Method and apparatus for producing and shipping hydrocarbons offshore

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6230809
  • Patent Number
    6,230,809
  • Date Filed
    Wednesday, December 10, 1997
    27 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, May 15, 2001
    23 years ago
  • Inventors
  • Examiners
    • Dang; Hoang
    Agents
    • Kenyon & Kenyon
Abstract
A method and apparatus for off-shore production of oil. Special shuttle tankers with high-pressure cargo tanks capable of containing the produced live crude oil at a pressure close to that of the ambient pressure inside a subterranean oil field, and without any processing of the live crude oil prior to transportation are used. The produced live crude oil from the subterranean oil field is pumped directly into the high-pressure cargo tanks aboard the shuttle tanker. Lighter fractions of the live crude oil stored in the shuttle tanker may be used as a fuel to power the propulsion machinery and the auxiliary machinery aboard the shuttle tanker. The pressures in the tanks are ordinarily above 70 kPa gauge pressure, may be higher than 1.8 MPa gauge, and may range as high as 35 MPa gauge or even higher. The tanker vessel transports the produced live crude oil to an onshore processing plant for separation into gas, water, solids, and stabilized crude oil.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




1. Field of the Invention




The present invention relates to a method and apparatus for producing and shipping hydrocarbons, e.g., crude oil, from an offshore site. In particular, the present invention relates to a method and apparatus which does not require an offshore processing plant and which allows both gas and oil to be shipped to an onshore processing plant.




2. Description of the Prior Art




Crude oil and natural gas from offshore wells is produced in the following manner according to the teachings of the presently-known prior art technology. First, the crude oil and gas wells are drilled and completed using drilling equipment that is mounted on either a jack-up drilling rig or on a floating vessel.




After the wells have been drilled and completed they are typically connected to an offshore processing plant that separates the live crude oil from the well—which is typically a mixture of oil, gas, water, salt and other solids—into a stabilized crude oil with a low vapor pressure—that is therefore suitable for transportation in ordinary tanker vessels—and a natural gas component—that is suitable for transportation onshore by a pipeline. Ordinarily, the stabilized crude oil is processed at the offshore processing plant sufficiently so that it may be used in a standard onshore refining process without further treatment to remove solids, salt, and water from the crude oil. Therefore, the offshore processing facility also removes water, salt and other solids from the live crude oil before it is transferred to the vessel as stabilized crude oil.




The stabilized crude oil may then be transported ashore by pipeline or by tanker vessels, which tanker vessels normally store the stabilized crude oil at or near atmospheric pressure. The produced gas is ordinarily transported ashore in pipelines. In addition to transporting the produced gas ashore by pipeline, a number of emerging technologies exist to transport the gas in ships, by subjecting the gas to chemical processes that convert it, for example, into methanol or by liquefying the gas and transporting it as a cooled liquid. The technologies for transporting the gas in ships all require large capital expenditures and cause the loss of a significant fraction of the energy content in the gas during processing and transportation.




If tanker transportation of the stabilized crude oil is used from the offshore oil field processing plant, significant hydrocarbon losses usually occur due to de-gassing of the crude oil in the cargo tanks. The economics and safety of ordinary tanker transportation do not permit the re-capture and retention of this gas, leading to the waste of this energy source.




In the event that no pipeline is available to transport the gas ashore, because of, e.g., distance, many jurisdictions today require that the gas be re-injected into the hydrocarbon-bearing soil formation to preserve the gas for future production when the economics of exploitation permits the production and transportation of the gas. At locations where re-injection requirements do not exist, the gas may be burned in a flare. Either of these processes, re-injection or flaring, are expensive and waste energy that could otherwise be produced or used.




The offshore processing plant of the presently-known prior art technology may be mounted on a platform sitting on the sea bed, on a ship-like vessel, on a semi-submersible, or on a tension leg platform. Other possible means of mounting offshore processing plants also exist. However, all of these means have in common the fact that the platform for supporting the processing plant is very expensive.




The offshore processing plant of the presently-known prior art technology is expensive compared to a comparable crude oil processing plant on land, because the offshore processing plant must be specially adapted for the offshore environment, for operation in a restricted space, to compensate for possible movement and accelerations of the plant during operations, and for limited possibilities for maintenance. Furthermore, the crew operating the offshore plant is regularly ferried back and forth between the platform and land, and all their needs, with the possible exception of fuel, must also be ferried to the plant from shore.




Thus, the capital costs and the operating costs for an offshore processing plant of the presently-known technology is much higher than for a corresponding plant on land.




Some of the problems of the above-described method are addressed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,446,804. In this patent, a method is described for loading shuttle ships with live crude oil directly from subsea oil wells. This process consists of loading the live crude oil into tanks on the shuttle tanker that are pre-filled with a displacement liquid and pressurized to a pressure near the pressure of the live crude oil to be received. The live crude oil then displaces the displacement liquid under nearly constant pressure during the loading operation. This procedure results in a shuttle tanker having an extraordinary complex cargo handling system with a large number of valves and instruments. Another disadvantage of the system described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,446,804 is that the tanker must be designed for a pressure near the bubble point of the crude oil, to take full advantage of the shuttle tanker loading system.




The system described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,446,804, however, has the advantage of minimizing the release of gas from the crude oil by maintaining the cargo always near maximum pressure. A severe drawback to the system described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,446,804 is that the containment system in the tanker must be designed for the bubble pressure of the received crude oil. This pressure varies from oil field to oil field. Therefore a tanker may be designed to serve a specific oil field, which limits its utility, or may be designed to be used in a number of oil fields. In the latter case the cargo containment system must be designed for a highest pressure in the oil fields, possibly as high as 35 MPa.




Another relevant patent to this field is U.S. Pat. No. 5,199,266. This patent describes a method for transporting gas from offshore fields, which gas has been produced on offshore production platforms by pressurizing the gas and cooling it to a temperature in the range of −100° C. to −120° C. In this temperature range and at a pressure of approximately 1.5 MPa, all hydrocarbon gases normally occurring in oil wells are liquid. As described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,199,266 the gas must be delivered to the transport vessel in gaseous form and is then cooled and liquefied on the shuttle vessel. A very large and expensive cooling plant is required on the gas transport vessel to cool and condense the gas to be transported. Thus, the system described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,199,266 not only requires an offshore production platform in accordance with the traditional technology but also require a number of high pressure, refrigerated tanker vessels each fitted with a large-capacity cooling plant.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




The object of the present invention is to overcome some or all of the drawbacks associated with the present technologies. This object is achieved by constructing special shuttle tankers with high-pressure cargo tanks capable of containing the produced live crude oil (i.e., crude oil which has not been stabilized by removal of mixed gas, or further processed to remove water, salt or other solids) at a pressure close to that of the ambient pressure inside the subterranean oil field, and without any processing of the live crude oil prior to transportation. The produced live crude oil from the subterranean oil field is pumped into high-pressure cargo tanks aboard the shuttle tanker, either directly or through a flash drum. Re-injection or flaring of produced gas mixed with the crude oil is avoided or greatly reduced, and escape of the lighter fractions of the crude oil to the atmosphere is prevented.




In the ordinary application of the invention, the produced oil will separate into two phases, a gas phase and an oil phase that has a lower gas-oil ratio (GOR) than the produced crude oil. As the pressure in the receiving tanks rise the gas phase becomes proportionally smaller compared to the oil phase. If the bubble point of the produced oil is sufficiently low, the gas phase may become zero when the pressure in the tanks have risen sufficiently. Re-injection or flaring of produced gas is avoided or greatly reduced and escape of the lighter fractions of the crude oil to the atmosphere is prevented.




The volumetric ratio between gas and oil may vary between zero and one. Thus a vessel according to the present invention is universal and may produce crude oil from offshore oil fields having all GORs from zero (i.e., no gas in the produced fluids) to the produced fluids being 100 percent gas.




In the practice of the present invention, it is the intent to use the lighter fractions, such as methane, of the produced live crude oil stored in the shuttle tanker as a fuel to power the propulsion machinery and the auxiliary machinery aboard the shuttle tanker. This action lowers the pressure of the contained live crude oil. The ambient temperature of the live crude oil in the ground is ordinarily significantly higher than the ambient temperature at the sea surface. During the production process the produced live crude oil is cooled, as the result of transfer of the live crude oil from the well, through the riser and into the vessel, with a consequent reduction in vapor pressure of the live crude oil.




The pressures at which the cargo must be contained in order to contain most of the lighter fractions of the produced live crude oil in liquid form vary greatly from oil field to oil field. However, the pressures would ordinarily be above 70 kPa gauge pressure, may be higher than 1.8 MPa gauge, and may range as high as 35 MPa gauge or even higher. Standard shuttle tankers of the prior art can only accept a pressure differential of approximately 25 kPa between the interior of the cargo tanks and the exterior atmosphere, i.e., a pressure of 25 kPa gauge. Therefore, tanks in ordinary tankers of the prior art must be vented to the atmosphere to prevent dangerous differential pressures from building within the cargo tank as gas dissociates from the stabilized crude oil because of the vapor pressure increase as the result of storing the stabilized crude oil at or near atmospheric. This venting in the prior art causes significant energy loss, which loss is eliminated or greatly reduced using the method and apparatus of the present invention.




A particular advantage of the present invention is that the live crude oil is produced into tanks aboard the shuttle tanker that have an internal pressure close to atmospheric at the start of the loading process. This crude oil dissociates into liquid and gas phases in the tanks. As more crude oil enters the cargo tanks the dissociated gas is compressed and raises the pressure in the tanks. Normally the cargo tank design pressure is reached before the cargo tanks are full. Therefore, a shuttle tanker having a particular design pressure may be applied to wide variety of oil fields with different crude oils, regardless of the bubble pressure. The only difference is the degree to which the tanker can be filled without venting the gas.




When the crude oil having a high GOR is discharged into a vessel with much lower pressure, the flow expands violently and may cause high wear of the piping, fittings, valves, and the receiving tank itself. The produced crude oil often contains sand and other grit increasing the erosion of the system. For this reason the tankers in this invention will usually be fitted with a flash drum that is maintained at the pressure of the receiving cargo tank. This flash drum is the pressure vessel that receives and reduces the pressure of the crude oil. The flash drum may be located at an easily-accessible location on the tanker so that it can be replaced whenever the wear of its components warrant its replacement.




To be able to efficiently handle crude oils with a high GOR the present invention also allows the venting of the gas in the cargo tanks of the shuttle vessel into refrigerated cargo tanks that are cooled by an onboard refrigeration plant. By this method, all hydrocarbons normally occurring in crude oil except methane will condense and become liquid, and the methane itself can be stored at a higher density because of its lower temperature.




The discharging of crude oil and gas at the processing plant is particularly easy in the present invention. The crude oil is drawn from the bottom of the cargo tanks using the high pressure in the tanks to provide energy to pump the oil ashore. If the vessel is fitted with cooled storage tanks natural gas liquids are drawn from the bottom of these tanks, and pumped ashore by the high pressure in these tanks. The natural gas remaining is only partly discharged so that a sufficient quantity remains to be used as fuel for propulsion on the tanker's return trip to the oil field.




Application of the present invention requires that the tanker vessel transport the produced live crude oil to an onshore processing plant for separation into gas, water, solids, and stabilized crude oil. This plant may be situated anywhere that the tanker vessel can go that is advantageously situated relative to customers of the oil and the gas.




The present invention is also applicable to existing or future oil or gas fields that are not situated in the vicinity of a gas pipeline and for which such a pipeline is uneconomical. Such fields are normally equipped with a processing plant that separate the crude oil from the gases. Normally the gases are re-injected into the hydrocarbon bearing formation. In such cases vessels constructed in accordance with the teaching of this invention may be employed to bring the hydrocarbon gases ashore. The processing plant may deliver so-called fuel gas which contains significant amounts of propane, butane and higher hydrocarbons or may deliver pipeline-ready gas that can be directly injected into gas pipelines ashore without further treatment.




The present invention is similar to the process described by U.S. Pat. No. 5,199,266, with the exception that the gas is not cooled to below −100 degrees C., but stored under pressure partly or fully in the form of a gas. The present invention also applies to oil fields found on land in the vicinity of the ocean or in the vicinity of navigable rivers. The technology may also be used to transport gas on inland waterways. The only alternative technologies for transporting gas along inland waterways are pipeline transportation or transportation in ships or barges carrying the gas as a liquid at a temperature that is typically −162 degrees C. (Liquefied Natural Gas, “LNG”).




The first of the two prior art technologies discussed above has high fixed costs, whereas the second has both high fixed costs and high energy consumption in the liquefaction process. Transportation of gas in accordance with the teaching of the present invention is particularly advantageous and lower in cost for small volumes of transportation such as between 100 tonnes/day and 2000 tonnes/day and for relatively small distances such as 200 km to 1000 km.











The above and other features and advantages of the oil production method and apparatus are described in detail below in connection with the drawings.




BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1

is diagram representing the existing technology of offshore oil production;





FIG. 2

is a diagram describing offshore oil production in accordance with the present invention;





FIG. 3

is side view of a vessel adapted for the production of offshore oil in accordance with the present invention;





FIG. 4

is a diagram showing the processes aboard a shuttle tanker according to one embodiment of the present invention, adapted for cooling produced gasses;





FIG. 5

is a diagram showing the flash drum receiving the crude oil in tankers according to the embodiment of FIG.


4


.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION





FIG. 1

illustrates an example of the production of oil in accordance with the present, prior art, technology.




An underground sub-sea hydrocarbon reservoir


10


may include a gas layer


11


, an oil layer


12


, and a water layer


13


. The reservoir


10


is tapped though a well


14


. The well


14


terminates in a wellhead


15


at the sea bed


16


. A crude-oil/water/gas mixture (which mixture may also contain salt and other solids), also known as live crude oil, flows from the well head


15


through the pipe


20


to a processing plant


21


elevated above the sea surface


22


by a platform


23


. The processing plant


21


separates the live crude oil into a gas that is conveyed to shore by the pipeline


24


, produced water that is discharged to the sea through pipe


25


, and stabilized crude oil that is transferred through a pipe


26


to a floating storage vessel


27


. Stabilized crude oil is crude oil which has had, inter alia, volatile gas removed from it by the processing plant


21


.




The storage vessel


27


is permanently moored near the platform


23


by anchor lines


28


connected to sea bed anchors (not shown), and stores the stabilized crude oil produced by the processing plant


21


at approximately atmospheric pressure or at a pressure no greater than 25 kPa gauge. The crude oil is transported away from the storage tanker


27


by shuttle tankers


29


that receive the oil through a cargo transfer hose


30


. Shuttle tankers


29


also store the stabilized crude oil at approximately atmospheric pressure or at a pressure no greater than 25 kPa gauge.





FIG. 2

shows an oil production system in accordance with the teachings of the present invention. A sub-sea hydrocarbon reservoir


10


comprises a gas layer


11


, an oil layer


12


, and a water layer


13


. The reservoir


10


is tapped by the well


14


terminating in a sub-sea wellhead


15


. The wellhead


15


may be located at the sea-bed


16


or above or below the seabed


16


as circumstances may dictate. The wellhead


15


is connected through a pipeline


40


to a riser


41


terminating in a mooring buoy


42


for the shuttle tanker


50


. Mooring buoy


42


may be of the type shown in my U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,305,703; 5,339,760; 5,380,229; 5,553,976; 5,447,114 and 5,515,803; and my U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,647,295 and 5,676,083. The live crude oil is conveyed through the mooring buoy


42


by piping (not shown) in the mooring buoy


42


to piping


51


in the shuttle tanker


50


, through a multi-path swivel


52


, and to cargo piping


53


aboard the tanker


50


. The tanker


50


is a special tanker adapted to store the produced crude oil at a pressure at or somewhat below the pressure in the sub-sea oil field


10


.




The well head


15


may include instrumentation and controls (not shown) in order to monitor the flow from the well and in order to be able to shut in the well. The instrumentation and the controls (not shown) at the well head


15


are connected to the vessel


50


by an umbilical


45


connected to control and instrument cabling


55


aboard the vessel


50


. The cabling


55


is connected through the multi-path swivel


52


to fixed cabling


54


to control and monitoring systems


56


aboard the vessel


50


.




The riser


40


, submarine pipeline


41


, and umbilical


45


may consist of multiple individual units connecting to a number of different wellheads


15


. Each of the risers


40


and umbilicals


45


may connect to multiple pipes


53


and multiple cabling


54


aboard the vessel. The multi-path swivel


52


in such a case would be equipped with sufficient fluid, instrument, and control paths (not shown) to service all risers


41


and umbilicals


45


individually. The umbilical


45


may also contain electrical or hydraulic power conduits (not shown) to power subsea pumping equipment (not shown) to boost the flow in the well


14


.




Some of the wells


14


may serve as water injection wells


91


or as gas injection wells


93


(see

FIG. 3

) being supplied with water and gas, respectively, from the vessel


50


. While it is usually advantageous to avoid gas injection wells


93


when producing the crude oil using the technology taught in the present invention, all standard well production and stimulation schemes may be employed, provided the vessel


50


is fitted with the required equipment.





FIG. 3

shows in more detail the vessel


50


. In this figure the control, power, and instrumentation equipment


56


,


54


,


55


, and


45


have been omitted for clarity.




Three risers


41


are shown, one


61


is connected to an oil producing well (not shown), one


62


is connected to a water injection well


91


, and one


92


is connected to a gas injection well


93


. It is to be understood that water injection well


91


, water injection riser


62


, gas injection well


93


and gas injection riser


92


are all optional features, and are only needed where local geological conditions or local regulations require that water or gas be re-injected into reservoir


10


. Water for water injection is drawn from the sea at intake


76


and conveyed to the pump


74


through suction piping


75


. The pump


74


has a discharge pressure sufficient to overcome the flow pressure losses in the well and the pressure in the oil field itself. The water is conveyed through the discharge pipe


73


, through the multi-path fluid swivel


52


, and into connector pipe


72


. The connector pipe


72


is connected to internal piping (not shown) in mooring buoy


42


and then to the riser


62


, and thereafter into the water injection well


91


.




The produced crude-oil/water/gas mixture or live crude oil is received through riser


61


then through piping in the mooring buoy


42


(not shown) to connector pipe


71


. The produced fluids are then conveyed through the multi-path swivel


52


to suction pipe


77


for pump


80


. Pump


80


raises the pressure in the produced fluid sufficient so that the dissociation of gases in the crude oil stops or slows down significantly. The produced fluid is then conveyed through pipe


81


to the high pressure storage tank


82


. Storage tank


82


is normally spherical or cylindrical. The vessel is usually equipped with a large number of tanks


82


, but only one is shown in

FIG. 3

, for clarity. The produced fluid stored in tanks


82


will typically dissociate into a gas phase and fluid phase, separated by a surface


83


within the tank


82


. The gas phase may be drawn off through the pipe


84


for use as fuel for powering the propulsion system


95


of tanker


50


or for other purposes aboard the tanker


50


. As an alternative, the gas phase may also be drawn off, pressurized by a gas pump


94


, conveyed by piping (not shown) to the multi-path fluid swivel


52


, into a connector pipe (not shown) connected to internal piping (not shown) in mooring buoy


42


, then conveyed to a gas injection riser


92


connected to the internal piping in the mooring buoy


42


, and thereafter into a gas injection well


93


.




Storage tanks


82


, in order to limit the dissociation of gases in the crude oil and to safely handle and transport the crude-oil/water/gas mixture, must be designed to maintain the crude-oil/water/gas mixture at a pressure approximating that in the formation


10


. The storage tanks


82


must therefore be capable of holding pressures of above 70 kPa gauge pressure, pressures which may be in excess of 1.8 MPa gauge, and pressures possibly as high as 35 MPa gauge. One tank which will hold the pressure in this range and which will comply with maritime and other safety regulation is the type of tank described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,010,864. This type of tank is particularly advantageous because it is much lighter than tanks of standard solid wall design. Application of tanks


82


similar to those described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,010,864 typically increases the amount of gas that can be carried by a given vessel


50


by 50% to 100%.




In the event that produced water settles out in tank


82


it may be withdrawn through piping (not shown) and conveyed to pump


74


for re-injection into the formation


10


, through water injection riser


62


and water injection well


91


.




Operation of the device of the present invention is as follows. First, one or more crude oil and gas wells


14


are drilled and completed using drilling equipment that is mounted on either a jack-up drilling rig or on a floating vessel (not shown). Thereafter, each drilled well is capped with a suitable wellhead


15


. Wellheads


15


may include or be connected to subsea pumping equipment (not shown) which boosts the flow in the well, instrumentation and control equipment (not shown) which monitors the flow from the well and may shut off the flow from the well. Pipeline


40


, which may contain one or more risers


41


and umbilicals


45


, is then connected to the wellheads


15


, which riser


41


is then connected to a mooring buoy


42


, which mooring buoy


42


is anchored to the sea bed in a known fashion.




When it is desired to retrieve and transport live crude oil from the wells


14


, vessel


50


steered over the mooring buoy


42


and thereafter attached to the mooring buoy in a known manner. Cabling


54


and piping


53


on the vessel is connected to the umbilicals


45


and risers


41


by connection of piping


51


and cabling


55


, connected to the swivel connection


52


on the vessel


50


, with piping and cabling (not shown) in the mooring buoy


42


, connected to risers


41


and umbilicals


45


. Control and monitoring systems


56


on vessel


50


are then activated to send a signal, through cabling


54


and umbilicals


45


, to open the flow of fluids from the wells


14


and/or to pump fluids from the wells


14


. The live crude oil flowing from wells


14


flows through riser


61


, through mooring buoy


42


, through connector pipe


71


and suction pipe


77


. The live crude oil is thereafter pressurized by pump


80


so that it flows into tanks


82


, through pipe


81


, and is thereafter stored in tanks


82


at a pressure approximately equal to that at which the live crude oil was kept in the reservoir


10


, i.e., pressures of above 70 kPa gauge, pressures which may be in excess of 1.8 MPa gauge, and pressures possibly as high as 35 MPa gauge. During the time when the vessel


50


is connected to mooring buoy


42


, seawater may be pumped by pump


74


through intake


76


, discharge pipe


73


, riser


62


and into water injection well


91


, if local conditions or regulations require water re-injection into the reservoir


10


. Additionally, or alternatively, water which settles out in tanks


82


may be pumped by pump


74


into water injection well


91


. Additionally, if local conditions or regulations require gas re-injection into the reservoir


10


, gas in tanks


82


may be pumped by pump


94


through pipe


84


, through riser


92


and into gas injection well


93


.




After the tanks


82


on vessel


50


have been filled with live crude oil, the control and monitoring systems


56


on vessel


50


are then activated to send a signal, through cabling


54


and umbilicals


45


, to shut off the flow of fluids from the wells


14


and/or to discontinue pumping of fluids from the wells


14


. Cabling


54


and piping


53


on the vessel are disconnected to the umbilicals


45


and risers


41


by dis connection of piping


51


and cabling


55


with piping and cabling (not shown) in the mooring buoy


42


. Vessel


50


thereafter is unattached from the mooring buoy


42


in a known manner. Vessel


50


then sails to a suitable onshore processing plant (not shown), where the vessel


50


is moored and the live crude oil in tanks


82


is transferred to the processing plant for subsequent processing. During sailing of vessel


50


, gas from tanks


82


may be conveyed through pipe


84


to powered equipment, including the propulsion system, on vessel


50


, to be used as a source of power for that equipment.





FIG. 4

shows in diagram of a modified embodiment of the present invention, for the receipt and storage of live crude oil. Live crude oil is received on the vessel


50


at the flash tank


90


through pipe


81


. In the flash tank


90


the live crude oil separates into a gas phase


98


and a liquid phase


97


, which are separated by the liquid surface


96


. The gas phase


98


is conveyed through pipe


88


to the storage tank


82


. The liquid phase is conveyed through pipe


89


to the storage tank


82


. In the storage tank


82


, the liquid occupies the bottom part


130


and the gas the top part


132


, separated by the liquid surface


134


.




The continued production of oil keeps raising the level


134


and thereby raising the pressure in the tank


82


. At some point the set pressure of relief valve


96


is reached and the gas phase


132


vents through pipe


99


to gas tank


100


. Tank


100


is cooled by a coil


105


powered by a refrigeration machine


106


. The crude oil liquid phase


130


would typically be maintained at temperatures ranging from 5° C. to 60° C., depending on the characteristics of the crude oil. Tank


100


would typically be maintained at a temperature of −20° C. to 10° C. Normally the pressure in tanks


82


and


100


would exceed 5 MPa, and thus all hydrocarbons but methane would condense into liquid form in tank


100


. The liquids


101


collect at the bottom of tank


100


separated from the gas


103


by liquid surface


102


.





FIG. 5

depicts the system in

FIG. 4

in more detail. Pipe


77


aboard the tanker receives the crude oil and feeds it to pump


80


that raises the pressure of the fluid. For some oil wells, pump


80


may be necessary to increase the drive force on the crude oil from the well. For other wells having a high drive pressure, pump


80


may be omitted or bypassed. The crude oil is conveyed through pipe


81


through metering valve


112


, from which it flashes into flash tank


90


. Flash tank


90


is preferably located at a low elevation near the bottom of the vessel


50


. The storage tanks


82


are generally located at a higher elevation than tank


90


. The flash drum


90


is fitted with a liquid level sensor


115


sensing the location of the liquid-gas interface


96


. The signal from sensor


115


is sent to a processing unit


116


that controls valve


117


. Valve


117


is opened whenever the level


96


falls below a preset level and closed when the level


96


rises above a preset level. By this action the crude oil is forced by the gas pressure in tank


90


into storage tank


82


through pipe


89


. The gas


98


that flashes out of the crude oil in flash drum


90


is metered in the proper amount into tank


82


to maintain a nearly constant liquid level in tank


90


.




As the liquid level


134


rises in tank


82


, the pressure increases as well. At some point the gas


132


is vented through relief valve


131


to the gas storage tank


100


. The gas storage tank


100


functions in a similar manner to the oil storage tank


82


, with the exception that it is cooled by heat exchanger


105


, cooled by refrigeration machine


106


. As the liquid level increases in tank


100


the set pressure of relief valve


121


will be reached. The pressure in tank


100


is then kept constant by venting the gas through pipe


122


which may for example vent to a flare (not shown) or to the power plant or propulsion equipment for the vessel


50


. The system will reach its maximum storage capacity when either the liquid level


134


or the liquid level


102


reaches the top of the tank


82


and


100


respectively.




Typically the vessel will be fitted with numerous storage tanks


82


and


100


. The vessel may also be fitted with more than one flash drum


90


. In this event the vessel will be fitted with piping and valving (not shown) that permits the sequential loading of tanks


82


and


100


.




However, in an alternative embodiment, the valve


117


may be closed continuously or the pipe


88


may be eliminated. In this embodiment, the liquid surface


96


would at all times be at the bottom of flash drum


90


. Pipe


89


would, in this embodiment, convey a mixture of gas and liquid. The gas would in this embodiment bubble up through the liquid


130


in tank


82


. In all other respects, the operation of this embodiment is identical to the embodiment described above.




The tanks


90


,


82


and


100


may particularly advantageously be constructed as taught by U.S. Pat. No. 4,010,864. The subject matter of that patent is incorporated herein by reference. The tank construction taught in U.S. Pat. No. 4,010,864 is a cylindrical tank which is reinforced on the outside by helically deployed high strength wires. This construction typically reduces the weight of the tank by 30 to 50% compared to a solid wall tank. Thus the amount of gas that can be carried in a tanker fitted with reinforced cylindrical tanks is typically increased between 50% and 100% compared to a tanker fitted with solid wall tanks. The teaching of U.S. Pat. No. 4,010,864 includes an outer spirally wound sheet made impermeable through welding along the helical lines between two adjacent windings. This feature may be omitted from the tanks


90


,


82


and


100


because they are normally situated within a sealed hold in the tanker and therefore do not need the corrosion protection afforded by the impermeable outer sheath.




While the invention has been described in the specification and illustrated in the drawings with reference to preferred embodiments, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made and equivalents may be substituted for elements of the invention without departing from the scope of the claims.



Claims
  • 1. An oil production system for retrieving and transporting oil from an off-shore oil well said oil comprising a fluid component and a gas component, the system comprisinga riser connected to the oil well; and a vessel comprising a cylindrical metal storage tank coupled to a flash drum by a line, the flash drum being selectively coupleable to the riser, the cylindrical metal storage tank storing both the fluid and gas components of the oil, wherein the cylindrical metal storage tank is reinforced on the outside by one or more layers of helically deployed metal wire.
  • 2. The system of claim 1, further comprising:a pump connected to the oil well, the pump increasing a pressure of the produced fluids.
  • 3. The system of claim 1, wherein:the line comprises a first gas line and a liquid line.
  • 4. The system of claim 1, further comprising:a second gas line drawing off gas from the metal cylindrical storage tank.
  • 5. The system of claim 4, further comprising:a relief valve in the second gas line, the relief valve opening at a set gas pressure.
  • 6. The system of claim 4, wherein:the vessel comprises powered equipment, and wherein the second gas line is connected to the powered equipment, gas from the produced fluids powering the powered equipment.
  • 7. The system of claim 6, wherein:the powered equipment is a propulsion system.
  • 8. The system of claim 1, further comprising:a mooring buoy connected to the riser, the mooring buoy selectively coupling the flash drum to the riser.
  • 9. The system of claim 4, further comprising:a gas storage tank connected to the second gas line.
  • 10. The system of claim 9, wherein:the at least one gas storage tank comprises a heat exchanger.
  • 11. The system of claim 10, further comprising:a refrigeration unit connected to the heat exchanger, the heat exchanger cooling gas in the at least one gas storage tank.
  • 12. The system of claim 4, further comprising:a vent line connected to the gas storage tank, the vent line venting gas from the gas storage tank.
  • 13. The system of claim 12, further comprising:a relief valve in the vent line, the relief valve opening at a set gas pressure.
  • 14. The system of claim 2, further comprising:a liquid level sensor in the flash drum, the liquid level sensor sensing a liquid level in the flash drum.
  • 15. The system of claim 14, further comprising:a control valve in the first gas line, the control valve being connected to the liquid level sensor, the control valve controlling the flow of gas in the first gas line, thereby controlling the liquid level in the flash drum.
  • 16. A method for producing crude oil and natural gas offshore, comprising the steps of:withdrawing crude oil mixed with gas from an oil well; transferring the crude oil mixed with gas into a flash drum on a vessel; reinforcing a cylindrical metal storage tank with one or more layers of helically deployed metal wire on the outside of the tank; transferring crude oil and gas from the flash drum to the metal cylindrical storage tank through a line; storing the crude oil and gas in the cylindrical storage tank; and transporting the crude oil and gas in the vessel.
  • 17. The method of claim 16, further comprising the step of:pumping the crude oil and gas mixture from the well into the flash drum.
  • 18. The method of claim 16, further comprising the step of:drawing off gas from the metal cylindrical storage tank.
  • 19. The method of claim 18, further comprising the step of:using gas drawn off from the metal cylindrical storage tank to propel the vessel during the transporting step.
  • 20. The method of claim 18, further comprising the step of:transferring the gas drawn off from the metal cylindrical storage tank to at least one gas storage tank.
  • 21. The method of claim 20, further comprising the step of:cooling gas transferred to the gas storage tank.
  • 22. The method of claim 20, further comprising the step of:venting gas from the gas storage tank.
  • 23. The method of claim 16, further comprising the steps of:sensing a level of liquid in the flash drum; and controlling the transfer of gas from the flash drum to thereby control the level of liquid in the flash drum.
  • 24. The method of claim 16, wherein:the step of transferring gas and liquid from the flash drum to the storage tank, comprises transferring gas from the flash drum to the storage tank on the vessel through a first gas line, transferring liquid from the flash drum to the metal cylindrical storage tank on the vessel through a liquid line.
Parent Case Info

This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/784,871, filed Jan. 16, 1997, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,012,530 on Jan. 11, 2000, and a continuation in part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/814,147, filed Mar. 10, 1997, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,019,174 on Feb. 1, 2000.

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Continuation in Parts (2)
Number Date Country
Parent 08/784871 Jan 1997 US
Child 08/988497 US
Parent 08/814147 Mar 1997 US
Child 08/784871 US