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Unconventional oil and gas reserves have drawn considerable attention for petroleum companies over the last two decades. Eco-friendly electric-powered drilling rigs and fracturing fleets have been commercially available instead of diesel-powered equipment. However, Operators were often confronted with challenges of the great demand on electrical power especially fracturing operation. Fossil-energy-powered electricity and existing expensive high-voltage power grids have negative effect on Environmental-Social-Governance (ESG) initiatives and CAPEX of shale-oil developing projects. Additionally, although operators concern multi-energy complementary with regard to green energy such as solar energy and wind power, economic and efficiency drawbacks of green electricity caused by power uncertainties could not be ignored. Unconventional reserves have been proved in Western China full of abundant green energy. As demonstrated in the national project of "Channels computing resources from east to west", computing-power data centers are constructed with electrochemical Energy-Storage System (ESS) in Western China and power source mainly stem from local green energy. In this paper one novel green-power supply solution based on capacity leasing and energy storage sharing with data centers was proposed due to electrical power surplus. One hybrid power network, combining 35kV grid with Multi Micro-grids (MMGs) between green-power stations and oil field pads, was planned to be constructed by operators. One ESS-based system integrating MMGs was set up in one case demonstration. Some mobile energy-storage units were used for cost-effective power supply and peak shaving on certain pads due to poor load curves. The solution feasibility was verified and compared with the traditional power supply mode. ESS-based system with MMGs is qualified for affordable green-powered well construction and sustainable development of unconventional oil fields.
Unconventional oil and gas reserves have drawn considerable attention for petroleum companies over the last two decades. Eco-friendly electric-powered drilling rigs and fracturing fleets have been commercially available instead of diesel-powered equipment. However, Operators were often confronted with challenges of the great demand on electrical power especially fracturing operation. Fossil-energy-powered electricity and existing expensive high-voltage power grids have negative effect on Environmental-Social-Governance (ESG) initiatives and CAPEX of shale-oil developing projects. Additionally, although operators concern multi-energy complementary with regard to green energy such as solar energy and wind power, economic and efficiency drawbacks of green electricity caused by power uncertainties could not be ignored. Unconventional reserves have been proved in Western China full of abundant green energy. As demonstrated in the national project of "Channels computing resources from east to west", computing-power data centers are constructed with electrochemical Energy-Storage System (ESS) in Western China and power source mainly stem from local green energy. In this paper one novel green-power supply solution based on capacity leasing and energy storage sharing with data centers was proposed due to electrical power surplus. One hybrid power network, combining 35kV grid with Multi Micro-grids (MMGs) between green-power stations and oil field pads, was planned to be constructed by operators. One ESS-based system integrating MMGs was set up in one case demonstration. Some mobile energy-storage units were used for cost-effective power supply and peak shaving on certain pads due to poor load curves. The solution feasibility was verified and compared with the traditional power supply mode. ESS-based system with MMGs is qualified for affordable green-powered well construction and sustainable development of unconventional oil fields.
Friction pressure has always been a limiting factor for placing water and proppant during a hydraulic fracture treatment. Mitigating friction pressure has relied heavily upon using chemicals to reduce the friction and ultimately the hydraulic horsepower required to complete the job. Costs to reduce friction pressure have always been associated with the type and amount of friction reducer (FR) used. Best practices being associated with using as little as necessary to achieve the treatment. On the contrary, utilizing the minimum amount of FR can increase overall costs for treatment due to increased fuel usage which leads to increased emissions. As the industry strengthens focus surrounding Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) and optimizing costs for well completions, this paper discusses a unique approach to decrease friction pressures, reduce fuel usage, and ultimately optimize the completions treatment and associated cost. Using friction models based on laboratory data and fuel consumption models built from flowmeter measurement during treatment, various pumping scenarios can be combined to estimate fuel consumption for diesel and dual fuel engines at varying FR set points. Incorporating a friction pressure model allows for treating pressure to be estimated and used within the fuel consumption model. Providing commodity costs and emissions factors allows for understanding of total cost and emissions changes with increased FR usage. Varying FR usage, treatment rate, and number of pumps gives room for optimization and understanding of the variables that demonstrate the greatest effect on total costs and emissions. Increasing FR leads to decreased treating pressure and required hydraulic horsepower which reduces fuel consumption and generated emissions. The cost reductions depend on commodity prices as well as the types of fuel used (diesel or a blend of diesel and natural gas). Utilizing current market pricing, an increase in FR concentration from 0.4 gal per thousand to 0.6 gal per thousand resulted in a decrease in overall costs of nearly 5% per pumping hour and emissions reductions of up to 15.9%. By changing the conventional wisdom of lowering costs by reducing chemical concentrations to optimizing based on the bigger picture, emissions, treatment costs, and equipment utilized are reduced. Additional horsepower can be utilized for backup and further reduce non-productive time and increase efficiency. With proper planning and understanding, this solution will provide a more efficient environment for completions.
The hydraulic fracturing of an unconventional well is typically the single most significant component of the expenditure for that well; however, there is no industry standard for assessing the efficiency of that operation. This work will present an approach for evaluating hydraulic fracturing performance that transcends commonly used key performance indicators (KPIs). Historically, the industry has focused on various metrics, such as pumping hours per day, to quantify a frac crew's efficiency. However, many commonly used KPIs may provide incomplete and sometimes misleading indicators of the actual performance of a given completions spread. This paper will present examples of traditionally used KPIs, instances where they have gone wrong, and offer an alternative means of consolidating and visualizing data from various commonly available sources. The intent is to better diagnose drivers affecting the performance of a given hydraulic fracturing spread. Commonly collected data from a hydraulic fracturing job, including rates, volumes, design parameters, and job logs, are transformed into consistent and easily understandable metrics. These data have been collected for hundreds of jobs and stages over the last few years and integrated into a dashboard to get a high-level understanding of performance. The authors of this paper have mined these data sets for examples to share lessons learned from experience and present some of the critical factors that can substantially impact performance. A review of historically used KPIs (stages, hours, feet per day, transition times, etc.) will reveal that none are ideal, and many suffer significant flaws. For example, a typical ‘stage’ design can vary wildly between areas. Pumping hours per day do not account for actual output during those hours. Case studies will illustrate the potential pitfalls of traditional KPI tracking and introduce the value of a more comprehensive approach. The methodology presented will divide the efficiency of a frac crew into a few broad buckets. The first encompasses surface efficiency - how physical operations on the well site affect the ability to pump. The second is hydraulic efficiency - quantifying how effectively the spread can attain and maintain the target pumping rate. The final bucket focuses on capturing overall crew performance in a single metric – slurry volume pumped. The volume pumped per day captures daily performance, while cumulative volume pumped over time reveals macro efficiency trends. Hydraulic fracturing KPIs have not been standardized. Additionally, they are often only evaluated and reviewed monthly or quarterly, not daily. Subsurface drivers of efficiency are also commonly neglected. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first work to present a methodology for holistically assessing a hydraulic fracturing operation's effectiveness and efficiency using a combination of surface and subsurface metrics trackable on a daily basis.
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