巴西成熟领域的隐藏机遇

巴西顶级运营商表示,忽视成熟油田潜力的运营商可能会错失增加回报和生产力的机会。

(来源:esfera/Shutterstock.com)

提出者:

哈特能源勘探与生产

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随着新油田的发现成为头条新闻并成为焦点,因为它们为运营商带来了生产力的提高,成熟的油田往往会落入幕后。由于生产率下降,许多巴西运营商忽视了成熟油田,转而青睐闪亮的新油田,但这样做可能会浪费公司潜在的钻探机会和收入。

SPE Live 最近的网络研讨会“巴西的自然油田:机遇与技术”的小组成员分享了他们对成熟油田的生产力和其中蕴含的机遇的看法。

对于那些认为巴西成熟油田不再值得投资的人,Petrorio 首席运营官弗朗西尔马·费尔南德斯 (Francilmar Fernandes) 则表示不然。

“如今,巴西在成熟领域有很多机会,”费尔南德斯说。“我们在数十个领域拥有这些机会,这些领域正准备从大型和超级大型独立公司手中转手。” 五年前 Petrorio 刚刚开始这一旅程,从那时起我们就取得了非常好的成果。我们有很多很多的机会……[并且]专注于使用新技术、新方法来以更低的成本和更高的运营效率进行生产。”

费尔南德斯表示,公司在技术方面的主要关注点之一是数字化。

“需要以这种方式[创造]更多能源来提高我们的效率等等,”他补充道。

巴西 SPE Live、成熟油田
SPE 主持人 Nils Kaageson-Loe 会见了巴西三位顶级运营商,讨论重振被忽视的成熟油田的策略。(来源:SPE)

创新解决方案

为了重振老油田,使其产量能够与新油田相媲美,运营商需要投资于技术创新。费尔南德斯强调了部署新技术(以及大量新技术)改造成熟领域的重要性。

“对于成熟的领域,我们确实需要在所有领域越来越多的技术,”他说。“自从建井以来,我们需要每口井的生产率更高,每口井的生产效率可能更低,可能需要更多的支管,可能需要更多的方向来真正选择,而无需导向孔等,从顶部系统或更多的传感器,更多的物联网可以减少船上的 POP(持久性有机污染物)等等。因此,我们有很多很多的机会,但关键是我们必须以适当的价格拥有正确的技术,并且必须在经济上可行。”

Decio Fabricio Oddone da Costa, 埃瑙塔
Enauta 首席执行官 Decio Fabricio Oddone da Costa 谈到了巴西在振兴成熟油田方面取得的进展及其设定的目标。(来源:SPE)

Enauta首席执行官Décio Fabricio Oddone da Costa补充道,技术创新不仅有助于提高运营商在其成熟领域的自身生产力,还能保持其在世界市场上的竞争力。例如,挪威花费了大量时间和资源来开发成熟油田,而巴西运营商不希望在生产力水平上落后。

“我们正处于巨大的技术变革的开端,[伴随]所有这些大数据数字化[和]人工智能,”奥多内·达科斯塔说。“这将改变我们的钻探方式、收集数据的方式以及生产油田的方式。我非常确定,我们经常听到的那些复苏因素目前正在挪威实现。他们还拥有我们未来几年在巴西的目标数据。”

挪威石油开采

在挪威,运营商在成熟油田的回收方面取得了进展,从而从油田中获得了最大的收入和生产力,巴西运营商希望效仿这一策略。

Equinor Brasil 专注于石油技术 IOR 的 Maria Clara Costa 表示,挪威开发商能够将峡湾的生产寿命从 2022 年延长到至少 2027 年,甚至可能到 2040 年。

玛丽亚·克拉拉·科斯塔,Equinor
Equinor Brasil 的玛丽亚·克拉拉·科斯塔 (Maria Clara Costa) 表示,巴西运营商正在追随挪威运营商的脚步,从成熟油田开采石油。(来源:SPE)

“巴西的采收率非常低,但我们看到了挪威,”科斯塔说。“我们油田的平均采收率是 Equinor 的 50%,我们的目标是达到 60% 。这就是我们的雄心,并将我们今天的生产水平保持到 2025 年及以后。”

她继续说道,“我们还看到该行业比以往任何时候都更快地发生根本性变化,特别是自去年以来,能源转型和低碳未来的需求正在带来新的工作方式、新的思维方式,尤其是对于成熟的油田来说,这在巴西也不例外。”

科斯塔还指出了行业的领导地位以及转型过程中的前进道路。

“我们的目标是为石油和天然气行业必须如何发展树立榜样,并展示领导力,并为更大胆、更好的解决方案指明道路。”她说。“这就是为什么我们正在积极塑造我们的产品组合,以提供高价值和低碳足迹。”

激励振兴成熟领域

奥多内·达科斯塔表示,巴西政府已开始制定针对成熟油田改造的激励措施,因为提高已开发油田的采收率通常会花费更多资金,但对环境更加友好。

“过去几年我们在巴西取得了很大进步,我无法以不同的方式思考,”他说。“政府和机构采取了一系列措施,帮助行业首先在这些成熟的领域运作。现在我想说,我们巴西有条件让独立运营商来接管这些成熟的领域。”

原文链接/hartenergy

Hidden Opportunities in Brazil’s Mature Fields

Operators overlooking the potential in mature fields could be missing out on increased returns and productivity, according to Brazil’s top operators.

(Source: esfera/Shutterstock.com)

Presented by:

Hart Energy E&P

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As new oilfield discoveries make headlines and take center stage as they bring productivity increases for operators, mature fields tend to fall into the background. Deemed declining in productivity, many Brazilian operators overlook mature fields in favor of shiny new oil fields, but doing so could be wasting potential drilling opportunities and revenue for their companies.

Panelists on SPE Live’s recent webinar “Mature Fields in Brazil: Opportunities and Technologies” shared their thoughts on the productivity of mature fields and opportunities that lie within.

To those who think that Brazil’s mature fields are no longer worth investing in, Petrorio COO Francilmar Fernandes would say otherwise.

“Brazil nowadays, it [has] many opportunities for mature fields," Fernandes said. "We have those in dozens of fields that are just ready to change off the hands of the major and supermajor independent companies. Petrorio just started this journey five years ago, and we [have been] just collecting very good results since then. We have many, many opportunities ... [and are] focusing in fields to use new technologies, to use new ways to produce with lower cost and with more high operational efficiency.”

Fernandes said that one of the company’s primary focuses in terms of technology was focusing on digitalization.

“We need to [create] more energy in this way to increase our efficiency and so on,” he added.

SPE Live, mature fields in Brazil
SPE host Nils Kaageson-Loe met with three of the top Brazilian operators to discuss strategies for reinvigorating overlooked mature fields. (Source: SPE)

Innovative solutions

To reinvigorate older fields so they can produce on par with new fields, operators need to invest in technological innovations. Fernandes stressed the importance of deploying new technologies—and a lot of it—to revamp mature fields.

“For mature fields, we really need more and more technology in all the areas,” he said. “Since the well construction, we need more productivity per well with a lower possible per well, maybe more laterals, maybe more directionals to really choose without pilot holes and so on from going to the top side system or with more sensors, with more IOTs to reduce the POP [persistent organic pollutant] on board and so on, so forth. So we have many, many opportunities, but the critical point is we have [to have] the right technology with the right price [which] has to be economically feasible.”

Decio Fabricio Oddone da Costa, Enauta
Décio Fabricio Oddone da Costa, CEO of Enauta, spoke about the progress Brazil is making in revitalizing mature fields and its goals set in place. (Source: SPE)

Décio Fabricio Oddone da Costa, CEO of Enauta, added that the technological innovations would not only help improve operators’ own productivity in their mature fields but keep them competitive in the world market. Norway, for instance, has spent a considerable amount of time and resources developing mature fields, and Brazilian operators don’t want to fall behind in productivity levels.

“We are in the middle of the beginning of enormous technology transformation, [with] all this big data digitalization [and] artificial intelligence,” Oddone da Costa said. “This will change the way we drill and the way we collect data and the way we produce oil fields. And I'm quite sure that those recovery factors that we heard often are currently being achieved in Norway. They also have the numbers that we have as goals in Brazil in the years to come.”

Norwegian oil recovery

In Norway, operators are making headway in recovering their mature fields and therefore getting the most revenue and productivity out of the fields, a strategy that Brazilian operators hope to mimic.

Maria Clara Costa, who focuses on petroleum technology IOR at Equinor Brasil, shared that Norwegian developers were able to expand the production life span of a fjord from 2022 to at least 2027 and possibly 2040.

Maria Clara Costa, Equinor
Maria Clara Costa with Equinor Brasil said Brazilian operators are following the lead of Norwegian operators in recovering oil from mature fields. (Source: SPE)

“The recovery factor is very low in Brazil, but then we see Norway," Costa said. "The average we have on plans for our fields is 50% [of recovery] from Equinor, and we have the ambition to reach 60%. That's the ambition we have, and keeping the production level that we have today until 2025 and beyond.”

She continued, “We are also seeing fundamental change in the industry faster than ever before, especially since last year, and the energy transition and the need for a low-carbon future is posing new ways of working, new ways of thinking, especially for the mature fields, and that's not different in Brazil."

Costa also pointed to leadership in the industry and the path forward during this transition.

“We aim to set an example of how the oil and gas industry must develop and also show the leadership and point a way to bolder and better solutions," she said. "That's why we are actively shaping our portfolio to deliver high value and a low-carbon footprint.”

Incentivizing revitalizing mature fields

The government in Brazil has begun putting in place incentives for revamping mature fields, as increasing recovery in already developed fields generally costs more money but is more environmentally friendly, Oddone da Costa said.

“I couldn't think in a different way that we have made a lot of progress in Brazil in the past few years,” he said. “The government and the agency, they put in place a series of measures that help the industry to operate in these mature fields initially. Now I would say that we have the conditions in Brazil for the independent operators to come and to take over these mature fields.”