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Miscible gas injection EOR is a well-established and proven recovery mechanism. There are a large number of miscible gas injection EOR developments worldwide. Some of these developments achieved relatively high recoveries. ADNOC is a leader in miscible gas injection EOR in carbonate reservoirs - with a number of developments within its portfolio contributing substantially towards ADNCO overall production. For miscible gas injection EOR developments, especially in relatively low permeability carbonate reservoirs, the following are recognised as key field development planning and reservoir monitoring/management areas: Development pattern, number and location of injectors in relation to producersSufficient injection rate and volume, to maintain reservoir pressure and optimise sweepReservoir monitoring and production management, to ensure adequate data acquisition and studies to support field development and production decisions in a timely manner. In relatively tight carbonate reservoirs, injection well injectivity is a critical factor when addressing the above three key areas. Water injection injectivity is fairly well understood, but gas injection injectivity in a miscible setting can be very complex. The complexity can be attributed to a combination of factors, for example: The dependence of injection gas property parameters on downhole injection pressure and temperatureDevelopment of the miscible oil bank via either vaporising or/and condensing mechanismVapour phase being significantly more mobile than reservoir liquid oil and waterWhere applicable, gravity segregation in areas surrounding the injectorReservoir wettability and hysteresis. An assessment into miscible gas EOR injection injectivity for relatively low permeability carbonate reservoirs has been performed. Actual field injection data (both water injection phase and gas injection phase) from 3 reservoirs were analysed. A compositional sector model was also used. Injectivity evolution trends were discussed, and potential influencing factors identified. Recommendations on best practices for WAG injector injectivity monitoring, reservoir voidage replacement calculations are provided.
Miscible gas injection EOR is a well-established and proven recovery mechanism. There are a large number of miscible gas injection EOR developments worldwide. Some of these developments achieved relatively high recoveries. ADNOC is a leader in miscible gas injection EOR in carbonate reservoirs - with a number of developments within its portfolio contributing substantially towards ADNCO overall production. For miscible gas injection EOR developments, especially in relatively low permeability carbonate reservoirs, the following are recognised as key field development planning and reservoir monitoring/management areas: Development pattern, number and location of injectors in relation to producersSufficient injection rate and volume, to maintain reservoir pressure and optimise sweepReservoir monitoring and production management, to ensure adequate data acquisition and studies to support field development and production decisions in a timely manner. In relatively tight carbonate reservoirs, injection well injectivity is a critical factor when addressing the above three key areas. Water injection injectivity is fairly well understood, but gas injection injectivity in a miscible setting can be very complex. The complexity can be attributed to a combination of factors, for example: The dependence of injection gas property parameters on downhole injection pressure and temperatureDevelopment of the miscible oil bank via either vaporising or/and condensing mechanismVapour phase being significantly more mobile than reservoir liquid oil and waterWhere applicable, gravity segregation in areas surrounding the injectorReservoir wettability and hysteresis. An assessment into miscible gas EOR injection injectivity for relatively low permeability carbonate reservoirs has been performed. Actual field injection data (both water injection phase and gas injection phase) from 3 reservoirs were analysed. A compositional sector model was also used. Injectivity evolution trends were discussed, and potential influencing factors identified. Recommendations on best practices for WAG injector injectivity monitoring, reservoir voidage replacement calculations are provided.
Miscible CO2 flood is a well-established proven EOR recovery mechanism. There have been a large number of CO2 EOR developments worldwide, in both carbonate and clastic reservoirs. Potential control or influence factors on incremental production and incremental recovery over water flood are well documented in the published literature. Some of the published CO2 EOR developments have reported relatively high incremental recoveries. ADNOC is a leader in miscible gas injection EOR in carbonate reservoirs. There are a number of ongoing miscible gas injection EOR developments within its portfolio contributing a significant amount of production. Miscible CO2 flood is a key EOR development for ADNOC. Following intensive screening studies and laboratory experiments, the first CO2 EOR pilot in the MENA region was conducted as early as 2009 in one of ADNOC Onshore fields. This paved the way for further large-scale deployment and CO2 WAG pilots starting in 2016, both onshore. Appreciable progresses have been made since 2009. This bodes well with the significant initiatives undertaken by the UAE towards carbon emissions and greenhouse gas reduction, climate control and sustainable development. There are broad consensus that climate changes are now and will continue to affect all countries on all continents. Potential global warming can disrupt national economies and adversely impact on lives, costing people, communities and countries already today and perhaps more in the future. Carbon Capture, Utilization, and Storage (CCUS) technologies have been making headlines and attracting increasing amount of renewed attention, because they are in line with meeting global greenhouse gas reduction goals, and contributing towards climate control and sustainable development. The giant Abu Dhabi onshore field consists of 6 carbonate reservoirs. Several pilots, immiscible hydrocarbon gas injection and CO2 WAG, and a pattern immiscible gas injection WAG flood have been executed. Miscible gas injection EOR is therefore field proven. However, due to large field size, surface congestion constraints, geological and fluid variations, miscible gas injection EOR development by reservoir individually becomes complex and economically challenging. This paper presents a comprehensive study and recommends an integrated CCUS Hub development approach - enabling field-wide EOR development with several hundred million-barrels of incremental recovery. The study follows a step-by-step systematic method. Existing water flood performances were assessed first. History matched full field simulation then leads to identification of CO2 EOR targets by area/flank for each reservoir. These are referred to as sweet development areas. Available advanced PVT data were analysed and a multi-reservoir single equation of state developed. It has been found that only CO2 is miscible across all six reservoirs, while hydrocarbon gas is also miscible for the deepest two reservoirs. Dedicated fine scale sector models (EOR history matched where applicable) were developed to generate multiple CO2 EOR development scenarios, for example, depending on water flood maturity at the time of CO2 EOR start-up, and potential impact on incremental oil production, incremental oil recovery due to reservoir heterogeneity. First results from sector modelling show that quite a few areas/flanks would be sub-economical if CO2 EOR development on a stand-alone basis. Hence the concept of a CCUS Hub is proposed, which would allow sweet development areas in any or all of the six reservoirs to be developed from a single common surface Cluster. There is potential space for development phasing, allowing additional CO2 EOR developments within the same cluster area once ullage and CO2 supply becomes available. The CCUS Hub development approach facilitates optimization and sharing of injection/production flow-lines; surface space, gathering and processing facilities, CO2 supply, CO2 recovery unit deployment coupled with produced gas re-injection into the 2 deepest reservoirs. Compared to a more conventional development approach of reservoir by reservoir, considerable scope for CAPEX and OPEX savings was found. Assuming a constant future oil price, a reduction in development costs would allow more sweet development areas to pass the threshold of economical development, leading to an increase in overall incremental production and recovery from CO2 EOR.
Miscible CO2 flood - similar to miscible hydrocarbon gas injection - is a well-established proven EOR development scheme. There have been a large number of CO2 EOR developments worldwide, with deployment in both carbonate and clastic reservoirs. Potential controlling factors on CO2 EOR incremental production and recovery are well understood and widely published. This paper presents an integrated CO2 EOR development study, with emphasis on advanced technologies application - a full subsurface to surface integrated approach to meet the challenges of a complex multi reservoir carbonate field CO2 EOR development. This paper is a follow up companion paper, presenting additional results, to a previous paper by Xu S. et al (2021). Holistic detailed studies were performed expediting advanced technologies deployment under a CCUS Hub decarbonisation approach. Based on field pilot testing results, multi advanced technologies from subsurface to surface were assessed in a fully integrated manner. These include Maximum Reservoir Contact (MRC) wells, Limited Entry Liner (LEL) and fishbone drilling advanced completion technologies, fishbone surface networking, CO2 recovery unit etc. Significant improvements in incremental oil recovery and project economics were obtained.
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