Success Story: Co log Finds by-Passed In A High Water-Cut offshore Well And Increases Oil Production and Reduces Workover Cost

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
S.K Pahlevi
2011 ◽  
Vol 14 (01) ◽  
pp. 120-128 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guanglun Lei ◽  
Lingling Li ◽  
Hisham A. Nasr-El-Din

Summary A common problem for oil production is excessive water production, which can lead to rapid productivity decline and significant increases in operating costs. The result is often a premature shut-in of wells because production has become uneconomical. In water injectors, the injection profiles are uneven and, as a result, large amounts of oil are left behind the water front. Many chemical systems have been used to control water production and improve recovery from reservoirs with high water cut. Inorganic gels have low viscosity and can be pumped using typical field mixing and injection equipment. Polymer or crosslinked gels, especially polyacrylamide-based systems, are mainly used because of their relatively low cost and their supposed selectivity. In this paper, microspheres (5–30 μm) were synthesized using acrylamide monomers crosslinked with an organic crosslinker. They can be suspended in water and can be pumped in sandstone formations. They can plug some of the pore throats and, thus, force injected water to change its direction and increase the sweep efficiency. A high-pressure/high-temperature (HP/HT) rheometer was used to measure G (elastic modulus) and G" (viscous modulus) of these aggregates. Experimental results indicate that these microspheres are stable in solutions with 20,000 ppm NaCl at 175°F. They can expand up to five times their original size in deionized water and show good elasticity. The results of sandpack tests show that the microspheres can flow through cores with permeability greater than 500 md and can increase the resistance factor by eight to 25 times and the residual resistance factor by nine times. The addition of microspheres to polymer solutions increased the resistance factor beyond that obtained with the polymer solution alone. Field data using microspheres showed significant improvements in the injection profile and enhancements in oil production.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Zhiwang Yuan ◽  
Zhiping Li ◽  
Li Yang ◽  
Yingchun Zhang

When a conventional waterflooding characteristic curve (WFCC) is used to predict cumulative oil production at a certain stage, the curve depends on the predicted water cut at the predicted cutoff point, but forecasting the water cut is very difficult. For the reservoirs whose pressure is maintained by water injection, based on the water-oil phase seepage theory and the principle of material balance, the equations relating the cumulative oil production and cumulative water injection at the moderately high water cut stage and the ultrahigh water cut stage are derived and termed the Yuan-A and Yuan-B curves, respectively. And then, we theoretically analyze the causes of the prediction errors of cumulative oil production by the Yuan-A curve and give suggestions. In addition, at the ultrahigh water cut stage, the Yuan-B water cut prediction formula is established, which can predict the water cut according to the cumulative water injection and solve the difficult problem of water cut prediction. The application results show Yuan-A and Yuan-B curves are applied to forecast oil production based on cumulative water injection data obtained by the balance of injection and production, avoiding reliance on the water cut forecast and solving the problems of predicting the cumulative oil production of producers or reservoirs that have not yet shown the decline rule. Furthermore, the formulas are simple and convenient, providing certain guiding significance for the prediction of cumulative oil production and water cut for the same reservoir types.


2021 ◽  
Vol 73 (09) ◽  
pp. 60-61
Author(s):  
Chris Carpenter

This article, written by JPT Technology Editor Chris Carpenter, contains highlights of paper SPE 200957, “Application of Specially Designed Polymers in High-Water-Cut Wells: A Holistic Well-Intervention Technology Applied in Umm Gudair Field, Kuwait,” by Ali Abdullah Al-Azmi, SPE, Thanyan Ahmed Al-Yaqout, and Dalal Yousef Al-Jutaili, Kuwait Oil Company, et al., prepared for the 2020 SPE Trinidad and Tobago Section Energy Resources Conference, originally scheduled to be held in Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago, 29 June–1 July. The paper has not been peer reviewed. A significant challenge faced in the mature Umm Gudair (UG) field is assurance of hydrocarbon flow through highly water-prone intervals. The complete paper discusses the field implementation of a downhole chemical methodology that has positively affected overall productivity. The treatment was highly modified to address the challenges of electrical-submersible-pump (ESP)-driven well operations, technical difficulties posed by the formation, high-stakes economics, and high water potential from these formations. Field Background and Challenge The UG field is one of the major oil fields in Kuwait (Fig. 1). The Minagish oolite (MO) reservoir is the main oil producer, contributing more than 95% of current production in the UG field. However, water cut has been increasing (approximately 65% at the time of writing). The increasing water cut in the reservoir is posing a major challenge to maintaining the oil-production rate because of the higher mobility of water compared with that of oil. The natural water aquifer support in the reservoir that underlies the oil column extends across the reservoir and is rising continuously. This has led to a decline in the oil-production rate and has prevented oil-producing zones from contributing effectively. The reservoir experiences water-coning phenomena, especially in high-permeability zones. Oil viscosity ranges from 2 to 8 cp, and hydrogen sulfide and carbon dioxide levels are 1.5 and 4%, respectively. During recent years, water production has increased rapidly in wells because of highly conductive, thick, clean carbonate formations with low structural dip as well as some stratified formations. Field production may be constrained by the capacity of the surface facilities; therefore, increased water production has different effects on field operations. The average cost of handling produced water is estimated to be between $5 billion and $10 billion in the US and approximately $40 billion globally. These volumes often are so large that even incremental modifications can have major financial effects. For example, the lift-ing cost of one barrel of oil doubles when water cut reaches 50%, increases fivefold at 80% water cut, and increases twenty-fold at 95% water cut.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Truong Nguyen Huu

Abstract In the past decades, most oil explotation in the White Tiger oil field was produced from the basement reservoir. However, in recent years, these pay zones consist of basement reservoirs, Oligocene reservoirs, and Miocene reservoirs of which oil field s have been declined in oil production rate due to several issues such as complex fracture network, high heterogeneity formation, high water cut, and the reduction of reservoir pressure. The huge issues in the most production wells at basement reservoir were high water cut and it has been significantly increasing during oil production yearly. Therefore, the total amount of oil production in all pay zones sharply decreased with time. At present, the lower Miocene reservoir is one of the best tight oil reservoirs to produce oil extractrion. The lower Miocene reservoir has been faced some issues such as high heterogeneity, complex structure, catastrophic clay swelling, low connectivity among the fractures, low effective wellbore radius and the reservoir that is hig h temperature up to 120°C, the closure pressure up to 6680psi, reservoir pressure up to 4500 psi, reservoir depth up to 3000m. Another reason low conductivity consists of both low reservoir porosity ranging from 1% of the hard shale to 10% of the sandstone formation, and the low permeability raining from 1md to 10md. By considering the various recovery methods, the integrated hydraulic fracturing stimulation is the best tool to successfully stimulate this reservoir, which method allows an increase in oil production rate. In the post fractured well has been shown an increase in productivity over 3 folds in comparison with the base case with fracture half-length nearly 75m, and fracture conductivity about 5400md.ft, which production rate is higher than the production rate of the base case. In addition, the proppant mass is used of 133,067 lbs of which the first main stage is to pump sinter lite bauxite proppant type of 20/40 into the fractures and the next big stage is to pump sintered ball bauxite proppant size of 16/30 into the fractures, which not only isolate proppant flow back but also increase fracture conductivity at the near wellbore as wel as high productivity rate after fractured well. To improve proppant transport, fract uring fluid systems consist of Guar polymer concentration of 11.2 pptg with these additives to form a total leak-off coefficient of 0.00227 ft/min0.5.


PETRO ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 45
Author(s):  
Rizky Rezha Fauzi ◽  
Djoko Sulistyanto ◽  
Ghanima Yasmaniar

<p>MBR Field is an onshore field located at East Kalimantan. In this field, there are five clusters with 2 main stations and 1 supporting station. With the current pipe flow conditions, this field has several constraints which are ESP maximum motor loads, ESP maximum frequencies, and current maximum water injection plant capacity. First, modeling is done with deviations of less than 10 percent to reach matching conditions in several parameters such as upstream pressure, downstream pressure, liquid rate, water rate, oil rate, and gas rate. Afterward, the first optimization is done by increasing the ESP frequency, increasing choke bean size, and shutting-in relatively low oil production wells with high water cut. But due to the water production is almost exceeding the water injection plant capacity, then the second optimization is done. The second optimization is done by increasing choke bean size and shutting-in relatively low oil production wells with high water cut. Each optimization is then followed by an analysis of pressure and flowrates alterations and the existence of backpressure in unoptimized wells.</p>


2009 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Daparo ◽  
Luis Soliz ◽  
Eduardo Roberto Perez ◽  
Carlos Iver Vidal Saravia ◽  
Philip Duke Nguyen ◽  
...  

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