The largest carbonate condensate field has been found in the Tarim Basin, NW China. Different from sandstone condensate gas reservoirs, however, the conventional gas injection for pressure maintenance development is not favorable for Ordovician fracture-cave reservoirs. Based on this, in this paper, 21 sets of displacement experiments in full-diameter cores and a pilot test in 11 boreholes were carried out to study enhanced oil recovery (EOR) in complicated carbonate reservoirs. The experimental results show that the seepage channels of the gas condensate reservoirs are fractures, which are quite different from sandstone pore-throat structures. Condensate oil recovery using water injection was up to 57–88% in unfilled fractured caves and at ca. 52–80% in sand-filled fractured caves. These values are much higher than the 14–46% and 17–58% values obtained from the depletion and gas injection experiments, respectively. The water injection in 11 wells showed that the condensate oil recovery increased by 0–17.7% (avg. 3.1%). The effective EOR for residual oil replacement using water injection may be attributed to fractures, as the gas channel leads to an ineffective gas circulation and pipe flow in fracture-cave reservoirs, which is favorable for waterflood development. The complicated fracture network in the deep subsurface may be the key element in the varied and lower oil recovery rates obtained from the wells than from the experiments. This case study provides new insights for the exploitation of similar condensate gas reservoirs.
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