通过自动化优化高压气举

高压气举 (HGPL) 方法受到页岩油运营商(包括二叠纪盆地)的欢迎,该方法侧重于注入深度、注入速率、流动截面面积和流动井口压力,以最大限度地提高油井的价值。

Wolf HGPL 没有机械井下部件,代表了气举的替代方法。(来源:Etis 压缩)

高压气举(HGPL)作为一种非常规油田的人工举升方法正在受到越来越多的关注。

Estis Compression 的 Wolf HPGL 方法在井下不使用任何机械部件。相反,所有设备都位于顶部,可以根据需要在井之间移动。在首次现场试验后不到五年,Etis 正致力于通过自动化来优化 Wolf HPGL。

Estis 的人工举升专家维克多·乔丹 (Victor Jordan) 表示,人工举升方法对操作员来说很有趣,因为它可以加速生产,并且没有其他人工举升方法(例如电潜泵 (ESP))带来的一些缺点。

Hart-Energy-2022 年 10 月_Estis-压缩优化-高压气升_Victor-Jordan_headshot“在过去五年里,升力已经获得了如此大的关注。”Etis Compression 的 Ericor Jordan

他说,ESP 在沙地层中更容易发生故障。由于安装在井下,维护或更换 ESP 时必须停止生产。

乔丹表示,由于推迟生产会降低资产价值,“经营者希望尽可能加快产量。”

此外,运营商正在寻求尽可能增加产量,并通过人工举升来维持产量,他说。

需要压力

“这就是气举,只是气举的一种不同方法,”他说。

Estis 的 Wolf HPGL 系统将压缩天然气注入整个生产管柱,因此气体在整个深度处从开放式管道中排出。在那里,它与油、水和地层气结合,降低液柱密度和井底压力。井液通过环空较大的流动面积被提升到地面。

该系统需要在地面安装一台进给压缩机,将压力从 80 psi 提高到 1,200 psi,而一台更小的增压压缩机“提升沃尔夫”则进一步将天然气压力从 1,200 psi 提高到 5,500 psi磅/平方英寸。该数字由井底静态压力决定。

“许多气举设计都是围绕阀门间距、阀门尺寸、设定深度进行的,”乔丹说。“井下没有机械部件。我们担心注入深度、注入速度、流通截面积、流动井口压力。这些是我们关心的四个变量,以实现资产价值最大化。”

乔丹表示,由于非常规油井生产剖面的动态特性,运营商试图选择能够应对生产流剧烈变化的人工举升系统。

他说,与其他形式的人工举升系统相比,Wolf HPGL 系统的资本支出要求要低得多。原因之一是该系统唯一的井下组件是开口油管。他说,所有控制都发生在表面。Wolf HPGL 可出租。

“需要具备高压能力并不是为了油井的使用寿命。可能需要 3 到 18 个月,”乔丹说。

他补充说,当井底压力下降足够多时,系统可以转移到另一口井。

首次试点超过 1,600 个应用程序

2017 年,Etis 和 EOG Resources Inc. 进行了 Wolf HPGL 试点项目,2018 年,Etis “开始投入大量资金建设大量(Wolf)装置,”Jordan 说。

2018 年,Wolf HPGL 系统快速增长,2019 年,Etis 扩展到 Midcon。

“我们在 2018 年和 2019 年迅速扩大了 Wolf 机队,然后新冠疫情爆发了,”他说。“就像行业中的其他公司一样,我们放慢了速度。”

他补充说,2021 年下半年,该公司恢复了 Wolf 装置的建设。截至 9 月,Wolf HPGL 系统已有 1,600 多个应用。

他表示,Wolf HPGL 下一阶段的优化目标是维持或提高基础生产水平、降低成本并保持高效率。这需要数据收集、数据分析和算法来实现系统自动化。

“我们快到了,”乔丹说。

该系统的使用提高了产量。

他说,“客户发现该油井的现值增加了 20 万至 70 万美元”,具体取决于石油价格。

SM Energy Co. 2019 年在二叠纪盆地的部署表明“PGL 可以与 ESP 的输出相匹配,”他说。

测试范围涉及 SM Energy 在德克萨斯州大斯普林附近的一个平台上的八口油井。Wolf HPGL 安装在一口井上,其他井作为配备传统 ESP 的对照组。根据比较油井数据,预计液体日产量为 4,000 至 4,500 桶/天。

Wolf HPGL 井的垂直深度为 8,150 英尺,并配有配备传感器的智能分离器。该系统处理的横向长度为 10,000 英尺。生产套管外径为 5 1/2 英寸。

根据 Estis 的说法,使用 Wolf HPGL,SM 能够将吸入注入深度比 ESP 低 600 英尺,并且它的含油量是平台上所有油井中最高的。

2019 年和 2020 年初,Devon Energy Corp. 在特拉华盆地的 Burton Flat Deep 油田将 Wolf HPGL 与传统气举进行了比较。他表示,Wolf HPGL 试验的产量比传统气举提升了 37%,“证明了加速生产的价值主张”。

对于 Devon,两口井使用 Wolf HPGL,七口井使用传统气举,并对前 356 天的生产进行了分析。据 Estis 称,两口 Wolf HPGL 井的性能比七口传统气举井的初始平均产量高出 123%,总流体产量总体增加了 37%。

该系统已用于北美所有主要非常规石油开采区。

“过去五年里,电梯获得了如此大的吸引力,”他说。

原文链接/hartenergy

Optimizing High-Pressure Gas Lift through Automation

Gaining traction among shale operators—including in the Permian Basin, the high-pressure gas lift (HGPL) method focuses on injection depth, injection rate, cross-sectional flow area and flowing wellhead pressure to maximize the value of wells.

The Wolf HGPL has no mechanical downhole parts and represents an alternative approach to gas lift. (Source: Estis Compression)

High-pressure gas lift (HGPL) is gaining traction as an artificial lift method for unconventional fields.

Estis Compression’s Wolf HPGL method uses no mechanical parts downhole. Instead, all equipment is topside and can be moved from well to well as needed. A scant five years after its first field trial, Estis is working to optimize Wolf HPGL through automation.

Victor Jordan, artificial lift specialist at Estis, said the artificial lift method is interesting to operators because it can accelerate production without some of the downsides that come with other artificial lift approaches, such as electrical submersible pumps (ESPs).

Hart-Energy-October-2022_Estis-Compression-Optimizing-High-Pressure-Gas-Lift_Victor-Jordan_headshot“Gas lift has gotten so much traction in the last five years.”—Victor Jordan, Estis Compression

ESPs are more prone to failure in sandy formations, he said. Due to being placed downhole, production must be shut in when ESPs are maintained or replaced.

Because deferring production reduces the value of an asset, Jordan said, “operators want to accelerate barrels as much as possible.”

Additionally, operators are seeking to increase their production as much as feasible and to sustain that output through artificial lift, he said.

It takes pressure

“It’s gas lift, just a different approach to gas lift,” he said.

Estis’ Wolf HPGL system injects compressed, natural gas down the entire production string, so the gas exits open-ended tubing at total depth. There, it combines with oil, water, and formation gas, reducing fluid column density and bottom hole pressure. The well fluids are lifted to the surface through the larger flow area of the annulus.

The system requires a feed compressor at the surface, which takes pressure from 80 psi to 1,200 psi, and a smaller booster compressor—Estis’ Wolf—that further increases the pressure of the natural gas from 1,200 psi to as much as 5,500 psi. That number is dictated by static bottomhole pressure.

“A lot of gas lift design has been around valve spacing, valve sizing, set depth,” Jordan said. “We have no mechanical parts downhole. We worry about injection depth, injection rate, cross-sectional flow area, flowing wellhead pressure. Those are the four variables we care about to maximize the value of assets.”

Because of the dynamic nature of unconventional well production profiles, Jordan said operators try to choose an artificial lift system that can handle drastic changes in the production stream.

The Wolf HPGL system has a much lower capex requirement than other forms of artificial lift, he said. One reason is because the system’s only downhole component is open-ended tubing. All the control happens at the surface, he said. Wolf HPGL is available as a rental.

“The need to have that high-pressure capability is not for the lifetime of the well. It can be from three to 18 months,” Jordan said.

When the bottomhole pressure has declined enough, the system can move to another well, he added.

First pilot to 1,600+ applications

In 2017, Estis and EOG Resources Inc. did a Wolf HPGL pilot project, and in 2018, Estis “started to invest a lot of capital in building a lot of (Wolf) units,” Jordan said.

2018 saw rapid growth of the Wolf HPGL system, and in 2019, Estis expanded into the Midcon.

“We were rapidly expanding the Wolf fleet in 2018, 2019, then COVID hit,” he said. “Like the rest of the industry, we slowed down.”

In the back half of 2021, the company resumed building out Wolf units, he added. As of September, there had been over 1,600 applications of Wolf HPGL systems.

The next phase for Wolf HPGL—optimizing it—seeks to maintain or increase the base production levels, lower costs and maintain high efficiency, he said. That takes data gathering, data analytics and an algorithm to automate the system.

“We’re getting there,” Jordan said.

Uses of the system have resulted in increased production.

“Customers are seeing a $200,000 to $700,000 increase in the present value of the well,” depending on the price of oil, he said.

A 2019 deployment in the Permian Basin for SM Energy Co. demonstrated that “HPGL can match the output of ESPs,” he said.

The scope of the test involved eight of SM Energy’s wells on a single pad near Big Spring, Texas. Wolf HPGL was installed on one well, with the others serving as a control group featuring conventional ESPs. Daily production between 4,000 and 4,500 bbl/d of liquids based on comparative well data was anticipated.

The Wolf HPGL well had a vertical depth of 8,150 ft and smart separators featuring sensors. The system treated a lateral length of 10,000 ft. The production casing was 5 1/2 in. OD.

With the Wolf HPGL, SM had the ability to land the intake injection depth 600 ft lower than with ESPs, and it had the highest oil cut of any well on the pad, according to Estis.

In 2019 and early 2020, Devon Energy Corp. compared Wolf HPGL with conventional gas lift in their Burton Flat Deep Field in the Delaware Basin. The Wolf HPGL trial delivered a 37% increase over conventional gas lift and “demonstrated the value proposition of accelerating production,” he said.

For Devon, two wells used Wolf HPGL and seven used conventional gas lift, and the first 356 days of production were analyzed. The two Wolf HPGL wells outperformed the seven conventional gas lift wells by an average initial 123% and an overall 37% increase in total fluid production, according to Estis.

The system has been used in all the main unconventional oil plays in North America.

“Gas lift has gotten so much traction in the last five years,” he said.