Bakken EOR 试验将产量提高了 25%

Liberty Resources 的试点项目表明,将生产的天然气与水/表面活性剂 EOR 混合物交替使用,可以提高巴肯页岩的产量并降低成本。

(来源:康菲石油公司)

就像水力压裂的发展引发了页岩革命一样,新的 EOR 技术也有望使那些快速枯竭的油井恢复活力。

页岩的致密性使得水驱和CO 2驱等传统EOR方法无用,因此每口井必须单独处理。总部位于丹佛的 Liberty Resources II LLC 开发顾问 Gordon Pospisil 表示,对这些油井实施 EOR 至关重要,因为生产商采用他所谓的“钻井、压裂和排水”方法只能达到油田产能的 6% 左右。 ”

Liberty Resources II 位于北达科他州 Bakken 和 Three Forks 油田的产量约为 10,000 桶油当量/天。

最好的页岩井已经钻探完毕,因此为了继续增加甚至维持产量,新的开发必须伴随着现有井的增强。EOR 也更具成本效益。

大约 10 年前,生产商开始开发一种逐井 EOR 系统,称为 Huff n' Puff (HnP)。通过 HnP,操作员将气体(通常是现场生产的天然气)高压注入现有油井,然后让油井“浸泡”几天,然后再恢复生产。

虽然这已被证明是有益的,但它需要极高的压力,涉及大型且昂贵的压缩机,而且实际的产量提升很小。为了减少与高压相关的成本和安全问题,Pospisil 和其他人于 2021 年在北达科他州蒙特雷尔县联手进行了巴肯测试。他们的方法包括用水交替注气,或水交替注气(摇摆)。

该试点由 Liberty 与能源与环境研究中心 (EERC) 和 EOR ETC 合作设计、许可和实施。根据 Pospisil 和专家团队撰写的论文摘要,“目标是 1. 将储层重新加压到最小混相压力 (MMP) 以上;2. 证明利用水共注建立静水压力以低表面压力注入气体并提高气体一致性的概念;3. 使用表面活性剂通过改变岩石润湿性和降低界面张力来提高石油采收率。

由于巴肯井比一些页岩气田有更多的井间连通,因此维持每口井的压力需要找到一种方法来控制处理井附近的气体。“我们的重点是使用注水和注气来产生压力,并包括沿井眼的一致性,”他说。

与仅注入气体相比,水的低压缩性使得压力能够快速建立。其目的是减少所需的表面马力、降低成本并提高安全性。水还提供了插入表面活性剂的载体。

该测试是在单口井上进行的。完全商业化涉及一个持续的循环,从关闭/注入/重启过程中的一口井开始,然后一次一次穿过油田。

三次采油过程

“基本上实现了我们的所有目标,”波斯皮希尔说。“我们能够将天然气和水注入目标体积并在储层中建立压力,从而增加能量。然后,当我们将油井恢复生产时,我们看到了石油的反应。”

它们还将天然气和水包含在钻距装置中,消除了对迁移出租赁或与附近油井相互作用的担忧。

此外,他们还观察到“与我们注入的天然气量相比,我们看到的石油响应效率更高。”这些增长与其他生产商之前的现场研究进行了比较,这些研究使用了非常高的天然气注入率而不是 WAG 。

更多的石油,更少的成本

“在注入这一次段塞后,我们能够产出约 8,000 桶增量石油。我们能够以每增量桶约 4 [Mcf] 至 5 Mcf 的速度做到这一点,”他说,这比之前的生产率增加了约 25%。

Pospisil 指出,在 Eagle Ford 页岩,其他实体的项目所需的天然气量是其两到五倍。

“我们能够将天然气和水注入目标体积并在储层中建立压力,从而增加能量。然后,当我们将油井恢复生产时,我们看到了石油反应。”ordon Pospisil,Liberty Resources II LLC

测试的关键是 EOR ETC 的装置,它可以连续注入水和气体。

“这使我们能够在注水和注气之间快速切换,”消除了断开和重新连接天然气和水源所造成的延误,他说。WAG 使他们能够使用更小且成本更低的压缩机。

吞吞吐吐循环
吞吞吐吐循环
这些图表比较了 WAG Huff n’Puff 系统中的注射和生产周期。(来源:Liberty Resources II LLC)

提高采收率实施

Pospisil 和团队对结果感到满意,但在可扩展之前还需要一些改进。一种方法是使用采出水而不是他们在测试中使用的淡水来使其可行。这一变化将使解决方案更具成本效益。

一旦该程序投入商业使用,生产商将进行 7 天的 WAG 注入,然后生产 30 天。注入设备会不断地从一口井旋转到另一口井。

“你可以在一个垫上重复五到十个循环,然后再转移到下一个,”一旦回报开始减少就停止,他说。

他指出,这可以有效地将油井的总产量提高 80% 至 100%。他补充说,它还带来了 ESG 效益。

Pospisil 表示:“从减少地表影响、更好地利用天然气、水和所有基础设施的角度来看,这是一个巨大的 ESG 效益。” 我们认为这是未来的一部分。”

原文链接/hartenergy

Bakken EOR Trial Increased Output by 25%

Liberty Resources' pilot project shows alternating produced gas with water/surfactant EOR mix boosts production and cuts costs in the Bakken Shale.

(Source: ConocoPhillips)

Much as the development of hydraulic fracturing enabled the shale revolution, new EOR techniques are poised to revitalize those quickly-depleting wells.

Shale’s tightness renders useless traditional EOR methods like waterflood and CO2 flood, so each well must be treated separately. According to Gordon Pospisil, development adviser for Denver-based Liberty Resources II LLC, implementing EOR for these wells is vital because producers can only reach about 6% of a field’s capacity with the approach he called “drill, frac and drain.”

Liberty Resources II produces about 10,000 boe/d from wells in the Bakken and Three Forks plays in North Dakota.

The best shale wells have already been drilled, so to continue to increase—or even maintain—oil production, new development must be accompanied by enhancing existing wells. EOR is also much more cost-effective.

About 10 years ago, producers began developing a well-by-well EOR system known as Huff n’ Puff (HnP). With HnP, the operator injects a gas, typically site-produced natural gas, into an existing well at high pressure, then lets the well “soak” for a few days before returning it to production.

While this has proven beneficial, it requires extremely high pressures involving large and expensive compressors, and the actual production boosts are small. In an attempt to reduce both the cost and safety concerns associated with high pressures, Pospisil and others teamed up for a Bakken test in Montrail County, North Dakota, in 2021. Their method involved alternating the gas injection with water, or water alternating gas (WAG).

The pilot was designed, permitted and conducted by Liberty in partnership with the Energy & Environmental Research Center (EERC) and EOR ETC. According to the abstract of a paper authored by Pospisil and a team of experts, “The objectives were to 1. repressure the reservoir above the minimum miscibility pressure (MMP); 2. prove the concept of using water co-injection to build hydrostatic pressure to inject gas at low surface pressures and to improve gas conformance; and 3. use a surfactant to enhance oil recovery through rock wettability alteration and interfacial tension reduction.”

Because the Bakken has more inter-well communication than some shale plays, maintaining each well’s pressure required finding a way to contain the gas near the treated well. “We were focusing on using water injection as well as gas injection to build pressure, and include the conformance along the wellbore,” he said.

Water’s low compressibility allowed pressure to build quickly compared to injecting just gas. This was designed to reduce the surface horsepower required, mitigate costs and improve safety. The water also provided a vehicle for inserting surfactant.

The test was on a single well. Full commercialization involves an ongoing cycle starting with one well in the shutdown/injection/restart process, then moving across the field one well at a time.

The EOR process

“We essentially met all our objectives,” Pospisil said. “We were able to inject gas and water to target volumes and build pressure in the reservoir, adding energy. Then we saw an oil response when we returned the well to production.”

They also contained the gas and water in the drill spacing unit, eliminating concerns about migrating off-lease or interacting with nearby wells.

In addition, they observed “much higher efficiencies in regards to oil response we saw versus the amount of gas we injected.” Those increases were compared to previous field research, by other producers, which used very high gas injection rates instead of WAG.

More oil, less cost

“We were able to generate about 8,000 barrels of incremental oil after the injection of this single slug. We were able to do that with about 4 [Mcf] to 5 Mcf per incremental barrel,” he said, and that this was an increase of about 25% over the previous production rate.

In the Eagle Ford Shale, projects by other entities required two to five times as much gas, Pospisil noted.

“We were able to inject gas and water to target volumes and build pressure in the reservoir, adding energy. Then we saw an oil response when we returned the well to production.”—Gordon Pospisil, Liberty Resources II LLC

The key to the test was EOR ETC’s unit, which provided continuous injection of water alternating with gas.

“This allowed us to rapidly switch between water and gas injection,” removing delays involved in disconnecting and reconnecting gas and water sources, he said. WAG allowed them to use a much smaller and less costly compressor.

Huff 'n Puff cycle
Huff 'n Puff cycle
These graphics compare injection with production cycles in the WAG Huff n’ Puff system. (Source: Liberty Resources II LLC)

EOR implementation

Pospisil and the team are pleased with the results, but some improvements are needed before it is scalable. One would be making it viable using produced water instead of fresh water, which they used in the tests. That change would make the solution more cost effective.

Once the procedure is commercially available, the producer would do the WAG injection for seven days, then produce the well for 30 days. The injection equipment would continuously rotate from one well to the next.

“You might repeat five to 10 cycles on one pad before moving to the next,” stopping once the returns began to diminish, he said.

That could effectively raise the well’s total production by 80% to 100%, he noted. And it delivers ESG benefits, he added.

“It’s a great ESG benefit,” Pospisil said, “from the standpoint of less surface impact, better utilization of the gas, water and all the infrastructure. We see that as part of the future.”