非常规/复杂油藏

非常规页岩油藏遇到癌症基因组测序

ATCE 上提出的一个案例研究将医学科学推向了新的高度——进入二叠纪盆地深处,应用于井下储层排水诊断。

具有 DNA 链和数据背景的数字屏幕。 双螺旋结构。 核酸序列。 基因研究。 3d 插图。
资料来源:JuSun/Getty Images/iStockphoto。

技术的跨行业开发和应用是创新和匠心的缩影。行业越是多元化,思维方式的独特性就越让人印象深刻。

石油和天然气行业与其他行业之间的技术转让并不是什么新鲜事。在医学、太空探索以及可再生和可持续技术中可以找到许多例子本期JPT重点介绍了Oceaneering Space Systems和Impossible Sensing Energy的技术。

2023 年 SPE 年度技术会议暨展览会上提出的案例研究将医学科学推向了新的高度——进入二叠纪盆地深处进行井下储层排水诊断 (RDD)。

合著者是雪佛龙科技风险投资公司 (Chevron Technology Ventures, CTV) 的地下和油井经理以及分会经理、监测、分析和优化以及试点人员,他们描述了在成功的概念验证 (POC) 测试中使用基因组测序进行癌症检测和治疗2017 年至 2019 年进行。

Nampetch Yamali 和 Daniel Emery 在SPE 215052中解释了 CTV 如何在 2017 年接受确定评估垂直排水尺寸的技术的任务,以估计压裂井的排水量。目标是最大限度地减少补偿井和共同开发的干扰,以优化非常规油田的油藏采收率。

当时的技术及其能力是有限的。尽管上游资产的地下微生物 DNA 测序已在增强杀菌剂和腐蚀抑制、储层最佳点指示器和示踪技术等领域得到应用,但该技术的使用也被认为在通过 RDD 进行水平井开发规划方面具有潜力。

在休斯敦大学生物学和生物化学系学习了用于人类癌细胞识别的基因组测序技术后,CTV 开始转动,并认为该技术可以开发并用于 RDD。

之所以能看到相似之处,是因为 RDD 使用原位地下微生物 DNA 来推断水平井压裂后流体排出的深度,并优化垫上的井距,尤其是在叠层油藏中。

预测分析平台利用非侵入性 DNA 测试工具绘制了地质分区的碳氢化合物足迹图。RDD 的独特 DNA 标记是从水平和垂直钻井段的泥浆和岩屑中提取的。还收集了产出液中的 DNA。

作者写道,“在井口每隔两到四个星期收集的产出流体被映射到 RDD 框架。它们的“血统可追溯到”页岩和致密岩石。这些位置的引流高度和贡献百分比是通过适应 DNA 测序和数据分析管道来计算的,这些管道是为谱系追踪癌细胞、从原发肿瘤分裂并转移到远处部位回到起源组织而开发的。

在验证 DNA 提取后,CTV 仅使用 DNA 数据进行了盲测,以确定垫上四个孔中每个孔的着陆区域。亚马里和埃默里表示,利用聚类方法,盲测的结果在可接受的范围内准确识别了所有着陆区域。

试验的下一步是分析产生的液体的 DNA。“初步结果显示了每口水平井的排水高度估计值。”

2021 年,该研究继续在二叠纪盆地进行了四次新的现场试验,将该技术应用于分区生产识别。作者写道,“虽然 POC 的结果是积极的,但地下 DNA RDD 技术是石油和天然气行业的一项新技术,高级应用仍在不断发展。” 这种结合自然会引起更普遍的怀疑,并需要从操作、经济和准确性的角度彻底评估该技术。”

该论文描述了石油工程师、地质学家、微生物学家和地层学家正在进行的跨学科工作,以全面评估这种 RDD 方法。它进一步详细介绍了 CTV 的更广泛方法“加速创新生命周期,从试点阶段到大规模广泛采用”,强调领导者需要支持非传统思维和方法。

2023 年即将结束,我想借此机会代表JPT 编辑审查委员会和 JPT 工作人员祝大家 2024 年一切顺利。

我们将以JPT 成立75 周年纪念活动拉开新的一年的序幕每期都将包含一篇文章,专门介绍JPT覆盖上游行业七年半以来技术和行业实践的演变。一月份,Trent Jacobs 和 Stephen Rassenfoss 将回顾自1999 年JPT 成立50 周年以来的技术进步。自那时起,全球供应量已增加了超过 2500 万桶/日,这在很大程度上要归功于钻井、完井和开采方面的进步。油藏技术。与我们一起探索这些内容以及 25 年前做出的一些预测以及该行业当今令人惊讶的现实。

原文链接/jpt
Unconventional/complex reservoirs

Unconventional Shale Reservoirs Meet Cancer Genome Sequencing

A case study presented at ATCE took medical science to a new low—into the depths of the Permian Basin for application to downhole reservoir drainage diagnostics.

Digital screen with DNA strands and data background. Double helix structure. Nucleic acid sequence. Genetic research. 3d illustration.
Source: JuSun/Getty Images/iStockphoto.

The cross-industry development and application of technologies is the epitome of innovation and ingenuity. The more divergent the industries are, the more the unique ways of thinking strike us as remarkable.

Technology transfer between the oil and gas industry and other sectors isn’t new. Many examples can be found in medical science, space exploration, and renewable and sustainable technologies. In this JPT issue, the technologies of Oceaneering Space Systems and Impossible Sensing Energy are featured.

A case study presented at the 2023 SPE Annual Technical Conference and Exhibition took medical science to a new low—into the depths of the Permian Basin for downhole reservoir drainage diagnostics (RDD).

The coauthors, a subsurface and wells manager and a chapter manager, surveillance, analysis, and optimization and pilots at Chevron Technology Ventures (CTV), described using genome sequencing for cancer detection and treatment in a successful proof-of-concept (POC) test conducted from 2017 to 2019.

Nampetch Yamali and Daniel Emery explained in SPE 215052 how in 2017 CTV was given the task of identifying technology to assess vertical drainage dimensions to estimate drainage volumes from fractured wells. The goal was to minimize interference from offset wells and co‑developments to optimize reservoir recovery in unconventional fields.

At that time, the technologies and their capabilities were limited. Although subsurface microbial DNA sequencing for upstream assets has found applications in enhanced biocide and corrosion inhibition, reservoir sweet spot indicators, and tracer technology, use of the technique was thought also to have potential in horizontal well development planning via RDD.

Learning of a genomic sequencing technique for cancer cell identification in humans at the biology and biochemistry department at the University of Houston, the wheels started turning at CTV with thoughts it could be developed and adopted for RDD.

Similarities were seen because RDD uses in-situ subsurface microbial DNA to infer the depths from which fluids drain after fracturing a horizontal well and optimizes well spacing on a pad, especially in stacked reservoirs.

The predictive analytics platform mapped the hydrocarbon footprints of geologic subzones by using noninvasive DNA testing tools. The unique DNA markers for RDD were extracted from mud and cuttings from the horizontal and vertical drilling sections. DNA from produced fluids was also collected.

The authors wrote, “Produced fluids collected at two-to-four-week intervals at the wellhead are mapped to the RDD framework. They are ‘lineage traced’ back to shale and tight rock. Drainage heights and percentage of contribution from these locations is computed adapting DNA sequencing and data analytics pipelines which were developed for lineage tracing cancer cells, breaking off from the primary tumor and metastasizing to distant sites back to the tissue of origin.”

After validating the DNA extractions, CTV conducted a blind test using only the DNA data to determine the landing zones for each of the four wells in the pad. Using clustering methods, the results of the blind test accurately identified all landing zones within an acceptable margin, according to Yamali and Emery.

The next step in the trial analyzed the DNA of the produced fluids. “Preliminary results showed drainage height estimates for each horizontal well.”

In 2021, the study continued with an additional four new field trials in the Permian Basin for application of the technique to zonal production identification. The authors wrote, “Although the results from the POC were positive, subsurface DNA RDD technology is a novel technique within the oil and gas industry, and advanced applications are still evolving. This combination naturally gives rise to more general skepticism and a need to thoroughly evaluate the technology from operational, economic, and accuracy perspectives.”

The paper describes the ongoing cross-disciplinary work being done by petroleum engineers, geologists, microbiologists, and stratigraphers to fully evaluate this method of RDD. It further details CTV’s wider approach to “accelerate the innovation life cycle, from pilot stages to widespread adoption at scale,” emphasizing the need for leaders’ support for nonconventional thinking and approaches.

As the close of 2023 approaches, I’d like to take this opportunity to wish you the best in 2024 on behalf of the JPT Editorial Review Board and the JPT staff.

We’ll be kicking off the new year with the commemoration of JPT’s 75th anniversary. Each issue will include an article dedicated to the evolution of technology and industry practices over the seven and a half decades JPT has covered the upstream industry. In January, Trent Jacobs and Stephen Rassenfoss will revisit technological advancements since JPT’s 50th anniversary in 1999. Since then, over 25 million B/D have been added to the global supply thanks in very large part to advancements in drilling, completions, and reservoir technologies. Join us as we explore these along with some predictions made 25 years ago and the surprising realities of where the industry stands today.