商业/经济

Atlas Energy 的 Dune Express 支撑剂输送机滚入二叠纪盆地

第一个用于输送支撑剂的长途陆上输送系统正在二叠纪盆地建设中。

沙丘快车陆上传送带
Atlas Energy Solutions 的 Dune Express 陆上传送带设计有地上高速公路交叉口,间隙为 25 英尺,有助于消除传送带穿越公共高速公路时发生桥梁撞击的风险。

杂货店的收银台是许多人唯一接触传送带的地方。对于生活在德克萨斯州西部和新墨西哥州二叠纪盆地的人们来说,这种情况即将改变。

Atlas Energy Solutions 正在建造该地区首个长途陆上支撑剂输送系统 Dune Express,以优化从该公司位于德克萨斯州克米特的沙矿到新墨西哥州特拉华盆地北部的输送。

Atlas 将传送带方法视为解决将压裂砂输送到井场最后一英里的长期挑战的解决方案。传统上,支撑剂通过气动卡车或腹式自卸卡车运输,从装载设施或矿山开始,到井场结束,然后将支撑剂移入储存仓,直到压裂作业需要为止。

这家总部位于德克萨斯州奥斯汀的油田服务公司经过 5 年多的规划,于 3 月份破土动工,耗资 4 亿美元。这条全电动、42 英里长的有顶输送系统预计每年可输送 1300 万吨支撑剂。

“自 2017 年开始,当我们开始建造第一个筒仓时,我们首先考虑的是解决在农村地区运输支撑剂的巨大物流挑战。我们当时认为二叠纪的沙子需求将持续增长,给当地物流和基础设施带来压力。”阿特拉斯能源解决方案公司总裁兼首席财务官约翰·特纳说。“根据我们作为前运营商的经验,我们知道接下来会发生什么。”

他强调了管道如何取代卡车从井场运输石油和水。沙丘快车也做了类似的事情,将沙子从矿场运到更靠近页岩工厂车间的地方,即特拉华盆地。

该公司提供 40/70 和 100 目尺寸的支撑剂,这些支撑剂将根据客户的订单通过传送带分批运输。

“这是一个相对简单的过程。” 假设我们有几个 100 目的订单;然后我们将其装载到皮带上并发送。在某个时候,我们会收到 40/70 的订单,然后我们会将其装载并发送,”特纳说。

他补充说,公司将继续投资技术以实现流程自动化。

“当我们开发出与基础设施一起推出的技术平台时,我们将能够有效地处理这个过程,”他说。

特纳表示,在输送带移动时将支撑剂保持在输送带上是一项挑战,他们花了相当多的时间来解决。二叠纪盆地的风很少一天休息。

特纳说,项目团队在风洞中测试了支架和输送机,以开发一种将支撑剂留在输送带上的设计。

“前两三天的测试进行得不太顺利。我们在风洞中填满了沙子,但最终我们找到了一种确保不会丢失沙子的设计。我们还将该系统的模型驾驶到华盛顿州,并在喷气发动机前用水模拟侧向降雨进行测试。沙子保持干燥。这是一种专有设计,可将元素挡在外面,将沙子挡在里面。”

存储、装载和更少的卡车
陆上传送带是该系统的核心,因为它将提高支撑剂输送效率,同时减少卡车排放和公共道路上的交通。该系统还包括约 85,000 吨干存储,与两个永久支撑剂装载相关。这些设施地理位置优越,可以缩短支撑剂到井场的运输时间。

State Line 装载设施位于德克萨斯州线上,距克米特 26 英里,拥有两个 2,000 吨的储存筒仓,可从奥斯汀远程操作,能够装载适合用途的双拖车,可拖运 70 吨的货物。35每辆拖车一次装载数吨支撑剂。

新墨西哥州利县的生产线末端装车设施拥有 30,000 吨存储量。如果需要,该系统还将配备灵活的移动装载设施,以缩短支撑剂到井场的运输时间。

传送带设计有地上公路交叉口,间隙为 25 英尺,有助于消除传送带穿越公路时桥梁撞击的风险。租赁道路交叉口的设计是为了保证油田交通的安全流动。

沙丘快车预计将使数千辆卡车离开公共道路,避免该地区的交通事故和相关死亡,同时显着减少二叠纪输沙的排放足迹。

“沙丘快车将支撑剂运送到标准位置,使卡车远离公共道路。这将使在那里生活和工作的人们更加安全,”特纳说。“减少公共道路上的卡车总数是一个整体效益,有助于使二叠纪地区成为一个更好的居住地。”

Dune Express 系统预计将于 2024 年底投入使用。Atlas 于 2022 年 12 月宣布,已签署多年协议,通过该系统向两家主要石油公司供应支撑剂。

原文链接/jpt
Business/economics

Atlas Energy’s Dune Express Proppant Conveyor Rolling Into the Permian Basin

The first long-haul overland conveyor system to deliver proppant is under construction in the Permian Basin.

Dune Express overland conveyor belt
Atlas Energy Solutions' Dune Express overland conveyor belt is designed with above-ground highway crossings with a clearance of 25 ft to help eliminate the risk of bridge strikes where the belt crosses public highways.

The checkout line in a grocery store is the only exposure many people may have to a conveyor belt. That is about to change for those living in the Permian Basin of west Texas and New Mexico.

Atlas Energy Solutions is building the Dune Express, the area’s first long-haul overland proppant conveyor system, to optimize delivery from the company’s sand mine in Kermit, Texas, to the northern Delaware Basin in New Mexico.

Atlas sees the conveyor belt approach as the solution to the long-time challenge of delivering frac sand the last mile to the wellsite. Proppant is traditionally delivered by pneumatic or belly-dump trucks, beginning at a loading facility or mine and ending at the wellsite, where it is moved into storage silos until it is needed for a fracturing job.

The Austin, Texas-based oilfield services company broke ground on the $400 million project in March after more than 5 years of planning. The covered, all-electric, 42-mile-long conveyor system is expected to deliver 13 million tons of proppant annually.

“Starting back to 2017, when we started to kick off construction of our first silos, our efforts towards solving the massive logistical challenge of moving proppant around rural areas were top of mind. We had taken the view then that sand demand in the Permian would grow for years, creating a strain on local logistics and infrastructure,” said John Turner, president, and chief financial officer for Atlas Energy Solutions. “From our experiences as former operators, we knew what was coming.”

He highlighted how pipelines replaced trucks to haul oil and water from the wellsites. The Dune Express does something similar in carrying sand from the mine to a point closer to the shale factory floor that is the Delaware Basin.

The company offers proppant in 40/70 and 100 mesh sizes that will be shipped out on the conveyor belt in batches, depending on the client’s orders.

“It’s a relatively straightforward process. Say we have several orders for 100 mesh; then we’ll load it up on the belt and send it. At some point, we get an order for 40/70, then we’ll load it up and send it,” said Turner.

He added that the company continues investing in technologies to automate the process.

“As we develop our technology platforms that will roll out with the infrastructure, we’re going to be able to handle that process efficiently,” he said.

Keeping the proppant on the belt as it moved was a challenge that Turner said they spent considerable time addressing. There is rarely a day of rest for the Permian Basin winds.

Turner said that the project team tested the stand and conveyor in a wind tunnel to develop a design where the proppant would stay on the belt.

“The first 2 or 3 days of testing didn't go too well. We filled that wind tunnel full of sand, but we finally landed on a design that ensured we did not lose sand. We also drove a mock-up of the system to Washington state and tested it in front of a jet engine with water to simulate sideways rain. The sand stayed dry. It is a proprietary design that keeps the elements out and the sand in.”

Storage, Loadout, and Fewer Trucks
The overland conveyor belt is the system’s centerpiece as it will increase proppant delivery efficiency while reducing truck emissions and traffic on public roads. The system also includes about 85,000 tons of dry storage tied to two permanent proppant loadouts. These facilities are strategically located to enable shorter hauls of proppant to wellsites.

The State Line Loadout facility, located 26 miles from Kermit and on the Texas state line, features two 2,000-ton storage silos that are remotely operated from Austin and capable of loading fit-for-purpose double trailers able to haul 70 tons—35 tons in each trailer—of proppant at one time.

The End of Line Loadout facility in Lea County, New Mexico, has 30,000 tons of storage. If needed, the system will also feature flexible mobile loadout facilities to shorten proppant transportation to wellsites.

The conveyor belt is designed with above-ground highway crossings with a clearance of 25 ft to help eliminate the risk of bridge strikes where the conveyor belt crosses public highways. Lease road crossings are engineered to allow the safe flow of oilfield traffic.

The Dune Express is expected to take thousands of trucks off public roads, avoiding traffic accidents and associated fatalities in the region while significantly reducing the emissions footprint of sand delivery in the Permian.

“The Dune Express delivers the proppant to a standard location, taking trucks off the public roads. It will make it safer for the folks that live and work out there,” said Turner. “Reducing the total number of trucks on the public roads is an overall benefit and helps make the Permian a better place to live.”

The Dune Express system is expected to go into service at the end of 2024. Atlas announced in December 2022 that it had signed multiyear agreements to supply proppant to two major oil companies via the system.