The Athabasca bitumen resource in Alberta, Canada is one of the world's largest deposits of hydrocarbons. The leading EOR process for in situ recovery of bitumen is SAGD. But the reservoir quality is often impaired by top gas (gas over bitumen), top water (water over bitumen), water lean zones, bottom water (water under bitumen), shale and/or mudstone deposits (barrier or baffle), thin pays, and bitumen quality gradients, (i.e. reservoir inhomogeneities).
The Athabasca bitumen resource in Alberta, Canada is unique for the following reasons:
Today's leading in situ EOR process to recover bitumen from Canada's oil sands is SAGD (Steam Assisted Gravity Drainage). The current estimate of recoverable bitumen using in situ EOR is 136 billion bbls (CAPP (2010)). This is one of the world's largest, recoverable liquid hydrogen resources in the world.
SAGD is a delicate process. Temperatures and pressures are limited by saturated steam properties. Gravity drainage is driven by a pressure differential as low as 25 psia. Low temperatures (in a saturated steam process) and low pressure gradients make the SAGD process susceptible to impairments from reservoir inhomogeneities, as above.
SAGDOX is a more robust process. Because of the combustion component, at equal pressures, temperatures may be higher than saturated-steam temperatures. SAGDOX geometry (i.e. well locations) may compensate for some of the reservoir impairments that affect SAGD.
This invention describes how SAGDOX wells may be drilled and completed to ameliorate damages due to reservoir inhomogeneities as discussed above.
The following acronyms will be used herein.
AOGR American Oil & Gas Reporter
CAPP Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers
CIM Canadian Institute of Mining
CMG Computer Modeling Group
CSS Cyclic Steam Stimulation
D Permeability, Darcies
EnCAID Encana Air Injection Displacement
EOR Enhanced Oil Recovery
ERCB Energy Resources Conservation Board
ESP Electric Submersible Pump
ETOR Energy to Oil Ratio (MMBTU/bbl)
GD Gravity Drainage
HTO High Temperature Oxidation
IBR Impaired Bitumen Reservoirs
ISC In Situ Combustion
JCPT Journal of Canadian Petroleum Technology
LLK Long Lake (Alberta)
LTO Low Temperature Oxidation
OB Over Burden
P Pressure
PG Produced (non-condensable) Gas
PSC Petroleum Society of Canada
SAGD Steam Assisted Gravity Drainage
SAGDOX SAGD with Oxygen
SAGP Steam and Gas Push
SOR Steam to Oil Ratio
SPE Society of Petroleum Engineers
STARS Steam Thermal Advanced Reservoir Simulator
T Temperature
WLZ Water Lean Zone
According to one aspect of the invention, there is provided a process to utilize at least one water lean zone (WLZ) interspersed within a net pay zone in a reservoir and produce bitumen from said reservoir, wherein:
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided a process to accelerate breaching of at least one discontinuous shale barrier or baffle zone, proximate a bitumen pay zone, compared to saturated steam (e.g. SAGD), in bitumen reservoirs, wherein:
According to yet another aspect of the invention, there is provided a process to breach at least one continuous shale barrier zone in a bitumen reservoir having a net pay zone, wherein:
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided a process to increase bitumen production in a bitumen reservoir that has top gas with a pressure, wherein:
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided a process to increase bitumen production, compared to SAGD, in a bitumen reservoir that has an active bottom water with a pressure, where:
According to yet another aspect of the invention, there is provided a process to increase bitumen production, compared to SAGD, in a bitumen reservoir that has an active top water with a pressure, where:
According to yet another aspect of the invention, there is provided a process to produce bitumen from a bitumen reservoir with net pay less than 15 m wherein:
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided a process to increase bitumen production, compared to SAGD, in a bitumen reservoir having a bottom-zone and a top-zone; each of said bottom-zone and said top-zone bitumen have a viscosity, said bitumen reservoir has a significant vertical bitumen quality (i.e. viscosity) gradient, wherein:
Preferably the barrier or baffle zone is comprised of mudstone, shale, or a mixture of mudstone and shale.
Preferably, the barrier or baffle zone comprises multiple barrier or baffle zones, preferably within a single SAGDOX production pattern.
Preferably, multiple oxygen injector wells are used to access/utilize each barrier or baffle zone.
Preferably the bitumen to be processed has a density <10 API and in situ viscosity >100,000 cp.
Preferably the SAGDOX process has an oxygen injection rate such that the ratio of oxygen/steam (v/v) is between 0.5 and 1.0.
SAGD is a bitumen EOR process that uses saturated steam to deliver energy to a bitumen reservoir.
Since the produced fluids are at/near saturated steam temperatures, it is only the latent heat of the steam that contributes to the process (in the reservoir). It is important to ensure that steam is high quality as it is injected into the reservoir.
A SAGD process, in a good homogeneous reservoir, may be characterized by only a few measurements:
(1) Saturated steam T (or P)
(2) Bitumen production rate (one key economic factor), and
(3) SOR—a measure of process efficiency
For an impaired reservoir, a fourth measurement is added—the water recycle ratio (WRR) enables one to see how much of injected steam is returned as condensed water. WRR is the volume ratio, measured as liquid water, of water produced to steam injected.
SAGD operation, in a good-quality reservoir, is straightforward. Steam injection rate into the upper horizontal well and steam pressure, are controlled by pressure targets chosen by the operator. If the pressure is below the target, steam pressure and injection rates are increased. The opposite is done if pressure is above the target. Production rates from the lower horizontal well are controlled to achieve sub-cool targets as the difference between the average temperature of saturated steam, at reservoir conditions, and the actual temperature of produced liquids (bitumen+water). Produced fluids are kept at lower T than saturated steam to ensure that live steam doesn't get produced. 20° C. is a typical sub-cool target. This is also called steam-trap control.
The SAGD operator has two choices to make—the sub-cool target and the operating pressure of the process. Operating pressure may be more important. The higher the pressure, the higher the steam temperature linked by the properties of saturated steam (
But, efficiency is lost if pressures are increased. It is only the latent heat of steam that contributes (in the reservoir) to SAGD. As one increases steam pressure (P) and temperature (T) to improve productivity, the latent heat content of steam drops (
The SAGD operator usually opts to maximize economic returns and increases P, T as much as possible. Pressures are usually much greater than native reservoir P. A few operators have gone too far and exceeded parting pressures (fracture pressure) and caused a surface breakthrough of steam and sand (Roche, P. “Beyond Steam”, New. Tech. Mag., September, 2011).
There also may be a hydraulic limit for SAGD, as best seen in
One of the common remedies for an impaired SAGD reservoir, that has water incursion, is to lower the SAGD operating pressures to match native reservoir pressure—also called low-pressure SAGD. This is difficult at best, and impractical at its worst for the following reasons:
The template bitumen EOR process as discussed above is SAGD. SAGD is now the dominant bitumen EOR process. Ideally, SAGD works best for homogeneous bitumen reservoirs with clean sand, high bitumen saturation, high permeability (particularly in the vertical direction) and high porosity. But, Athabasca sand reservoirs have several impairments compared to the ideal expectation, including (but not limited to) the following:
Shale and mudstone form two kinds of reservoir impairments—1) baffles are shale/mudstone streaks, within the pay zone but with only limited areal extent; 2) barriers are more extensive shale/mudstone layers, with the same scale as a SAGD recovery pattern (i.e. >105 m2).
The Athabasca bitumen resource (McMurray Formation) contains, on average about 20 to 40% (v/v) shale and mudstone. Commercial operators high-grade the resource to areas with much less impairment by shale and/or mudstone. But any process for in situ recovery, for the bulk of the resource, must deal with significant shale and mudstone concentrations.
The operation of SAGD in a homogeneous bitumen reservoir is straightforward. But, impaired bitumen reservoirs may cause problems for SAGD performance and SAGD operation, as follows:
Prior art literature reports the following issues for SAGD with gas-over-bitumen:
Industry and prior art literature have reported the following WLZ issues:
In order for SAGD to overcome shale baffles or barriers, it must breach the shale (create multi-channel fractures), but SAGD, in some ways, is a delicate process. Even if shale is breached, the vertical permeability in a GD steam chamber is so high (>2D) that a breached-shale (or mudstone) still poses a significant barrier, and so, it will act as a baffle or barrier depending on its areal extent.
Mudstone may have a higher water content than shale. SAGD may induce thermal stress and pore pressures inside the mudstone layer to cause breaching as a result of shear or tensile failure (Li (2007)). But SAGD cannot vaporize the mudstone water.
A review of the literature, involving SAGD and shale/mudstone barriers, includes the following:
A detailed description of SAGDOX may be found in patent applications US2013/0098603 and WO2013/006950, herein incorporated by reference, as well as U.S. Ser. No. 13/543,012 and 13/628,164 from which we claim priority and herein incorporate by reference.
SAGDOX may be considered a hybrid process, combining steam EOR(SAGD) and in situ combustion (ISC). SAGDOX preserves the SAGD horizontal well pair (10, 20), but the process adds at least 2 new wells (
SAGDOX also has the following features that are useful for EOR in impaired bitumen reservoirs:
SAGDOX in a top gas impaired bitumen reservoir has several advantages compared to SAGD—namely:
SAGDOX in a WLZ reservoir may use the traditional SAGDOX geometry (
Although a WLZ may pose a problem for SAGD, it may be an opportunity for SAGDOX. As long as the bitumen saturation in the WLZ is above about 5.5% (v/v), there is enough energy via combustion of this bitumen to vaporize all the water in the WLZ. If bitumen saturation is higher than this amount, bitumen from the WLZ will be recovered as incremental production (
The WLZ may afford an opportunity to complete the oxygen injection well inside the WLZ (
In summary compared to SAGD, the advantages of SAGDOX in a bitumen reservoir with WLZ are as follows:
Bottom water poses a particular problem for SAGD Impairment is inevitable if the bottom water is active, driven mostly by pressure gradients in the horizontal production well. But, SAGDOX, for the same bitumen production as SAGD, has lower fluid flows (water and bitumen) in the production horizontal well. This will lower ΔP down the well length, producing a more-even and lower pressure in the process pattern than SAGD. This makes it easier to balance top WLZ, bottom WLZ, or interspersed WLZ.
Top water is more harmful than bottom water, since drainage into the GD chamber is driven by a gravity head of about 50 psia (335 KPa) for 30 m of net pay. The advantages to SAGDOX are similar to the top gas issue, namely:
In shale and mudstone, the ISC component of SAGDOX adds the enhanced ability to better breach shale barriers (breaching equals creation of multiple, high-permeability, vertical flow paths (fractures) through the shale barrier). SAGDOX is better than SAGD for this, for the following reasons:
Referring now to
If discontinuous shale with multiple barriers are present within a SAGDOX production pattern, O2 may be injected using multiple wells (100), each targeted to breach a shale barrier (130) (
The second case to consider is a continuous shale barrier across the SAGDOX production pattern as best seen in
Each PG vent well has similar options. This may also be extended to multiple continuous shale barriers.
Bitumen Quality (i.e. viscosity) Gradients impair SAGD mainly because poorest quality bitumen is at the bottom of the net pay where SAGD is started. SAGDOX is started at/near the bottom, similar to SAGD, but also near the middle of the pay zone, where oxygen is first injected. Thus, on average, SAGDOX will produce higher quality bitumen and have a higher productivity than SAGD in the earlier stages of recovery.
Some of the preferred conditions of the present invention are listed as follows:
Several features that form part of the present invention over SAGD in IBRs are as follows:
Other embodiments of the invention will be apparent to a person of ordinary skill in the art and may be employed by a person of ordinary skill in the art without departing from the spirit of the invention.
Where:
Where:
Where:
Where:
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20130248177 A1 | Sep 2013 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61647153 | May 2012 | US | |
61507196 | Jul 2011 | US | |
61549770 | Oct 2011 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13543012 | Jul 2012 | US |
Child | 13893902 | US | |
Parent | 13628164 | Sep 2012 | US |
Child | 13543012 | US |