The invention relates to a system for optimising production from one or more wells and a method for optimising the rate of injection of a viscosity reducing fluid such as a diluent into one or more wells.
In oil wells with downhole pumps as means of artificial lift, the high viscosity of the produced fluid can significantly reduce the efficiency of the downhole pump and increase the frictional pressure drop in the well. This leads to reduced production rates and high power consumption. The injection of lighter oil as a diluent (e.g. light oil with a low viscosity) and/or other fluids (e.g. water) may be used to reduce the viscosity of the fluid produced and therefore improve overall production efficiency. An alternative to diluent injection for the reduction of fluid viscosity is to inject water instead of the diluent. This is known as water continuous production; water is injected to invert the flow regime from oil continuous to water continuous, thus significantly reducing the viscosity of the mixture. Other chemicals (e.g. emulsion breakers) can also be used to reduce viscosity of the produced fluid. Although in this description we will primarily focus on diluent optimisation, the same concepts are valid for other fluids such as water, emulsion breakers and other chemicals that can reduce the viscosity of the highly viscous fluids as well, i.e. the fluids injected into these highly viscous fluids are viscosity reducing fluids. A schematic of a typical well with a downhole pump and diluent injection system with injection upstream the pump according to the prior art is shown in
To optimise production from wells with injection of viscosity reducing fluids, one needs to optimise the injection rate for these fluids. By doing so, it is possible to get, for example higher production rates or lower power consumption of the downhole pumps.
Optimal injection rates of the viscosity reducing fluids can be found through extensive offline simulations of production in typical wells. These simulations are based on theoretical models and models obtained from laboratory experiments.
As an alternative to this offline model-based method, the diluent can be optimised online during production phase, but still based on detailed well and pump models. For example in CN101684727 the diluent optimisation method disclosed is based on comprehensive well models, but there is no consideration of downhole pumps or any other means of artificial lift. A similar model-based approach to optimisation is disclosed in US2005173114A1, in which power optimisation in a well with comprising a downhole pump, but without diluent injection, is disclosed. Another advanced model-based solution for optimisation is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,535,795B1. It discloses a method for the optimisation of the rate of chemical addition to a process. The invention is based on using measurements, adaptive models and decision rules to find an optimal injection rate and to send that optimal rate to local controllers that physically adjust the chemical addition rate.
Model-based optimisation is a common approach in planning and optimising oil production, in particular, production with injection of viscosity reducing fluids. Model-based methods, either offline or online, rely on accurate models of the fluid (density, viscosity etc.), flow in pipes (frictional pressure drop) and on models of the downhole pump—how the fluid flow affects the pump performance, and how the pump affects the fluid downstream from the pump (e.g. it can create emulsions that significantly increase the frictional pressure drop downstream from the pump).
Optimisation based on offline model-based simulations according to the prior art has a number of drawbacks. Optimisation methods based on offline simulations are subject to discrepancies between the models used in the simulations and reality. This may result in non-optimal operation. In some cases optimal injection rate or ratio of the flow rate of the injected viscosity reducing fluid to the produced flow rate from the reservoir (e.g. diluent cut) is calculated for some average well conditions. For a particular well, the production with this injection rate will be in most cases non-optimal due to differences between the real production conditions in that well and the average conditions used in the optimisation calculations. For example, experimental data shows that optimal diluent cut (for wells with diluent injection) depends on water cut of the produced reservoir fluid and reservoir productivity.
For model-based methods that use adaptation of the model parameters to available measurements (“online optimisation methods”), discrepancy between the reality and the models is less. However, some models may still be incorrect. Moreover these methods require adjustment of a number of model parameters to fit the measurements data, which requires time, attention and availability of qualified personnel.
Drawbacks associated with model-based methods can be summarized in the following list:
Some of the models listed above are theoretical (and are often the least accurate), while some are obtained in laboratory experiments (these are more accurate). However, the test facilities for these laboratory experiments are also often far from reproducing true field conditions, again leading to inaccurate models when scaling the results from the experiments up to the full scale field conditions. For example, most test facilities for testing ESP pump stages (to determine their performance for viscous fluids and gas) use synthetic fluids that do not reproduce the behavior of the real oil mixed with water and/or gas. Moreover, such test facilities are usually limited to testing pumps with a small number of stages (e.g. 10-20), whereas in reality the number of stages can be 4-6 times larger. Therefore the effects of the pump on the fluid due to the number of pump stages cannot be captured in these experiments. Thus, certain physical effects happening in a full scale pump with a real fluid cannot be reproduced in these experiments and thus they are not captured in the models resulting from these experiments.
All the uncertainties and inaccuracies inherent to these model-based approaches will lead to non-optimal production that can be quite far from the actual optimum.
To make the models used in the existing methods more reliable, one needs to use additional measurements (like flow rate, water cut, gas/oil ratio, temperatures, viscosity, density, etc.) to tune the models. Quite often there is no available instrumentation for these measurements, or the measurements are available only from time to time (e.g. when the flow is routed to a test separator to determine flow rate, water cut and gas content, or when detailed laboratory tests on the fluid samples are conducted). Hence, it may be difficult to introduce any significant improvement in the degree of reliability of the models in this manner.
Another problem is that well conditions change during production. Consequently, models in model-based optimisation methods need to be constantly re-tuned or adjusted to the new conditions. Otherwise the accumulating inaccuracies in models will lead to non-optimal operation:
Clearly, there is a need to provide an improved system and method for determining the optimal injection rate of viscosity reducing fluid into oil wells comprising downhole pumps to optimise production characteristics like production rate or power consumption by the pumps. There is also a need to continuously control the diluent injection rate to the optimal value.
The present inventors have found that it is possible to provide an improved system and method for determining the optimal injection rate for a viscosity reducing fluid into one or more oil wells comprising one or more downhole pumps, so as to optimise the reduction of viscosity of the production fluid thus produced from said one or more oil wells and thus optimise the production performance of said one or more wells through increase of efficiency of the downhole pumps and reduction of the frictional pressure drop in said one or more wells. The invention applies equally to both single and multiple wells equipped with downhole pumps and fluid injection systems. The system and method of the invention do not suffer from the problems associated with the model-based and theory-based systems of the prior art described above such as the changes of viscosity reducing fluid (e.g. diluent) efficiency in different well conditions, e.g. with varying water cuts; the inaccuracy of the models and the assumptions on which they are based; labor- and knowledge intensive tuning of the models to measurements data.
Thus, in a first aspect of the present invention there is a system for optimising the injection of a viscosity reducing fluid to one, some or all of one or more wells, comprising a downhole pump positioned in the or each well, and holding means for a viscosity reducing fluid, said holding means being connected to the or each well via one or more injection lines through which the viscosity reducing fluid may be pumped by viscosity reducing fluid injection means;
The term production performance in the description above corresponds to the production characteristics either measured or calculated/estimated from the measurements—that need to be optimised, e.g. minimized or maximized. The production performance parameters can correspond to any of: liquid flow rate produced by the well, oil flow rate produced by the well, gas flow rate produced by the well, pressure at the pump intake, pressure at the pump discharge, pressure at the well head, pressure at a location in the well, temperature at the pump intake, temperature at the pump discharge, temperature at the well head, temperature at a location in the well, power consumed by the pump; current supplied to the pump electrical motor; ratio of power consumed by the pump and the liquid flow rate produced by the well, ratio of power consumed by the pump and the oil flow rate produced by the pump, ratio of current supplied to the electrical motor of the pump and the liquid flow rate produced by the well, ratio of current supplied to the electrical motor of the pump and the oil flow rate produced by the well, ratio of the oil flow rate produced by the well and the rate of the viscosity reducing fluid injected in the well, the efficiency of the pump, and the efficiency of the overall production system, or to a combination of any two or more of these parameters.
The system of the present invention is highly advantageous compared to those of the prior art. Instead of using models (which can be inaccurate or unreliable or may require additional measurements) for calculating the optimal injection rate of a viscosity reducing fluid, the system of the present invention uses the well itself as a “calculator” to bring the injection rate for one well or distribution of viscosity reducing fluid rate between the wells to optimal values.
In a second aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method for optimising the injection of a viscosity reducing fluid into one or more wells, wherein the or each well comprises a downhole pump, and the viscosity reducing fluid is pumped via one or more injection lines by viscosity reducing fluid injection means to the or each well, the method comprising:
In a third aspect of the present invention, there is provided a system for optimising the production of oil from one or more wells, comprising a system for optimising the rate of injection of a viscosity reducing fluid between one or more wells according to the first aspect of the present invention.
In a fourth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method for optimising the production of oil from one or more well, comprising a method for optimising the distribution of the viscosity reducing fluid between one or more wells according to the second aspect of the present invention.
The invention is diagrammatically illustrated, by way of example, in the accompanying drawings, in which:
The systems and methods of the present invention have many advantages over the systems and methods known previously. The system of the present invention is superior as it does not require the use of theoretical models or laboratory models. Instead, real time testing of the production performance through controlled variations of the injection rate of the viscosity reducing fluid into one, some or all of the wells enables the wells to be used as a “calculator” to find the gradient of production performance as a function of injection rate of the viscosity reducing fluid; and to adjust, following that gradient, the injection rate of the viscosity reducing fluid towards the value that brings optimal production performance for one or multiple wells.
One particular embodiment of this invention corresponds to the case when the optimisation system and/or the optimisation method described above are applied to a well with automatic control of pump speed to keep the pump intake pressure or pressure at a location in the well upstream from the injection point of the viscosity reducing fluid at a desired set-point. When the automatic controller keeps the pressure at a set-point, the reservoir fluid from the well is produced at a constant rate regardless of variations of the viscosity reducing fluid rate. By minimizing the pump power consumption, which is chosen as a production performance parameter, one optimises production at that constant production rate of the reservoir fluid. In this case all effects that the viscosity reducing fluid injection has on production are reflected as a single measured parameter: the power consumed by the pump. Since pump power is closely related to the pump speed and the pump motor current, one can also use them as production performance parameters instead of the pump power consumption. This particular application of the optimisation method described above is highly advantageous since it requires only the measurements of:
Sensors for all these measurements are available in very basic configurations of wells and no additional sensors are needed.
The method of the present invention addresses many of the problems associated with the prior art methods used for optimising the rate of injection of a viscosity reducing fluid into one or more wells:
In the present invention, the rate of injection of the viscosity reducing fluid into a given well (also referred to as the viscosity reducing fluid rate or rate of flow of the viscosity reducing fluid rate) is the rate of flow of the viscosity reducing fluid into a specific well via a specific injection line associated therewith. Thus, each well in a multiple well system may have a different rate of injection of a viscosity reducing fluid. Distribution of the available total flow rate of the viscosity reducing fluid between all wells should depend on the efficiency of the viscosity reducing fluid for each individual well. That efficiency is characterized by the gradient of the production performance as a function of the injection rate of the viscosity reducing fluid. The gradient is found through controlled variations of the injection rate of the viscosity reducing fluid, real-time measurements of the production performance corresponding to these variations, and processing these measurements.
The wells of the present invention may be vertical or deviated wells. The wells have a reservoir of oil containing fluid at the bottom thereof. In one embodiment, the wells are heavy oil wells. Heavy oil has high viscosity and specific gravity, as well as heavier molecular composition. Examples include heavy oils with viscosity higher than 50 cP.
In the present invention, the water cut is the ratio of water to the total volume of liquids produced from the reservoir.
In the present invention, the holding means for a viscosity reducing fluid may be any means for acting as a reservoir for the viscosity reducing fluid (e.g. a tank). It may be located at or near to the one or more wells or it may be situated at a location distant from the one or more wells and pumped to said wells when required.
In the present invention, the gradient of the production performance as a function of viscosity reducing fluid rate is the ratio of the small variation of the production performance and the variation of the viscosity reducing fluid rate. It is a very useful measure in practice as the gradient of the production performance shows the direction in which the injection rate must be changed to optimise (minimize or maximize) the production performance and how big will be the improvement of the production performance for a given change in injection rate of the viscosity reducing fluid. If the production performance gradient is greater than 0 at the current injection rate of the viscosity reducing fluid, then increasing the injection rate will increase the production performance. If the gradient is less than 0, then production performance can be increased by reducing the injection rate of the viscosity reducing fluid.
In the present invention, a downhole pump is a pump that is situated inside a well to provide artificial lift to the fluid present in the reservoir of the well. Typically, the downhole pump may typically be an electrical submersible pump (ESP), a hydraulically driven pump or a jet pump, and preferably an electrical submersible pump.
In the present invention, the viscosity reducing fluid is a fluid which is able to reduce the viscosity of the fluid produced from the reservoir when it is pumped into the wells by viscosity reducing fluid injection means. This reduction in viscosity can reduce power consumption by the downhole pump and/or increase production rate—in other words, it can optimise production performance. Examples of suitable viscosity reducing fluids include a diluent, water and an emulsion breaker, and a diluent is preferred, e.g. light oil.
In a preferred embodiment of the system of the present invention, it further comprises one or more of the following:
Components (c) to (f) of the present invention allow the optimisation process to be performed using a series of automated units. This makes it easy to perform thus enabling regular optimisation on a real time basis based on real time measurement.
In another preferred embodiment of the system according to the present invention, the total flow rate of viscosity reducing fluid available for injection into all wells of a multiple well system is limited and the means for optimising the rate of injection of the viscosity reducing fluid in the or each well comprises a computer unit for the computation in real time of the optimal distribution of the total flow rate of viscosity reducing fluid between the one or more wells so as to optimise the production performance of the production system consisting of said multiple well system.
The means for controlling the rate of injection of the viscosity reducing fluid can be an adjustable valve or a speed-adjustable pump.
The means for performing the real time measurements of said one or more production performance parameters and the rate of injection of the viscosity reducing fluid are typically sensors placed in the or each well, downhole pump, power supply unit or power supply line or the downhole pump and the or each injection line for the viscosity reducing fluid. The sensors may be provided with appropriate filters to reduce noise signals.
In one preferred embodiment of the system of the present invention, the computer unit (f) either displays the optimised rate of injection of viscosity reducing fluid to the or each well to an operator, thus enabling manual adjustment of the viscosity reducing fluid injection means to achieve the optimal rate of injection of viscosity reducing fluid injection means by said operator to to achieve the optimal rate of injection of viscosity reducing fluid to the or each well, or it is sent directly to the or each means for controlling the rate of injection of the viscosity reducing fluid and thus automatically adjusts the injection of the viscosity reducing fluid in the or each well to achieve the optimised production performance of the or each well or of the total production performance of the whole production system consisting of multiple wells. Preferably, the computer control unit (f) sends the computed optimised rate of injection of the viscosity reducing fluid for the or each well to the or each means for controlling the rate of injection of the viscosity reducing fluid, wherein said means is an adjustable valve or a pump with an adjustable pumping speed which are automatically adjustable by the computer unit (f).
In one preferred embodiment of the method of the present invention, in the case where there are multiple wells, step (c) can be performed on pairs of wells in which the variation of the rate of injection of the viscosity reducing fluid in one well is opposite to the direction in the other. As a consequence there is no change in the total viscosity reducing fluid injection rate for each well pair, which is advantageous for the top-side process.
In another preferred embodiment of the method according to the present invention, step (a) is performed when it is expected that stopping injection of the viscosity reducing fluid will lead to more optimal production performance of the or each well.
In yet another preferred embodiment of the method according to the present invention, step (a) is performed because it is expected that production from the well has reached water cut corresponding to the inversion point of the fluid without addition of the viscosity reducing fluid.
In the method of the present invention, the production performance is preferably optimised by the optimisation of the rate of injection of the viscosity reducing fluid into the one or more than one well.
The viscosity reducing fluid for use in the system and method of the present invention can be, for example, a diluent, water or an emulsion breaker. Preferably, the viscosity reducing fluid is a diluent, and most preferably a light oil.
The downhole pump for use in the system and method of the present invention is preferably an electrical submersible pump, a jet pump or a hydraulically driven pump and more preferably an electrical submersible pump. The well in the method of the present invention is preferably a heavy oil well.
In another preferred embodiment of the method according to the present invention, each of steps (a), optional step (b), (c) and (d) may independently be conducted manually or automatically.
In yet another preferred embodiment of the method according to the present invention, each of steps (a), optional step (b) (c) and (d) is conducted automatically.
In another preferred embodiment of the method according to the present invention, each of steps (c) and (d) is conducted simultaneously. When steps (c) and (d) are conducted simultaneously, the variation of the viscosity reducing fluid injection rate in step (c) may be a periodic variation around an average value; and the average value may be adjusted towards optimum in step (d). In step (c), the gradient may be estimated by a dynamical system. Furthermore, the adjustment of the average value may be done by a dynamical system.
In yet another preferred embodiment of the method according to the present invention, the automatic steps are performed by means of an automatic program run on a computer, wherein sensors in the viscosity reducing fluid lines and the sensors for measuring or estimation of the production performance automatically feedback the measurements from steps (a), optional step (b), (c) and (d) to the computer and on the basis of the measurements the program determines how to optimise the rate of injection of the viscosity reducing fluid into one, some or all of the one or more wells and automatically instructs appropriate action to be taken to achieve this.
The system for optimising the production of oil from one or more wells according to the third aspect of the present invention comprises a system for optimising the rate of injection of a viscosity reducing fluid between one or more wells according to the first aspect of the present invention and can incorporate all of the preferred embodiments of the system according to the invention.
The method for optimising the production of oil from one or more wells according to the fourth aspect of the present invention comprising a method for optimising the distribution of the viscosity reducing fluid between one or more wells according to the second aspect of the present invention and can incorporate all of the preferred embodiments of the method according to the invention.
As explained above, variations of the viscosity reducing fluid rate in step (c) can be conducted for multiple wells in pairs of wells in opposite direction, i.e. when variation of viscosity reducing fluid (e.g. diluent) injection rate for one well is opposite to the variation of the viscosity reducing fluid (e.g. diluent) injection rate in another well. In this case there will be no variation in the total viscosity reducing fluid injection rate which is advantageous for the top-side process. Moreover, in case when the pump and/or the well head choke are equipped with automatic controllers that maintain constant intake pressure at the pump intake, there will also be no variations in the total flow rate of the produced flow rate of the produced reservoir fluid, making this approach even more advantageous for the top-side process. This is a very favourable property. More advanced combinations of step (c) with the same idea as the one stated above can be used.
For multiple wells, the vector comprised of the production performance gradients in all wells is, in fact, the gradient of the total production performance for all wells as a function of viscosity reducing fluid injection rates. Once this gradient is known, one can use various existing gradient-based optimisation methods for optimising the total production performance of multiple wells as a function of viscosity reducing fluid injection rates. The simplest optimisation methods that can be used are linear programming methods, which are very cheap for implementation in terms of computational power. This sets very low requirements on the computer hardware needed for this system.
The principle of the present invention can be applied in an almost exactly the same way to transport lines equipped with booster pumps. To reduce viscosity of the fluid in the transport lines and in the booster pumps water, for example, may be injected upstream of the pumps. It is possible for the operator to use the same system and method as described above to such a transportation system. In this case, instead of application to a vertical well with a downhole pump, it will be an application to a horizontal line with a booster pump. The fluid (water in this case) is injected upstream the pump in both cases.
Further advantages and improvements associated with the method and system of the present invention include:
The present invention may be understood further by consideration of the following examples of the system and method of the present invention.
A schematic for a typical downhole well with a downhole pump is illustrated in
A schematic for a system for optimising the rate of injection of a viscosity reducing fluid to a downhole well 1 with a reservoir 2 of oil 2 is illustrated in
In practice in the present invention, the operator makes a small variation in the rate of injection of the viscosity reducing fluid via the injection line 7. This results in a corresponding variation in one of the production performance parameters, for example the intake pressure at the ESP 3. The aim is to allow either the operator or a computer control unit as in the case of the system of
Plots of variation of viscosity reducing fluid rate qd (e.g. a diluent) against time and corresponding variation of intake pressure against time are shown in
A schematic of a production system with four wells and diluent injection lines to each of these wells and to a topside location is illustrated in
In one test, a plot of ESP power versus diluent cut for a fixed oil rate from a reservoir was made based on tests in a multiphase flow-loop in that reservoir with an emulated well, full scale ESP and viscous oil. Diluent efficiency was clearly found to be different for different water cuts. As an illustration, for 0% water cut, injection of diluent at 5% diluent cut gave a 5 kW reduction of ESP power; for a 35% water cut, injecting diluent at the same rate (and diluent cut) gave a 22 kW reduction of ESP power; for a 60% water cut (water continuous flow) diluent injection at the same diluent cut gives only approximately a 1 kW reduction of ESP power. This clearly illustrates that diluent efficiency varies significantly with water cut.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/NO2015/000027 | 10/22/2015 | WO | 00 |