使二叠纪地区电气化:BPX Energy 大力宣传该盆地的减排

BPX Energy 在二叠纪盆地的电气化工作和集中处理设施的安装是该运营商实现净零排放路线图的一部分。

随着BPX Energy越来越依赖电气化并消除发动机、火炬和其他容易泄漏的设备,BPX Energy正在接近其陆上作业零常规火炬的目标。

BPX 是 BP 在 Lower 48 州的上游石油和天然气运营商,最初的目标是到 2025 年陆上作业实现零常规火炬燃烧,并为此制定了多项战略。

其中一个难题是该公司位于德克萨斯州的大满贯工厂。

Grand Slam 是一个电气化中央石油、天然气和水处理设施,通过更换各个井场的燃气驱动设备、压缩机和发电机来减少运营排放。

该公司表示,自 2018 年BP以 105 亿美元收购必和必拓在二叠纪盆地的页岩资产以来,该公司已取得了长足进步。这家超级巨头致力于减少所收购资产的排放,同时增加产量。

戴夫·劳勒
Dave Lawler,BPX 首席执行官兼 BP America 总裁兼首席执行官。 (来源:BPX)

从那时起,英国石油公司的火炬燃烧强度急剧下降。截至 2019 年第四季度,二叠纪盆地的火炬燃烧率约为 16%。BPX 首席执行官兼 BP America 总裁兼首席执行官戴夫·劳勒 (Dave Lawler) 在与记者举行的电话会议上表示,如今这一比例已不足 1%,并且还在下降。

“整体趋势显着下降,”他说,BP 目前二叠纪业务的平均水平低于 1%,有时低至 0.1%。

在BP 2022年第四季度业绩中,该运营商表示,2022年二叠纪甲烷火炬燃烧强度平均“<0.5%”,这是BPX Energy历史上记录的最低水平。

“我们即将宣布我们将实现零例行自燃。” “我们的业务中几乎没有出现任何问题,”劳勒说。

他将减排方面的进展很大程度上归功于电气化。

清理二叠纪

当 BPX 接管二叠纪资产时,该地区主要是单井地点,配有典型的火炬、储罐、燃气压缩机,没有电力。

他说,“很多设备在管理甲烷排放和火炬时可能会出现问题”。发动机、油箱、照明弹和设备产生了“大量排放物”。

BPX 花费了约 8 亿美元来更新和电气化发射台站点。新的发射场没有油箱、没有发动机压缩机、没有发电机,也没有照明弹。他说,基地上的所有设备均由电动空气压缩机和离网电源供电,因此无噪音且几乎无排放。

“我们的基础设施总额将达到约 14 亿美元,但这将是一个电气化基础设施,”劳勒说。


相关: 二叠纪接管:二叠纪盆地的跨国公司


BPX 已安装了一座 400 兆瓦的变电站为该油田供电。

“因为我们在自己的领域拥有非常先进的配电系统,所以我们可以从高压电线上卸下大量负载,然后将电力输送到(在某些情况下)10、20 英里的距离,”他说。“这是我们拥有的专有优势,因为我们可以在自己的系统上承担大量负载。”

BPX 能够利用电力基础设施为现场钻机供电。

“架空电力使我们能够通过电动压裂差压来增产或压裂油井,”他说。“用电动潜水泵给井抽水。我们使用电动压缩机压缩气体,并使用来自电源的压缩天然气来操作系统的控制装置。”

劳勒说,当公司说他们正在使用电子水力压裂技术时,他们通常是在使用液化天然气来发电。

BPX 正在使用一种专门的技术将电力重新引导到压裂卡车中。

“因为我们已经建造了如此庞大的电力基础设施,所以我们直接使用从电力线到泵的技术,”他说。

2023 年,BPX 将在二叠纪盆地运行三座电动钻机,以及一到两座非电气化钻机。

“随着开发的深入,届时将能够完全使用电力驱动设备,”他说。

他表示,到2023年底,二叠纪盆地95%的BPX井将实现电气化。购买时,只有 4% 的油井已通电。

BPX 还通过电气化中央石油、天然气和水处理设施使用某些流程的枢纽,这减少了每个平台的基础设施需求。

“未来的领域”

该运营商耗资 3.5 亿美元的 Grand Slam 设施自 2020 年以来一直在运营,处理来自二叠纪约 40% 油井的天然气。

Grand Slam的产能为每天35,000桶和每天1.3亿立方英尺,并且可以根据需要进行扩展。

“你看不到巨大的耀斑烟囱,你实际上什么也看不到。他说,这在很大程度上是一个零排放的设施,这表明这是“未来的领域”。

BPX 计划在未来十年内在二叠纪再建造三个此类设施。第二个集中交付系统 Bingo 预计将于 6 月或 7 月上线,处理量与大满贯类似。

劳勒表示,宾果游戏只会对大满贯设计进行“小幅调整”。这些调整主要以微调船舶尺寸和设备效率的形式进行。

除了努力最大限度地减少排放外,BPX 还部署了甲烷检测技术。劳勒说,操作员使用整个系统的传感器、设备和警报器来提前检测井出现的问题。

BPX 在二叠纪的努力是 BP 减少碳排放总体目标的一部分。这家超级巨头最初的目标是到 2030 年减少 40% 的排放量,但在 3 月份表示,它将把这一目标拉回至 2025 年减少 10% 至 15%,到 2030 年减少 20% 至 30%。该运营商仍预计达到净排放量到 2050 年实现零排放。

原文链接/hartenergy

Electrifying the Permian: BPX Energy Touts Emissions Reductions in the Basin

BPX Energy’s electrification efforts in the Permian Basin and the installation of centralized handling facilities are part of the operator’s roadmap to net zero emissions.

BPX Energy is closing in on its goal of zero routine flaring from its onshore operations as it increasingly relies on electrification and eliminates engines, flaring and other equipment prone to leaks.

BPX, which is BP’s upstream oil and gas operator in the Lower 48, initially targeted zero routine flaring by 2025 from onshore operations and pieced together several strategies to do so.

One piece of that puzzle is the company’s Grand Slam facility in Texas.

Grand Slam is an electrified central oil, gas and water handling facility that reduces operational emissions, in part by replacing gas-driven equipment, compressors and generators at individual well sites.

The company said it has made strides since 2018, when BP purchased BHP’s shale assets in the Permian for $10.5 billion. The supermajor committed to reducing emissions from acquired assets while also increasing production.

Dave Lawler
Dave Lawler, CEO of BPX and BP America president and CEO. (Source: BPX)

Since then, BP’s flaring intensity has decreased dramatically. As recently as fourth-quarter 2019, flaring in the Permian Basin was around 16%. Today, it’s less than 1% and dropping, Dave Lawler, CEO of BPX and BP America president and CEO, said during a conference call with journalists.

“The overall trend is significantly down,” he said, with BP’s current average for Permian operations below 1% and sometimes as low as 0.1%.

In BP’s fourth-quarter 2022 results, the operator said Permian methane flaring intensity averaged “<0.5%” in 2022, the lowest recorded in BPX Energy’s history.

“We're very close to announcing that we'll have zero routine flaring ourselves. There's very little flaring, if any, in our business at all,” Lawler said.

He attributes a lot of the progress at emissions reduction to electrification.

Cleaning up the Permian

When BPX took over the Permian assets, the acreage was largely single-well locations with typical flares, tanks, gas-driven compressors and no electricity.

There was “a lot of equipment that can be problematic in trying to manage it for methane emission and flaring,” he said. There were “a lot of emissions” from the engines, tanks, flares and equipment.

BPX spent around $800 million to update and electrify the pad sites. The new pads have no tanks, no engine compressors, no generators and no flares. All equipment on the pads run off of electric air compressors and off-grid power, making them noise-free and nearly emissions-free, he said.

“We’re on our way to about $1.4 billion in total infrastructure, but it will be an electrified infrastructure,” Lawler said.


RELATED: Permian Takeover: Multinationals in the Permian Basin


BPX has installed a 400-megawatt substation to power the field.

“Because we have this very advanced electrical distribution system that we own in our field, we can take massive loads off the high wires and then transport that electricity for, in some cases 10, 20 miles,” he said. “This is a proprietary advantage that we have because of the massive loads that we can take onto our own system.”

BPX is able to take advantage of the power infrastructure to supply power to the drilling rigs on site.

“The overhead power allows us to stimulate or frac the wells with electric frac spreads,” he said. “We pump the wells with electric submersible pumps. We compress the gas with electric driven compressors, and we operate the controls of the system with compressed natural gas from an electric source as well.”

Often, Lawler said, when companies say they are e-fracking, they are using LNG to power the generation for the electricity.

BPX is using a specialized technology to redirect power into frac trucks.

“Because we've built this massive electrical infrastructure, we're using that technology direct from the power lines straight to the pumps,” he said.

BPX is running three electric drilling rigs in the Permian in 2023, and one or two that are not electrified.

“As the development gets further along, that will enable then complete use of electric driven equipment,” he said.

By the end of 2023, 95% of BPX wells in the Permian Basin will be electrified, he said. At the time of purchase, only 4% of the wells were electrified.

BPX is also using a hub for certain processes through an electrified central oil, gas and water handling facility, which reduces the infrastructure needs at each pad.

‘Field of the future’

The operator’s $350 million Grand Slam facility has been in operation since 2020 and processes gas from about 40% of the wells in the Permian.

Grand Slam’s capacity is 35,000 barrels per day and 130 million cubic feet per day, and it can be expanded as needed.

“You don't see massive flare stacks, you don't really see anything. It’s largely an emissions-free” facility, he said, suggesting that it is “the field of the future.”

BPX plans to build three more such facilities in the Permian over the next decade. The second centralized delivery system, Bingo, is expected to go online in June or July and handle volumes similar to those at Grand Slam.

Bingo will only feature “small tweaks” to the Grand Slam design, Lawler said. Those tweaks will mostly come in the form of finetuning vessel sizing and equipment efficiency.

In addition to its efforts at minimizing emissions, BPX is also deploying methane detection technologies. The operator uses sensors, devices and alarms across the system to detect “something going wrong with the well in advance,” Lawler said.

BPX’s efforts in the Permian are part of BP’s overall goal to reduce carbon emissions. The supermajor had initially targeted a 40% reduction in emissions by 2030, but in March said it was pulling that target back to a 10% to 15% reduction by 2025 and 20% to 30% by 2030. The operator still expects to reach net zero emissions by 2050.