通电:纳伯斯 (Nabors)、赫斯 (Hess) 为巴肯钻井作业电气化

Hess 估计,将这四台 Nabors 钻机连接到电网将使该公司巴肯钻井作业的温室气体排放量减少 50%,能源成本减少 70%。

有些项目是显而易见的。提议:用电网电力取代钻机的柴油发电,从而降低排放和成本。

当赫斯工程师向赫斯巴肯钻井和完井总监维琪·杰克逊·尼尔森提出这一建议时,她很快就同意了。

尼尔森告诉哈特能源公司,这一转变提供了一个改善运营和可持续性的机会,同时在实现赫斯的一些温室气体目标方面发挥了作用。

她说,巴肯的钻井和完井业务只是赫斯整体运营和排放源的一小部分,“但每一次减少都会有所帮助。”

“当我们意识到这可以节省我们的钱时,这对我们来说是一个额外的机会,有点额外的效果。我的立场是,“如果能实现收支平衡,我愿意这样做,”她说。“当有人说,‘但是这样做实际上可以省钱’,我绝对被这个想法说服了。”

在五年内,Hess 在巴肯运营的四台钻井平台从柴油发电改为电网供电,预计将减少 50% 的温室气体排放和近 70% 的能源成本。

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詹姆斯·霍尔
詹姆斯·霍尔 (James Hall),Nabors 旗下 Canrig 部门能源转型高级总监。 (来源:纳博斯)

Nabors 旗下 Canrig 部门能源转型高级总监詹姆斯·霍尔 (James Hall) 告诉哈特能源公司,该公司的重点是开发技术,为净零排放钻探活动开辟一条道路。

在此过程中,开发了许多不同的产品,包括“智能”电力和发动机管理系统、燃料添加剂、储能技术和PowerTAP Highline电力变压器模块。他说,PowerTAP 的目标是通过使用电网电力为钻井作业提供动力来取代柴油发电机。

Nabors 与 Hess 合作首次推出 PowerTAP,将钻机连接到电网,并根据需要在电力和柴油发电机组之间切换。

开发 PowerTAP 并不简单。

“我们最关注的是拥有适合所有不同市场的解决方案。我们不会在美国某一地区只有一个电网的地方运行钻机。他说,我们在全国范围内使用不同的电压连接到不同的公用电网。

他说,随着 Nabors 将该技术推广到其他国家,PowerTAP 还具有额外的功能,例如用于解决频率不匹配问题的变频功能。

“PowerTAP 开发的很大一部分是为了确保我们提供的任何解决方案都不会对持续供电产生负面影响。”

霍尔表示,持续供电取决于连接到一致、可靠的电网。他说,如果停电,PowerTAP 具有转换开关功能,可以使柴油发电机恢复在线状态,这一过程很快就会实现自动化。

他说,该系统还必须报告实际用电量。

赫斯·巴肯
X27 钻机。 (来源:赫斯)

“寂静之声”

尼尔森表示,在提出建议后的五个月内,赫斯和纳伯斯将电源切换到纳伯斯为赫斯在巴肯运行的四台钻机中的第一台。

该项目于 2022 年上线需要进行规划和协调,包括与 Nabors 签订合同协议并准备必要的设备。

尼尔森表示,Hess 选择在 East Nesson 地区使用 X27 钻机试点电力钻机电源,因为该钻机能够获得 Mountrail-Williams 电力合作社 (MWEC) 的持续供电。

Nabors 安排了变压器和为钻机上每台设备供电所需的设备,并安装了 Canrig PowerTAP Highline 电力变压器模块来获取高线电力。

Hess 从 MWEC 购买了一个计量柜,最终与其余配电设备一起委托给 Nabors。MWEC 为井场安装了电源,并协助最终连接到现场的配电设备。

“我们需要与电力公司合作,以确保他们能够提供我们所需的电量,”尼尔森说。

这包括采购变压器、线路、中压线路以及有资格在该电压水平上工作的电工,因为普通钻机电工不具备资格。

“因此,我们的资源、纳伯斯的工程资源、现场人员、电力公司进行了大量的协调,”尼尔森说。

她说,由于以下几个原因,电力业务运行效率更高:发电机不需要增加功率;发动机维护不再需要由运营人员协调;钻机设备;不受发电限制;钻机运行更加高效,并能立即响应不断变化的操作负载。

除此之外,还有另一个好处:安静的声音。

“这里明显安静了。” 事实上,在有风的情况下,你可以听到井架上的管道撞击自身的声音,而你以前在地面上永远听不到这种声音。它明显安静了,”她说。现场的钻井主管最初发现“令人不安,因为太安静了”。

使用电力最初确实引起了人们对每天需要 12,000 千瓦时电力的钻机供电连续性的担忧。

”原本最关心的是持续电力。我们有足够的持续动力吗?然后B,如果我们失去电力,我们该怎么办?”尼尔森说。

之前为钻机供电的柴油发电机仍留在现场,以供移动钻机或风暴中断电力时使用。她说,然后就可以在“合理的时间内,不影响钻井作业”的情况下改用柴油。

尼尔森回忆说,2022 年冬季一场大暴风雪导致北达科他州关闭了一个月,赫斯不得不依赖这些资源。

当钻机移动时,Hess 的油井设施团队与 MWEC 合作,在钻机到达之前准备好电力。Hess 表示,钻机可能需要使用发电机供电的时间不到 10%,可能需要在到达新钻井地点后一两天,以在连接公用电源的情况下处理低负载活动。

在钻井作业的最后一天,井场被移回发电机处,以便公用基础设施可以被拆除并重新安置到下一个位置。

赫斯-巴肯面积
Hess 在巴肯净经营约 465,000 英亩土地,持有约 2.2 Bboe(欧元),估计约 1.7 Bboe 尚未生产。(来源:赫斯)

她说,该试点非常成功,赫斯决定对与赫斯签订合同的其他三台纳伯斯钻机进行同样的改造。Nabors X24 和 X10 于 2023 年 1 月转为线路供电,X28 于 2023 年 4 月跟进。

除了 Nabors 与 Hess 签订合同的 4 台钻机外,Nabors 还在其运营的其他 21 台钻机上提供了 PowerTAP。据 Nabors 称,部署在 Lower 48 地区 Nabors 和非 Nabors 钻机上的 20 多个 PowerTAP 模块的现场结果显示,范围 1 的初始平均减排量相当于每台钻机每天减少 20 公吨 CO 2

依靠电力在巴肯进行钻探预计将帮助赫斯实现其 2025 年减排目标,即与 2017 年水平相比,将运营中的温室气体排放强度和甲烷排放强度减少 50%。

“这对我们来说是一次非常成功的实施。没有什么让我们认为我们需要回到另一个方向并回到柴油发电机,”尼尔森说。“我们看到了我们希望看到的所有好处,但引入新技术时情况并非总是如此。”

原文链接/hartenergy

Power Up: Nabors, Hess Electrify Bakken Drilling Operations

Hess estimates connecting these four Nabors rigs to the grid will reduce greenhouse-gas emissions from the company’s Bakken drilling operations by 50% and energy costs by 70%.

Some projects are no-brainers. The proposition: Replace a drilling rig’s diesel-generated power with power from an electrical grid, lowering emissions and costs.

When Hess engineers approached Vicky Jackson Nielsen, Hess’ director for drilling and completions in the Bakken, with that proposal, it didn’t take her long to agree.

The switch presented an opportunity to improve operations and sustainability while playing a role in meeting some of Hess’ greenhouse-gas targets, Nielsen told Hart Energy.

The drilling and completions business in the Bakken is a small part of Hess’ overall operations and emissions sources, she said — but every reduction helps.

“When we realized that it would save us money, that was an additional opportunity, kind of a little bonus effect for us. I was in the camp of, ‘if it's even breakeven, I'm willing to do it,’” she said. “When somebody said, ‘but you'll actually save money doing it,’ I was definitely sold on the idea.”

Over five years, converting the four rigs Hess has operating in the Bakken from diesel to grid power is expected to reduce associated greenhouse-gas emissions by 50% and energy costs by nearly 70%.

Tapping the grid

James Hall
James Hall, senior director for the energy transition at Canrig, a division of Nabors. (Source: Nabors)

James Hall, senior director for energy transition at Canrig, a division of Nabors, told Hart Energy the company’s focus is on developing technology creating a path to net zero emissions drilling activity.

Along the way, a number of different products have been developed, including a “smart” power and engine management system, fuel additives, energy storage technologies and the PowerTAP Highline Power Transformer Module. The goal with PowerTAP, he said, is to replace diesel generators by making it possible to use electricity from the grid to power drilling operations.

Nabors collaborated with Hess on the initial roll out of PowerTAP to connect the rig to the electrical grid and switch between electrical power and diesel generator-power as needed.

Developing PowerTAP was not straightforward.

“The thing that we put the most amount of focus on is to have a solution that fits all the different markets. We don't run rigs in one part of the U.S. with only one grid. We connect to different utility grids” using different voltages throughout the country, he said.

And as Nabors rolls the technology out to other countries, PowerTAP has additional capabilities, such as frequency conversion to cope with mismatches of frequency, he said.

“A huge part of the development of PowerTAP was to make sure whatever we provide as a solution has no negative effects to the constant supply of power.”

Hall said that constant power supply comes down to being connected to a consistent, reliable grid. If the power does go down, PowerTAP has a transfer switch capability that brings the diesel generators online — a process that will soon be automated, he said.

The system also had to report on the actual amount of electricity used, he said.

Hess Bakken
X27 rig. (Source: Hess)

‘Sounds of silence’

Within five months of the proposal, Hess and Nabors had switched the power source to the first of four rigs Nabors was running for Hess in the Bakken, Nielsen said.

Bringing the project online in 2022 took planning and coordination, including contractual agreements with Nabors and lining up the necessary equipment.

Hess opted to pilot electric rig power with the X27 rig in the East Nesson area based on its access to a continuous power supply from Mountrail-Williams Electric Cooperative (MWEC), Nielsen said.

Nabors arranged for the transformer and the equipment needed to distribute power to every piece of equipment on the rig and installed its Canrig PowerTAP Highline Power Transformer Modules to access highline power.

Hess purchased a metering cabinet from MWEC, that was ultimately consigned to Nabors with the balance of the distribution equipment. MWEC installed the power to the wellsite and assisted with making the final connection to the electrical distribution equipment onsite.

“We needed to work with the power company to make sure that they could supply the amount of power that we needed,” Nielsen said.

That included procuring the transformers, the line, the medium voltage line and electricians qualified to work on that level of voltage since regular rig electricians are not qualified.

“So there was just a lot of coordination of our resources, Nabors’ engineering resources, field personnel, the electric company,”  Nielsen said.

She said operations run more efficiently on electricity for several reasons: generators don’t need to ramp up; engine maintenance no longer needs to be coordinated by operations; rig equipment ;is not constrained by power generation limitations; and the rig runs more efficiently and immediately responds to changing operational loads.

And on top of all that, another benefit: the sound of silence.

“It's significantly quieter. In fact, you can hear the pipe up in the derrick smacking against itself in a windy situation, and you could never hear that before on the ground. It is significantly quieter,” she said. Drilling supervisors on location initially found it “unnerving because it was so quiet.”

Using electricity did initially raise concerns around the continuity of power to supply rigs requiring 12,000 kW-hours of electricity daily.

“A big concern originally was the continuous power. Are we going to have enough continuous power? And then B, if we lose power, what do we then do?” Nielsen said.

The diesel generators that previously powered the rigs remain onsite for back-up purposes —when moving rigs or a storm disrupts power. Then a switchover to diesel can be done “within a reasonable amount of time that doesn’t disrupt the drilling operations,” she said.

Hess had to rely on those following a major snowstorm that essentially closed North Dakota for a month during the winter of 2022, Nielsen recalled.

And when rigs move, Hess’ well facilities team works with MWEC to have power ready for the rig prior to arrival. According to Hess, less than 10% of the time a rig may be required to use generator power — perhaps for a day or two upon arrival at a new drilling site to handle low-load activities while utility power is hooked up.

During the last day of drilling operations, the wellsite is shifted back to a generator so the utility infrastructure can be removed and relocated to the next location.

Hess-Bakken-acreage
Hess operates about 465,000 net acres in the Bakken, where it holds about 2.2 Bboe in EUR and estimates about 1.7 Bboe has yet to be produced. (Source: Hess)

The pilot was successful enough that Hess decided to make the same switch on the other three Nabors rigs under contract to Hess, she said. Nabors X24 and X10 moved to line power in January 2023 and X28 following suit in April 2023.

In addition to the four rigs that Nabors contracted to Hess, Nabors has made PowerTAP available on 21 other rigs it operates. According to Nabors, field results from more than 20 PowerTAP modules deployed in the Lower 48 on Nabors and non-Nabors rigs show an initial average Scope 1 reduction that is the equivalent, per rig, of 20 metric tons per day of CO2.

Relying on electrical power for drilling in the Bakken is expected to help Hess meet its 2025 emissions reduction target of reducing operated greenhouse-gas emissions intensity and methane emissions intensity by 50% compared to its 2017 levels.

“It's been a very successful implementation for us. There's nothing that makes us think we need to go back the other direction and go back to diesel generators,” Nielsen said. “We saw all the benefits that we hope to see, which is not always the case when you introduce new technology.”