水管理

URTeC:需要采用整体方法来处理二叠纪盆地的采出水

二叠纪盆地的生产水挑战为创新提供了机会,为该行业走向更可持续的未来铺平了道路。

URTeC-Permian-未来面板.JPG
从左至右,主持人雪佛龙公司的陈宇光、雪佛龙公司的科迪·科米斯基、西方石油公司的安吉拉·贝多亚、康菲石油公司的努尼·林科内斯和阿帕奇公司的布莱恩·博姆在 6 月 19 日于休斯顿举行的 2024 年非常规资源技术会议的特别会议上就“新二叠纪——未来的运营:我们在二叠纪工作方式的变化”发表了讲话。
来源:Jennifer Pallanich/JPT

要保持二叠纪盆地的碳氢化合物流出,需要解决采出水问题、采取可持续的方法和技术创新。

6 月 19 日,在休斯顿举行的非常规资源技术会议 (URTeC) 上,在重点讨论二叠纪盆地未来的特别会议上,小组成员呼吁采取整体生产水解决方案,以确保盆地的可持续性。

雪佛龙中部地区业务部地下水和地震顾问科迪·科米斯基 (Cody Comiskey) 表示,二叠纪盆地的地震活动有所扩大,尽管减少向深井排放采出水似乎有助于降低该地区 3 级及以上地震的发生频率。

他说,直到 2009 年左右,该盆地的地震活动才“断断续续”,通常每年发生的地震不超过 12 次。但是,2021 年,该盆地记录了 192 次地震。2022 年,记录了 222 次地震。

他说:“2023 年是自 2015 年开始增加以来地震活动首次出现下降的一年”,并指出那一年记录了 200 次地震。“地震数量仍然相当多,所以这仍然是一个非常大的问题。”

科米斯基说,不仅有记录的地震次数有所增加,而且震级也有所增加。

“我们的理解和监控能力已经显著提高,”他表示,“这不是单个运营商的问题。这实际上是一个行业问题。”

但问题很复杂,因为被认为是地震活动增加的一个因素的深度 8,000 至 10,000 英尺的深层处置井通常并不“紧邻”地震,他说,而且注水会增加水库压力,即使是在很长的距离内也是如此。

他说:“一些压力变化就会导致断层滑动。”

另一方面,向较浅的井中注入采出水似乎不会影响地震活动,他说。然而,这些井很快就会被填满。

“我们必须全面地看待生产水,”他说。

而且,在二叠纪,有大量的采出水。

“我们需要在二叠纪盆地中拥有选择性,”科米斯基说道,“如果你正在考虑这么多的水,我们需要一些选择来处理它。”

阿帕奇公司环境可持续发展经理布莱恩·博姆表示,该行业可能已经通过转向在较浅的处置井中储存水来解决生产水引起的地震问题。

“地震问题似乎正在好转,但我们已经改变了问题”,因此钻探现在要穿过处置区,他说,并指出钻探人员“都喜欢穿过那里进行钻探”。

他说,虽然该行业已将绝大多数采出水“通过另一个井”输送出去,但根据其他有注入井的盆地中地震活动的增加,它应该在某个时候看到二叠纪盆地预期的地震事件。

他说,处理采出水的方案包括回收和再利用水,但也需要其他解决方案。

他说道,在生产水处理和捕获碳的储存之间,“我们将开始争夺二叠纪的储层空间”。

他说,石油和天然气公司应该追求的目标之一就是节约用水。

根据维基百科,水资源积极性的目标是“对水生态系统产生积极影响,并确保节约和恢复的水资源多于使用或耗尽的水资源”。

博姆表示,采出水的一种潜在再利用方式是用于灌溉,而灌溉所需的水量甚至比二叠纪盆地生产的水量还要多。

他说,如果能够对水进行足够好的处理,就可以部分抵消灌溉需求。

他说,理想情况下,对采出水进行处理以适应再利用的目的,而不是全部处理至达到饮用水标准。

他说道:“我们的想法是进行适合目的的治疗——去除所需部分,然后找到有益的用途。”

他说,治疗能力是存在的。

他说道:“这只是经济和监管问题。”

西方石油公司净零排放开发经理安吉拉·贝多亚 (Angela Bedoya) 表示,直接空气捕获 (DAC) 碳是一个耗水过程。

她说:“AC 需要大量的水。”

Oxy 子公司 1PointFive 正在 Permian 建造 Stratos,这是一座大型 DAC 设施。该设施全面投入运营后,每年可捕获高达 50 万公吨的二氧化碳该项目是 Oxy 迈向低碳世界的众多项目之一。

贝多亚表示,公司已将排放预测纳入油田开发规划工作流程,并将碳数据作为每个油田的关键指标。

她说:“这样做改变了我们开发田地的方式。”

她表示,Oxy 未来的 Permian 油田将依靠各种策略来降低碳排放强度。该公司还为其所有设施(无论是棕地开发还是绿地开发)制定了二氧化碳基准

她说:“在我们朝着净零目标迈进的过程中,我们看到了优化的影响。”

她说,这些策略包括尽可能实现电气化、零常规燃烧、以及优化使用泄漏检测和修复流程以缩短对泄漏的响应时间。

康菲石油公司油藏工程创新解决方案经理 Nuny Rincones 表示,人工智能等技术将帮助运营商提高二叠纪开发效率。

她表示,人工智能将加速各领域的优化,但首先,数据必须实现现代化。

她说:“创新分为多个阶段。”

她说,人工智能带来的效率不仅有助于发现,还能帮助“更好地开采现有的石油”。

原文链接/JPT
Water management

URTeC: Holistic Approach Needed To Handle Permian Basin’s Produced Water

The Permian’s produced-water challenge presents an opportunity for innovation to pave the way toward a more sustainable future for the industry.

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From left, moderator Yuguang Chen of Chevron, Cody Comiskey of Chevron, Angela Bedoya of Occidental, Nuny Rincones of ConocoPhillips, and Brian Bohm of Apache spoke on “The New Permian—Operations of the Future: Changes in How We Work in the Permian” during a special session at the 2024 Unconventional Resources Technology Conference on 19 June in Houston.
Source: Jennifer Pallanich/JPT

Keeping hydrocarbons flowing from the Permian Basin requires solutions for produced water, sustainable approaches, and technological innovation.

During a 19 June special session focused on the future of the Permian Basin at the Unconventional Resources Technology Conference (URTeC) in Houston, panelists called for holistic produced-water solutions to ensure the basin’s sustainability.

Cody Comiskey, subsurface adviser for water and seismic with Chevron’s Mid Con Business Unit, said seismicity across the Permian has expanded, although a reduction in disposing of produced water in deep wells appears to be helping reduce frequency of magnitude 3 and higher earthquakes in the area.

Until around 2009, there was only a “spattering” of seismicity in the basin, typically with fewer than a dozen earthquakes in any given year, he said. But, in 2021, 192 were recorded in the basin. In 2022, 222 were recorded.

“2023 was the first year to show a decline in seismicity since they started to increase in 2015,” he said, noting there were 200 recorded quakes that year. “There’s still a significant number of earthquakes, so it’s still a very large issue.”

Not only has there been an increase in recorded earthquakes, but the magnitudes have grown as well, Comiskey said.

“Our ability to understand and monitor has increased significantly,” he said. “This is not an individual operator’s issue. … This is really an industry issue.”

But the problem is complex because the deep disposal wells in depths of 8,000–10,000 ft thought to be a factor in the increased seismic activity are typically not “right on top of” the earthquake, he said, and injection of water can increase reservoir pressures, even across long distances.

“A few psi change can induce slip” of faults, he said.

On the other hand, injecting produced water into shallower wells doesn’t seem to affect seismicity, he said. They are, however, filling up quickly.

“We have to look at produced water holistically,” he said.

And, in the Permian, there’s a lot of produced water.

“We need optionality in the Permian,” Comiskey said. “If you’re looking at this much water, we need options to handle it.”

Brian Bohm, environmental sustainability manager at Apache Corporation, said the industry may have addressed the produced-water-induced seismicity issue by shifting to storing water in shallower disposal wells.

“The seismicity issue seems to be getting better, but we’ve changed the problem” so that drilling now goes through the disposal zone, he said, noting drillers “don’t love drilling through that.”

While the industry has sent the vast majority of produced water “down another hole,” it should have seen anticipated seismic events in the Permian at some point, he said, based on seismic activity increases in other basins with injection wells.

Options for handling produced water include recycling and reusing the water, he said, but other solutions also are needed.

Between produced-water disposal and storage of captured carbon, “We are going to start fighting for reservoir space in the Permian,” he said.

One goal oil and gas companies should pursue is being water positive, he said.

According to Wikipedia, the goal of being water positive “is to leave a positive impact on water ecosystems and ensure that more water is conserved and restored than is used or depleted.”

One potential reuse of produced water, Bohm said, is for irrigation, which needs more water even than the Permian produces.

If the water can be treated well enough, it could be a partial offset to irrigation needs, he said.

Ideally, he said, produced water would be treated to fit the purpose of the reuse rather than it all being treated to drinking-water standards.

“The idea is to do fit-for-purpose treatment—remove what’s needed, find a beneficial use for it,” he said.

He said the treatment capabilities exist.

“It’s just economics and regulation,” he said.

Angela Bedoya, net-zero development manager at Occidental, said direct air capture (DAC) of carbon is a water-hungry process.

“DAC needs a lot of water,” she said.

Oxy subsidiary 1PointFive is building Stratos, a large DAC facility, in the Permian. It’s designed to capture up to 500,000 metric tons of CO2 annually when fully operational. That project is one of many Oxy is pursuing on the path to a low-carbon world.

Bedoya said the company has folded emissions forecasting into its field-development planning workflow and incorporated carbon data as a key metric for each field.

“Doing so has changed the way we develop our fields,” she said.

Oxy’s Permian fields of the future will rely on various strategies to lower carbon intensity, she said. The operator has also developed a CO2 baseline for all of its facilities, whether brownfield or greenfield developments.

“We see the impacts of optimization as we move toward net zero,” she said.

Some of the strategies include electrification where possible, zero routine flaring, and optimizing use of leak detection and repair processes to improve response time to leaks, she said.

Nuny Rincones, reservoir engineering innovative solutions manager at ConocoPhillips, said technology such as artificial intelligence (AI) will help the operator gain efficiencies with its Permian developments.

AI will speed up optimization of fields, she said, but first, the data has to be modernized.

“Innovation happens in many phases,” she said.

The efficiencies that AI can deliver will help not just with discoveries but also with “getting better at extracting the barrels you already have,” she said.