公司太阳能 EOR 的成功并非海市蜃楼

阿曼的试点项目减少了热力 EOR 中对天然气的需求。

作者:艾米·洛根,哈特能源公司

在阳光普照的阿曼南部,大片沙漠上点缀着抽油机和石油钻井平台,一直延伸到很远的地方。但坐落在这片被称为阿迈勒西油田的石油景观中的是 4 英亩的玻璃和钢制温室,它们在阳光下闪闪发光,就像海市蜃楼中的绿洲。尽管这些温室看起来很不协调,但它们并不是视错觉。它们是巨型抛物面镜的所在地,可以产生“万物”团队。

这些镜子不是利用太阳的热量来驱动机械或发电,而是全天跟​​踪太阳,将阳光聚焦在装有水的管子上,以产生用于石油开采的蒸汽。这种集中式太阳能发电架构称为封闭槽,专为油田设计,代表了热力 EOR 供电的一种新形式。

阿曼石油开发公司(PDO) 与加利福尼亚州的GlassPoint Solar合作建造并测试了新的封闭槽技术。GlassPoint 于 2011 年 2 月与巴里石油公司在加利福尼亚州克恩县的第一个商业太阳能 EOR 项目建造了类似的结构。该项目的成功使这家年轻的初创太阳能公司引起了 PDO 的注意。

2012 年 1 月,GlassPoint 和 PDO 在中东第一个太阳能 EOR 项目破土动工,并于 2013 年 12 月完成该项目。到 2013 年 5 月,GlassPoint 已超出合同绩效目标 10%。2013 年 12 月,该系统平均每天产生 50 吨蒸汽,正常运行时间达 98.6%,平均蒸汽输出为 80% 蒸汽和 20% 水。1 月底,即破土动工仅两年后,该项目就产生了足够的蒸汽来替代 1 MMcm (36 MMcf) 的天然气。

预报要求有阳光

GlassPoint 销售副总裁丹尼尔·帕尔默 (Daniel Palmer) 表示,对他的客户来说重要的是,这项技术对于阿曼等国家和中东等正在寻求太阳能解决方案以满足其能源需求的地区来说很有意义

中东地区通常所说的“便捷石油”现在已基本消失。剩下的就是难以开采的重油。这些资产需要热力 EOR 和高压蒸汽注入来生产。用大量天然气为蒸汽发电提供动力是最常用的 EOR 方法。不过,虽然阿曼的重油储量丰富,但天然气却并不丰富。

由于中东地区天然气短缺,天然气价格飞涨。Palmer表示,利用GlassPoint的太阳能EOR技术,只需要天然气来弥补阳光的损失。他说,这大大减少了从阿曼丰富的储量中开采石油和天然气所需的天然气量。

GlassPoint 首席执行官Rod MacGregor在视频采访中表示,在决定太阳能 EOR 是否是合适的解决方案之前,必须满足三个经济标准:

“对于[太阳能] EOR,您需要[充足的]阳光”,人类拥有世界上最好的阳光。你需要重油——曼曼是中东重油生产的领导者。而且您需要缺乏充足的燃料供应[例如天然气]。阿曼拥有这三点,使其成为理想的地点,”他说。
帕尔默表示,如果该项目符合麦基嘉的三个标准,GlassPoint 将能够以具有竞争力的价格提供其解决方案。“我们的目标始终是比天然气更经济,”他说。

他补充说,与大多数可再生能源技术一样,运营商投入初始资金购买太阳能 EOR 系统后,该系统将随着时间的推移收回成本。

“一旦它们开始运行,就可以开始使用了,”他说,指的是太阳能蒸汽发生器和整个系统。

精益干净

GlassPoint 太阳能 EOR 系统的独特之处在于其玻璃和钢制外壳可以阻挡风、湿气、沙子和沙砾,否则会损害太阳跟踪镜和组件的运动和坚固性。没有使用太阳能电池板。相反,镜子位于单轴系统上,该系统将它们定位以跟踪最佳的阳光量。然后,阳光聚焦在装有水的固定锅炉管上,等待加热到可以产生蒸汽进行热力 EOR 的程度。

Palmer 表示,GlassPoint 系统与现有设备完美集成,并使用传统燃气蒸汽发生器所需的相同类型的给水。它的设计方式是为了节省资金,并考虑到无法收集太阳能且需要天然气来维持蒸汽生产的夜间时间。

保护太阳能组件的大型玻璃屋不仅符合空气动力学原理,能够承受峰值风力,而且很容易作为批量生产的温室投入市场。帕尔默说,不必从头开始定制设计和建造玻璃外壳也有助于降低成本。

他补充说,用于清洁温室屋顶的批量生产机器人也很方便,尤其是在沙漠环境中。

“阿曼的灰尘含量非常高,”他说。”你必须每天洗车。如果我们没有让机器人隔夜清洁玻璃,我们的产量就会下降 3%。”

这些机器人有助于确保阳光不受限制地照射到外壳内的太阳能机械装置,以持续产生 312 摄氏度(594 华氏度)的蒸汽。

帕尔默说,另一个巨大的成本节省来自于太阳能 EOR 操作中使用的曲面镜。由于镜子可以免受恶劣环境的影响,因此它们更薄、更轻,从而节省了运输和维护成本。帕尔默补充说,将所有镜子和太阳能组件放在充满除湿和过滤空气的玻璃屋中,可以保持它们的清洁并以最佳性能运行。

帕尔默表示,船员安全是太阳能 EOR 系统的另一个优势,并补充说,在阿曼试点项目的一年建造和测试过程中,没有发生误工伤害。

“我们不需要在高处工作就可以建造整个建筑,”他说。

整个太阳能 EOR 操作是完全自动化的。他说,没有人需要进入玻璃房子或试图保持房屋清洁。

“全速前进”

在 2013 年 5 月 21 日的新闻稿中, PDO 新技术实施负责人Syham Bentouati博士表示,“该项目的初步结果表明,使用 GlassPoint 封闭式​​槽式结构产生的太阳能蒸汽与天然气同样有效”用于热 EOR。

“该装置可以作为阿曼未来太阳能蒸汽发电项目的性能和运营基准,”她补充道,“为我们规划未来潜在的大型太阳能蒸汽项目提供了宝贵的信息。”

哈特能源上游研究执行董事劳拉·阿特金斯 (Laura Atkins)在 2014 年 1 月 8 日的新闻稿中指出,重油“将在未来的全球能源结构中发挥重要作用。”她说,GlassPoint 的太阳能 EOR 技术及其减少 EOR 天然气使用量高达 80% 的能力将很有用。

“这对许多石油生产国来说是一个令人信服的主张,”她说,“节省下来的天然气可以重新用于液化天然气出口,或供当地工业使用,以推动经济增长。”

帕尔默说,在中东,“这具有完美的经济意义。”

请联系作者 Amy Logan,邮箱为 alogan@hartenergy.com。主页上的图片由 GlassPoint Solar 提供。

原文链接/hartenergy

Company’s Solar EOR Success Is No Mirage

Pilot project in Oman reduces need for natural gas in thermal EOR.

By Amy Logan, Hart Energy

In sun-drenched southern Oman, vast acres of desert dotted by pumpjacks and oil rigs stretch far into the distance. But nestled in this petroleum landscape known as the Amal West oil field are 4 acres of glass and steel greenhouses, sparkling in the sun like an oasis in a mirage. As incongruous as these greenhouses may seem, they are no optical illusion. They are home to giant parabolic mirrors that produce—of all things—steam.

Instead of harnessing heat from the sun to drive machinery or generate electricity, these mirrors track the sun throughout the day, focusing sunlight on a tube containing water to create steam used for oil extraction. This concentrated solar power architecture, called an enclosed trough, is designed specifically for the oil field, and it represents a new form of powering thermal EOR.

Petroleum Development Oman (PDO) partnered with California-based GlassPoint Solar to build and test the new enclosed trough technology. GlassPoint built similar structures in February 2011 for its first commercial solar EOR project with Barry Petroleum in Kern County, Calif. The success of that project brought the young startup solar company to PDO’s attention.

In January 2012 GlassPoint and PDO broke ground on the Middle East’s first solar EOR project, completing the project in December 2013. By May 2013 GlassPoint was exceeding contracted performance targets by 10%. In December 2013 the system was generating an average of 50 tons of steam per day with a success rate boasting 98.6% uptime and an average steam output that is 80% steam vapor and 20% water. At the end of January, just two years after it broke ground, the project was producing enough steam to replace 1 MMcm (36 MMcf) of natural gas.

Forecast calls for sunshine

Daniel Palmer, GlassPoint’s vice president of sales, said what’s important to his clients is that the technology makes sense for countries such as Oman and areas such as the Middle East that are seeking solar solutions for their energy needs.

What is often referred to as the “easy oil” in the Middle East is now mostly gone. What remains is the hard-to-reach heavy oil. These assets require thermal EOR and high-pressure steam injection to produce them. Powering this steam generation with vast amounts of natural gas has been the EOR method most commonly used. But while heavy oil is abundant in Oman, natural gas is not.

Due to the shortage of natural gas in the Middle East, the price for it has skyrocketed. Palmer said that with GlassPoint’s solar EOR technology, natural gas is only needed to make up for the loss of sunshine. This significantly reduces the amount of natural gas needed to recover oil and gas from Oman’s rich reserves, he said.

Rod MacGregor, CEO of GlassPoint, said in a video interview that there are three economic criteria that must be met before deciding whether solar EOR is an appropriate solution:

“For [solar] EOR you need [abundant] sunshine—Oman has some of the best in the world. You need heavy oil—Oman is the leader in heavy oil production in the Middle East. And you need scarcity of an abundant fuel supply [such as natural gas]. Oman has all three of those things, making it the ideal location,” he said.
If the project meets MacGregor’s three criteria, Palmer said GlassPoint will be able to offer its solution at a competitive price. “Our goal is always to be more economical than natural gas,” he said.

He added that like most renewable energy technology, after operators put up the initial capital to purchase a solar EOR system, the system will pay for itself over time.

“Once they’re running, they’re good to go,” he said, referring to the solar steam generators and overall system.

Lean and clean

Part of what makes GlassPoint’s solar EOR system unique is its glass and steel housing that keeps out the wind, humidity, sand, and grit that would otherwise impair the movement and sturdiness of the sun-tracking mirrors and components. There are no solar panels used. Instead, the mirrors sit upon a single-axis system that positions them to track the optimum amount of sunlight. That sunlight is then focused on stationary boiler tubes containing water waiting to be heated to the point where they can produce steam for thermal EOR.

Palmer said the GlassPoint system integrates perfectly with the existing equipment and uses the same type of feedwater needed for traditional gas-fired steam generators. It was designed this way to save money and account for the overnight hours when solar energy cannot be harvested and natural gas is required to maintain steam production.

The large glass houses that protect the solar components are not only aerodynamic and made to withstand peak-wind force, but they are readily available to the market as mass-produced greenhouses. Not having to custom-design and build the glass housing from scratch also helps keep the cost down, Palmer said.

He added that mass-produced robots designed to clean greenhouse rooftops are handy, too, especially in desert environments.

“The dust levels are extremely high in Oman,” he said. “You have to wash your car every day. We’d see a 3% drop in output if we didn’t have the robots cleaning the glass overnight.”

The robots help ensure the sunlight has unrestricted access to the solar mechanics inside the housing to produce steam at a consistent 312 C (594 F).

Another big cost savings comes from the curved mirrors used in the solar EOR operations, Palmer said. Because the mirrors are protected from the harsh elements, they are thinner and lighter, saving on transportation and maintenance costs. Keeping all of the mirrors and solar components in a glass house that is filled with dehumidified and filtered air keeps them clean and operating at peak performance, Palmer added.

Crew safety is another advantage to the solar EOR system, Palmer said, adding that throughout the yearlong building and testing of the pilot project in Oman there were no lost-time injuries.

“We can build the whole thing with no working from height,” he said.

The entire solar EOR operation is fully automated. No one need enter the glass houses or try to keep the housing clean, he said.

Moving ‘full steam ahead’

In a May 21, 2013, press release, Dr. Syham Bentouati, head of New Technology Implementation at PDO, said “preliminary results from this project demonstrate that solar steam generated with GlassPoint’s enclosed trough architecture is equally as effective as natural gas for thermal EOR.

“This unit serves as a performance and operational baseline for future solar-steam generation projects in Oman,” she added, “providing us with valuable information for planning potential future large-scale solar-steam projects.”

Laura Atkins, executive director of upstream research at Hart Energy, noted in a Jan. 8, 2014, press release that heavy oil “will play a significant role in the global energy mix of the future.” Since most of that oil will require steam injection for production, she said, GlassPoint’s solar EOR technology and its ability to reduce natural gas use for EOR by up to 80% will be useful.

“This is a compelling proposition for many oil-producing nations,” she said, “as gas saved can be redirected toward LNG export or put to use by local industry to fuel economic growth.”

In the Middle East, Palmer said, “that makes perfect economic sense.”

Contact the author, Amy Logan, at alogan@hartenergy.com. Image on the home page is courtesy of GlassPoint Solar.