in the industrial battery sector, told JPT. “We need something radically different from a cost and scale perspective and that’s ultimately the role that we’re going to fill here.”

Zhou shared that the newly announced 300 MW target may result in up to 100 storage wells drilled in Texas where officials are seeking solutions to alleviate the strain on the state’s electric grid.

Quidnet is pursuing a similar path as Sage Geosystems, another Houston-based firm. In February, Sage Geosystems secured $17 million in equity funding to build a 3-MW geomechanical energy storage system in Texas and is also conducting a separate feasibility study for the US Department of Defense.

One of the biggest challenges Quidnet faces in reaching such numbers involves its ability to maintain an adequate storage volume and pressure within a given geologic formation.

The concern is not so much about fluids leaking off into the matrix but at the fracture tips, which Zhou described as the critical “weak point” within the reservoir. “What we've been spending a lot of time on is to control for that because, at least from what we see in the field, the [fracture] tips themselves are not going to hold back the pressure,” he added.

The company’s mitigation efforts are shared in its recent SPE paper which speaks to the testing of a viscous sealing slurry made from a mixture of bentonite and friction reducer. In one case, the slurry reduced leakoff rates by 80%, while more than 85% of the initial post-injection pressure was retained for a 24-hour period, compared to less than 30% in untreated rock.

The deal between Quidnet and HEN is what’s known as a build-and-transfer partnership. Quidnet will design the projects and then hand them off to HEN, which will provide the capital to build and own the storage sites.

Among the projects they will collaborate on is an agreement with utility CPS Energy which selected Quidnet in 2022 to provide up to 15 MW of storage capacity around San Antonio, Texas.

Launched in 2018, Dallas-based HEN is part of Hunt Consolidated, the parent company of industry stalwart Hunt Energy, and brings experience in developing energy storage projects. Zhou said this background will be crucial for Quidnet’s commercialization efforts in the power sector, which is defined by nuances and permitting processes that can take years to navigate, even for the most-seasoned firms.

“It’s one thing to get the wells to work but it’s actually another business and another set of competencies entirely to bring those wells online and tie them into the grid,” he said, adding that HEN holds “a lot of latent knowledge that they can teach us.”

As part of the agreement, Todd Benson, chief innovation officer of Hunt Energy, has joined Quidnet's board of directors. Benson previously held an executive role at the drilling contractor Helmerich & Payne following its acquisition of Motive Drilling Technologies in 2017, a software firm he founded and led as CEO.

The new funding from HEN brings Quidnet’s total to $45 million in private capital raised along with $20 million in government contracts.

For Further Reading

SPE 212347 Geomechanical Pumped Storage in Hydraulic Fractures by H. Schmidt, S. Wright, C. Mauroner, H. Lau, B. Hill, and J. Zhou, Quidnet Energy; and A. Bunger, University of Pittsburgh.