In one Saudi Aramco offshore oil field, the formation fluids are being produced from different platforms and transported to one onshore gas-oil separation plant (GOSP) where the produced water is removed from the hydrocarbon stream. The produced water is injected back to highly permeable formations through disposal wells with no interruption. In this way, the water disposal system is an integral part of the hydrocarbon recovery system. A failure of one of the disposal wells could adversely affect oil production. Saudi Aramco petroleum engineers are placing more and more attention on water disposal wells as a higher volume of produced water from the increasing hydrocarbon production rates has to be disposed of continuously every day. The primary objective of surveillance on the disposal wells is to keep an extra disposal capacity for continuous oil production from the field and to precisely monitor the decline rate of the capacity of each disposal well. Areal sweep efficiency and pressure maintenance are not the surveillance scope for water disposal wells in our case. Few technical papers have been published that discuss the problems a water disposal system may have in a matured field and address issues such as surveillance of well performance and water quality, formation damage mechanisms, treatment and so forth. In this paper, the existing water disposal system in a matured offshore oilfield is briefly described and discussed with the surveillance of well performance and the quality disposal water, potential problems, and the evolution of the surveillance philosophy. The reasons why most disposal wells experienced severe injection decline are analyzed and discussed in detail. Historic treatments were summarized with actual outputs demonstrating" ineffective" treatments for the issues discussed. After several trial tests, one customized chemical treatment recipe was developed to effectively tackle the issues and actual well data is included showing the effectiveness of those treatments. A new surveillance strategy for better monitoring of well performance and the quality of "waste" fluid is also discussed in this paper. It can be concluded from our work that formation damage exists extensively in wastewater injection wells and that it greatly influences the performance of disposal wells. Any treatment for restoring the injection capacity of water disposal wells impaired by low quality water is expensive. Any successful treatment is rooted into the detailed analysis of the problems. Implementation of a proper surveillance program and appropriate processing of the injection fluid is also vitally important for wastewater management.
This paper presents the methodology of correcting the erroneous reading of the venturi meters for measuring the gas rate when high amounts of liquids, including condensate and water, are being produced from the gas wells. The proposed system takes advantage of existing infrastructure in proximity of the venturi meters and is designed to be retrofitted to the existing meters to knock out the liquid before the meter and recombines it after. This method eliminates the need for an additional flow line to carry out the liquid or a compressor to reinject the separated liquid back into the pressurized gas line.
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