二叠纪的水里有东西,这是一个问题

大大小小的公司都在想办法管理二叠纪盆地前所未有的采出水量。

目前,二叠纪盆地每产出一桶石油,就会产生约四桶采出水,其中含有高浓度的盐、重金属和其他有毒物质。(来源:Shutterstock)

二叠纪盆地每产出一桶石油,都会伴随几桶水。目前,大约有4桶石油,而且水油比还在上升。而且,这不仅仅是水,而是“采出水”,其中含有高浓度的盐、重金属和其他有毒物质。

据水资源数据和情报公司B3 Insight预测,到 2030 年,二叠纪盆地的石油产量预计将超过 650 万桶/天,水产量预计将超过 2600 万桶/天。压裂作业人员用水和沙子对二叠纪盆地的页岩进行爆破,以释放岩石中的石油和天然气,而水则与燃料一起浮出水面。

B3 表示,二叠纪盆地“正在产生数量空前的采出水,这是碳氢化合物开采昂贵而复杂的副产品”。 “有效地管理这些水将决定该盆地下一阶段的演变。”

在垂直井时代,这些废弃物可以简单地泵回其来源地。但有了水平钻井和水力压裂,这是不可能的。

分析师豪斯利·卡尔 (Housley Carr) 8 月份在 RBN Energy 的每日博客上写道,这种组合“打开了之前不透水的岩石,让石油和相关天然气(以及采出水)流出,但不会让采出水回流”。

该行业最初依靠注入井来处理废物,B3 表示,这种方法变得越来越困难,“原因是产量不断增加,以及为应对地层压力过大造成的地震风险而出台的监管限制”。地震风险就是地震,例如 2 月份在卡尔伯森县和里夫斯县边界附近发生的 5.0 级地震。

新墨西哥州多年来一直限制注入井,这迫使水务公司将水输送到州界线以外的德克萨斯州。如今,德克萨斯州铁路委员会也对注入井采取了更强硬的措施。

Aris Water Solutions首席执行官阿曼达·布洛克 (Amanda Brock) 在二月份于德克萨斯州糖城举行的生产水协会会议上更简单地说道:“你意识到你必须以不同的方式去做这件事。”

变革正在开始。B3指出,像Aris和Deep Blue这样的大型运营商正在向水利基础设施投入巨资,中游企业也在扩大水处理和循环利用能力。让水恢复饮用水的成本高得令人望而却步。一个更可行的方案是提取足够多的盐分,以便用于农业。

B3 产品副总裁帕特里克·巴顿 (Patrick Patton) 表示,真正的问题在于规模。

“即使你能轻松获得许可证,要完成所有这些工作,规模仍然非常庞大,”巴顿告诉《石油和天然气投资者》。“二叠纪盆地的石油产量比世界上任何其他地方都多,因此其水资源也比世界上任何其他地方都多。你需要多种解决方案。”

许多规模较小的公司也加入了竞争,例如 Cavitation Technologies、374Water、Espiku 和 Lithium Harvest 等公司。

空化技术

Cavitation Technologies Inc. (CTi) 于 2008 年开始运营,旨在利用其标志性的纳米空化技术加工生物柴油。多年来,CTi 的技术一直用于加工植物油和净化水。

顾名思义,空化是指液体中形成空腔,通常由低压引起。CTi 和 Intelligent Water Solutions 正在合作开发采出水处理技术。

“基本上,我们是在制造微小的气泡,”智能水解决方案公司总裁杜安·杰梅尼斯 (Duane Germenis) 说道。“我们会将水送入文丘里(水射流泵),并产生大量的微气泡。当泵发生空化时,压力会下降,从而产生微小的气泡,这些气泡会杀死其中的任何东西。细菌、酶、蛋白质,以及传统油水分离技术无法去除的所有物质。”

根据其新闻稿,CTi 与 Enviro Watertek 合作,在 2020 年至 2022 年间处理了二叠纪盆地约 300 万桶水。首席执行官 Neil Voloshin 表示,现在,该公司正在适应二叠纪盆地的新需求。CTi 表示,该系统正在德克萨斯州一家大型水修复公司进行测试。

沃洛申说,该过程不需要化学品,大大降低了运营成本。

杰梅尼斯表示,二叠纪产出水含盐量高是一个大问题。

“除了去除水中的污染物、碳氢化合物和其他物质外,[空化]还能淡化海水,”他说。“这虽然不是主要驱动力,但却带来了不错的附带好处。现在有人带着空化技术和等离子技术来找我们,说‘伙计,这看起来真有意思。’所以,我们正处于这个阶段,它即将迎来爆发。”

锂的收获

采出水中发现的固体物质之一是锂,它用于制造电动汽车和笔记本电脑所需的锂离子电池。氢氧化锂的价格约为每公斤10美元,预计未来需求将大幅增长。

Lithium Harvest 联合创始人兼首席执行官 Sune Mathiesen 在 2 月份于 Sugar Land 举行的生产水协会会议上表示,Lithium Harvest 成立于 2020 年,旨在满足对更可持续、更高效的锂电池化合物生产方式日益增长的需求。

马蒂森说:“我们可以将采出水的废物转化为价值,我们可以从石油中流出的每一层石油或水中增加利润。”

Lithium Harvest 在现场建造了锂提取和精炼设施,从而省去了运输成本。

“我们生产锂,然后将其发送给电池制造商,电池制造商再将其发送给电动汽车制造商,”马蒂森说道。目前,电动汽车正在推动锂的需求,他预计未来用于电网备用的固定电池的需求将会增加。

一座年产1500吨锂的工厂的计算公式如下:Lithium Harvest可以在10个月内建造一座6.2万平方英尺(约6000平方米)的工厂,资本支出约为1800万美元。以当前价格计算,该工厂每年将创造2500万美元的收入——但如果锂价上涨,则收入将大幅增加。Lithium Harvest可以自筹资金建造该工厂,也可以与石油生产商合作。

“我们将当今的废物(这是当今的一个大问题)转化为利润丰厚的资产,用于处理水并重新注入,”马蒂森说。“您可以根据我们的位置将其重新用于灌溉,如果有商业案例,我们可以以最快的速度部署和回报。”

374水

科学课:水在压力和温度下形成的不同形态——液体、气体、固体——相。

在足够的热量和压力下,水会进入一种称为“超临界”的阶段。所需的组合是 221 巴的压力(1 巴是地球的正常地面压力)和 374 摄氏度(705 华氏度)的温度,现在你知道 374Water 名字的由来了吧。

374Water 将空气与一种名为超临界水氧化(AirSCWO)的工艺相结合,用于处理多种工业废物。该工艺溶解进料中的所有碳物质和氧气,形成由水、溶解气体和无机物组成的水流。水流冷却后,气体被排出,无机物则转化为灰烬。

“这对于分解你不想要的水或正在处理的废物中的任何有机物非常有帮助,”374Water 的应用工程师 Naomi Senehi 在生产水协会会议上说道。

“无机物只是沉淀出来,”她说道,“当你试图保存锂或其他盐类时,它们会以保存状态从溶液中析出,之后你可以回收它们。”

塞内希表示,超临界水氧化(SCWO)的反应时间约为6秒。该过程会排放二氧化碳甲烷。374Water公司通过系统回收热量,以节省能源。

AirSCWO 已用于美国政府从地下水样本中销毁 PFAS(永久性化学物质)。该公司表示,它已做好准备,充分利用 PFAS 销毁需求的增长。该公司还在为加州奥兰治县卫生局开发一套系统。

塞内希表示,该工艺也适用于采出水。

“如果你的水恰好含有非常高的有机物,我们会喜欢它,因为有机物为这个过程提供了燃料,但你也可能只是有一些含有高浓度的一些有价值的无机物,你想回收它们,”她说。

374水
374Water 利用超临界水氧化技术处理工业废水(包括采出水),该工艺可溶解进料中的所有碳物质和氧气,最终生成水、溶解气体和无机物。(来源:374 Water)

埃斯皮库

Espiku是12月选定与哈里伯顿实验室合作的五家能源初创公司之一。哈里伯顿的子公司通过提供设施、网络和融资来帮助企业扩大规模。

Espiku 的系统将采出水转化为可供重复使用的清洁水,同时回收一些潜在有用的矿物质。

“我们提出的技术从水开始——回收、再利用,保持水的清洁,并以此创造价值,”创始人、俄勒冈州立大学能源系统工程副教授巴赫曼·阿巴斯 (Bahman Abbasi) 说道。“我们大幅减少了需要处理的用水量。”

Espiku 正在进行一项试点项目,该项目将对采出水进行三阶段分离过程:

” 首先是简单的密度分离,去除大部分油和重有机物质;

“接下来是除湿过程——这才是我们技术的核心,”阿巴斯说,“它的设计目的是将水从系统中排出,而不会污染整个系统。”

“最后阶段将气流中的水凝结出来。

试点的目标是证明该系统可以在最少的人为干预下良好运行,提供达到实验室测试水质的水,并且具有经济效益。

侧流会因地点而异,但通常含有有用的锂、镁、钴和镍。阿巴斯表示,在二叠纪盆地钻探这些资源并不经济,但它们可以成为一种有利可图的副产品,帮助企业节省运输、注入和储存成本。

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There’s Something in the Permian’s Water, and That’s a Problem

Companies big and small are figuring out how to manage the Permian Basin’s unprecedented volume of produced water.

Currently, every barrel of oil produced in the Permian Basin comes with about four barrels of produced water, which contains high concentrations of salt, heavy metals and other toxic substances. (Source: Shutterstock)

Every barrel of oil produced in the Permian Basin comes with a few barrels of water attached. Right now, it’s about 4 bbl, and the water-to-oil ratio is rising. Also, it’s not just water, it’s “produced water,” containing high concentrations of salt, heavy metals and other toxic substances.

By 2030, the Permian is expected to produce more than 6.5 MMbbl/d of oil and more than 26 MMbbl/d of water, according to B3 Insight, a water data and intelligence firm. Frac crews blast the shale in the Permian with water and sand to release the oil and gas in the rock, and the water comes up with the fuels.

The Permian is “generating an unprecedented volume of produced water—a costly and complex byproduct of hydrocarbon extraction,” B3 said. “Managing this deluge efficiently will define the next phase of the basin’s evolution.”

In the days of vertical wells, this waste product could simply be pumped back where it came from. With horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing, that’s not possible.

The combination “opens up previously impermeable rock for oil and associated gas (and produced water) to flow out—but not for produced water to flow back in,” analyst Housley Carr wrote on RBN Energy’s daily blog in August.

The industry initially relied on injection wells to get rid of the waste, an approach that B3 said is becoming more difficult “due to rising volumes and regulatory restrictions in response to seismic risk due to over-pressurized formations.” The seismic risk is earthquakes, like the magnitude 5.0 tremor that struck near the Culberson County-Reeves County border in February.

New Mexico has restricted injection wells for years, which prompted companies to carry water across the state line to Texas. Now the Railroad Commission of Texas is also taking a harder line against injection wells.

Aris Water Solutions CEO Amanda Brock said it more simply at the Produced Water Society conference in February in Sugar Land, Texas: “There’s this realization that you’re going to have to do it differently.”

The change is beginning. B3 points out that big operators like Aris and Deep Blue are pouring money into water infrastructure and midstream firms are expanding water treatment and recycling capacity. It’s prohibitively expensive to make the water drinkable again. A more feasible option is to pull out enough of the salts so that the water can be used for agriculture.

The real problem is scale, said Patrick Patton, vice president of product at B3.

“It’s still a massive scale to treat, to do all that, even if you could easily get permits,” Patton told Oil and Gas Investor. “The Permian’s producing more oil than anywhere else in the world, and so that’s more water than anywhere else in the world. You need a combination of solutions.”

A host of smaller firms are entering the fray—companies like Cavitation Technologies, 374Water, Espiku and Lithium Harvest.

Cavitation technologies

Cavitation Technologies Inc. (CTi) started operations in 2008 with the intent of using its signature nanocavitation technology to process biodiesel fuel. Over the years, CTi’s technology has been used to process vegetable oils and to clean water.

Cavitation is what it sounds like—the formation of cavities in liquid, generally brought about by low pressure. CTi and Intelligent Water Solutions are partnering to develop the technology for treating produced water.

“Basically, we’re creating tiny bubbles,” said Duane Germenis, president of Intelligent Water Solutions. “We’re going to send water through a Venturi [water jet pump] and create a lot of microbubbles. When a pump cavitates, it’s going to have this pressure drop, and you’re going to create tiny, tiny bubbles, and it’s going to kill anything in its place. The bacteria, the enzymes, the protein, whatever is in there that we can’t get with traditional oily water separation.”

CTi treated about 3 MMbbl of water in the Permian Basin from 2020 to 2022 in a partnership with Enviro Watertek, according to its news release. Now it’s adapting to the new expectations in the Permian, CEO Neil Voloshin said. The system is being tested at a major water remediation company in Texas, CTi said.

The procedure works without chemicals, Voloshin said, significantly reducing operational costs.

Germenis said the high saline levels of Permian produced water are a big issue.

“Besides removing contaminants and hydrocarbons and anything else that’s in the water, [cavitation] can desalinate it,” he said. “That wasn’t the driver, but it was a nice side benefit. And we have people coming to us with the cavitation technology and the plasma technology saying, man, this looks interesting. So, we’re right at that, where it’s about to take off.”

Lithium harvest

One of the solids found in produced water is lithium, which is used in the lithium-ion batteries that power electric vehicles and laptop computers. Lithium hydroxide goes for about $10 a kilogram, and demand is expected to rise well into the future.

Lithium Harvest was founded in 2020 to address the growing demand for more sustainable and efficient ways to produce lithium battery compounds, co-founder and CEO Sune Mathiesen said at the Produced Water Society conference in Sugar Land in February.

“We can transform the waste of produced water into value, we can increase profit from every level of oil or water that is coming out of the oil,” Mathiesen said.

Lithium Harvest builds a lithium extraction and refining facility on site, taking out transportation costs.

“We produce the lithium and send it off to the battery manufacturer, who then sends it off to the EV manufacturer,” Mathiesen said. EVs are driving lithium demand now, and he expects stationary batteries for grid backup to increase demand in the future.

The math for a plant that can produce 1,500 metric tons of lithium per year works like this: Lithium Harvest can build a 62,000-sf facility in 10 months with a capital expenditure of about $18 million. The plant will generate $25 million a year in revenue at current prices—more, if the price of lithium rises. Lithium Harvest can build the plant with its own money or form a partnership with the oil producer.

“We transform something that is waste today, which is a big problem today, into a lucrative asset we can reuse to treat the water for reinjection,” Mathiesen said. “You can reuse it for irrigation depending on where we’re located, and if there’s a business case for the water, we have the fastest deployment and returns.”

374Water

Science lesson: The different forms of water—liquid, gas, solid—are phases formed by pressure and temperature.

With enough heat and pressure, water enters a phase called “supercritical.” The combination required is pressure of 221 bars (1 bar is normal ground-level pressure on Earth) and temperature of 374 degrees Celsius (705 Fahrenheit), and now you know where 374Water got its name.

374Water combines air with a process called supercritical water oxidation, or AirSCWO, to treat many forms of industrial waste. It dissolves all carbon materials and oxygen in the feed, resulting in a stream of water, dissolved gases and inorganics. The water cools, the gases are vented and the inorganics turn to ash.

“This is really helpful to break apart any organics that you don’t want in your water or your waste that you’re treating,” said Naomi Senehi, an applications engineer at 374Water presenting at the Produced Water Society conference.

“Inorganics just precipitate out,” she said. “When you have things like lithium or some other salts that you’re trying to preserve, those will come out of your solution preserved and you can recover them later.”

The reaction time for SCWO is about 6 seconds, Senehi said. The process does emit CO2 and methane. 374Water recycles the heat back through the system to save energy.

AirSCWO has been used to destroy PFAS, “forever chemicals,” from groundwater samples for the U.S. government, and the company says it’s in position to capitalize on increased demand for PFAS destruction. It’s also developing a system for the Orange County Sanitation District in California.

Senehi said the process can apply to produced water as well.

“If you have water that happens to have really high organics, we like that because organics fuel the process, but you could also just have something that has a high concentration of some valuable inorganics that you want to recover,” she said.

374 water
374Water uses supercritical water oxidation to treat industrial waste, including produced water, in a process that dissolves all carbon materials and oxygen in the feed, resulting in water, dissolved gases and inorganics. (Source: 374 Water)

Espiku

Espiku is one of five energy startups selected in December to collaborate with Halliburton Labs. The Halliburton subsidiary helps businesses scale up by providing access to facilities, networks and financing.

Espiku’s systems turn produced water into clean water for reuse, recovering some potentially useful minerals along the way.

“We are proposing a technology that starts with water—recycles, reuses, just keeping the water clean and creating value that way,” said founder Bahman Abbasi, an associate professor of energy systems engineering at Oregon State University. “We drastically reduce the amount that needs to be disposed.”

Espiku is working on a pilot project that will put produced water through a three-stage separation process:

• First is a simple density separation that removes most of the oil and heavy organic materials;

• Next is a dehumidification process “that is really the core of our technology,” Abbasi said. “It’s designed to get water out of the system without fouling up the whole place” and

• The final stage condenses water out of the gaseous stream.

The pilot’s goals are to show the system can run well with minimal human intervention, deliver the quality of water reached in lab tests and work financially.

The side streams will vary depending on location, but they will typically contain useful amounts of lithium, magnesium, cobalt and nickel. It wouldn’t make economic sense to drill for any of these in the Permian but they can be a profitable byproduct and help companies save on the cost of transportation, injection and storage, Abbasi said.

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