NSTA:威尔斯报告揭示了值得抓住的重大增长机会

作者:
, 《油田技术》副主编


根据北海过渡管理局 (NSTA) 10 月 12 日发布的 Wells Insight 报告,2022 年总共钻探了 48 口开发井,完成了 12 口勘探和评估井,结果令人失望。

这违背了 NSTA 每年钻探 60 口开发井的基线目标,以帮助减缓产量的持续下降,并帮助确保更大比例的国内生产碳氢化合物。

过去三年中发现了 3.34 亿桶油当量的潜在碳氢化合物,推动了英国能源安全的发展,重要的是,在实现安全国内石油和天然气生产的过程中,迅速对这种可能的资源进行评估和开发。能源转型取得进展。

在已完工的 48 口井中,40 口为生产井,8 口为注水井。这一数字比上一年完成的 62 口有所下降,但开发井总支出为 12.3 亿英镑,仅略低于 2021 年的 13.3 亿英镑,这表明 UKCS 的平均井眼成本有所上升。

已完井主要位于北海中部和北海北部(CNS:已完井24口;NNS:已完井17口);其余部分为北海南部的三口井和设得兰群岛西部的四口井。

UKCS 是一个成熟的盆地,其现有的油井基础设施,特别是 CNS 和 WoS 区域,提供了通过新井和现有井眼的侧线进入各个油藏新区域并提高采收率的机会。

然而,油井活动持续下降。2022 年开钻开发井为 48 口,低于 2021 年的 62 口和 2020 年的 73 口。同样,油井干预从 2020 年的 566 口减少到 2021 年的 522 口,再到 2022 年的 511 口。E&A 井保持稳定,2022 年为 12 口,比 2022 年增加了 2 口。前一年。

油井活动的下降可能会影响资产的生产,使油田接近停产(CoP)临界点。运营商推迟投资从而导致产量下降的情况受到威胁,进而推动 CoP 的临近。

随着油田达到使用寿命并停止生产,油井总库存量稳步减少,并且随着到 2030 年更多油田达到 CoP,这种减少可能会持续下去。

尽管如此,还是有一些令人鼓舞的迹象;今年,关井数量从 785 口减少到 743 口,关井库存减少 5%,因为运营商针对大宗商品价格上涨和确保国内供应的需要,重点采取干预措施,恢复闲置油井的生产。

除恢复关井外的油井干预活动仍然较低,仅完成了 88 个优化作业,保护作业从 235 个减少到 208 个。

2022年开钻的勘探与评价(E&A)井主要位于北海中部和北海北部地区,总支出为2.75亿英镑(中北海地区为2.13亿英镑,北海地区为6200万英镑)。相比之下,2021 年 10 口 E&A 井的投资为 1.79 亿英镑。2022 年,WoS 或 SNS/IS 连续第三年没有 E&A 活动。

NSTA 担心运营商仅完成了预计钻井活动的 60% 左右,并希望看到这一数字大幅改善,因为这让供应链对即将完成的工作量更有信心。

尽管如此,目前运营商表示活动可能会有所增加,他们以高度和中等信心预测,2023 年至 2025 年间将钻探 77 口 E&A 井。

预计这 77 口井中的 12 口将在 2023 年开工,17 口将在 2024 年开工,其余的将在 2025 年开工。

34口井位于北海中部,15口位于北海南部/爱尔兰海,13口位于北海北部/设得兰群岛西部。

NSTA 新创企业总监安迪·布鲁克斯 (Andy Brooks) 表示:

“我们致力于帮助确保英国能源安全,而提高现有设施产量的油井干预措施可以在其中发挥关键作用。现有设施的生产也可以减少碳足迹。”

“我们增加开发钻探以维持国内供应也至关重要,我们对未来几年勘探和评估活动的预计回升感到鼓舞。”

在线阅读文章:https://www.oilfieldtechnology.com/exploration/16102023/nsta-wells-report-reveals-significant-growth-opportunities-to-be-grasped/

 

本文已被标记为以下内容:

石油和天然气新闻


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NSTA: Wells report reveals significant growth opportunities to be grasped

Published by , Deputy Editor
Oilfield Technology,


A disappointing total of 48 development wells were drilled and 12 exploration and appraisal wells completed in 2022, according to the Wells Insight Report, published by the North Sea Transition Authority (NSTA) on 12 October.

This is against a NSTA baseline ambition of 60 development wells drilled per year to help slow the ongoing decline in production and assist in securing a greater proportion of domestically-produced hydrocarbons.

The drive for UK energy security was boosted with 334 million boe of potential hydrocarbons discovered in the past three years, and it is important that appraisal and development of this possible resource is undertaken quickly in the drive to achieve secure domestic oil and gas production as the energy transition progresses.

Of the 48 wells completed, 40 are producers and eight water injectors. The total is down from the previous year in which 62 were completed, but the total development well spend of £1.23 billion was only slightly less than the £1.33 billion in 2021 indicating that average wellbore cost in the UKCS has risen.

The completed wells were mainly in the Central North Sea and Northern North Sea (CNS: 24 wells completed; NNS: 17 wells completed); with the Southern North Sea, three wells, and West of Shetland, four wells, making up the rest.

The UKCS is a mature basin and its existing well infrastructure, in particular the CNS and WoS areas, present opportunities to access new areas of individual reservoirs and increase recovery factors, via new wells and side-tracks from existing wellbores.

However, there is a continuing decline in well activity. There were 48 development wells spudded in 2022, down from 62 in 2021 and 73 in 2020. Similarly, well interventions dropped from 566 in 2020 to 522 in 2021 to 511 in 2022. E&A wells remained steady with 12 in 2022, up two from the previous year.

This decline in well activity could affect assets’ production, with fields approaching a cessation of production (CoP) tipping point. A situation is threatened in which operators delay investment which leads to declining production, in turn pushing CoP closer.

Total well stock has reduced steadily as fields reach the end of their lives and cease production, and this reduction is likely to continue with more fields reaching CoP by 2030.

There are nonetheless encouraging signs; the year has seen a reduction in shut-in wells from 785 to 743, a 5% reduction in shut-in well stock, as operators focused on intervention to restore production from idle wells reacting to increased commodity prices and the need to secure domestic supply.

Well intervention activity other than restoring shut-ins remained low with only 88 optimisation jobs completed and a decrease in safeguarding jobs from 235 to 208.

The Exploration and Appraisal (E&A) wells that were spudded in 2022 were mainly in the Central North Sea and Northern North Sea areas, with a total spend of £275 million (£213 million in the CNS and £62 million in the NNS). This compares with £179 million in 2021 for 10 E&A wells. For the third year running, there was no E&A activity in the WoS or SNS/IS in 2022.

The NSTA is concerned that operators only achieve around 60% of their projected drilling activity, and wants to see that figure substantially improve, as it gives supply chain greater confidence in the volume of work coming through.

Nonetheless currently operators suggest that activity may pick-up, they forecast, with high and moderate confidence, that 77 E&A wells which will be drilled between 2023 – 2025.

12 of these 77 wells are forecast in 2023, 17 in 2024 with the remainder in 2025.

34 wells are in Central North Sea, 15 in the Southern North Sea/Irish Sea, 13 in the Northern North Sea/West of Shetland.

Andy Brooks, NSTA Director of New Ventures, said:

“We are committed to helping ensure UK energy security and well interventions which increase production from existing facilities can play a key role in that. Production from existing facilities can also have a lower carbon footprint.”

“It is also vitally important that we increase development drilling in order to sustain domestic supply, and we are encouraged by the forecast pick-up on Exploration and Appraisal activity in the next few years.”

Read the article online at: https://www.oilfieldtechnology.com/exploration/16102023/nsta-wells-report-reveals-significant-growth-opportunities-to-be-grasped/

 

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