This invention relates in general to subsea trees, and in particular, to facilitating electrical and hydraulic control service to subsea tree via a remotely operated vehicle (ROV) during workover operations.
A subsea tree is a device that is used primarily to control the flow of production fluid from a subsea well. In addition, a subsea tree may be used to direct fluid into the subsea well, such as in chemical injection.
Typically, a subsea tree will utilize several valves for controlling the flow of fluids through the subsea tree. Operation of the subsea tree valves may be controlled by a subsea control module (SCM). The SCM may include several solenoid-operated control valves that direct the flow of hydraulic fluid to the subsea tree valves. The control valves in the SCM control various operations of the subsea tree valves. The control valves are supplied with hydraulic fluid and may be controlled by electrical signals from, for example, an umbilical, which may extend from a production tree or a remote platform.
Subsea tree valves may be hydraulically-operated valves. For example, the operator for a hydraulically-operated valve may have a spring that drives the valve toward a closed state. To open the valve, a control valve must be operated to direct hydraulic fluid pressure from a source of pressurized hydraulic fluid to the valve operator to overcome the force of the spring and drive the valve towards the open state. When it is desired to return the subsea valve to its original state, the control valve is positioned so that the source of pressurized hydraulic fluid no longer directs pressurized hydraulic fluid to the valve operator. The hydraulic fluid in the operator is vented to enable the spring to return the valve to its original state.
To facilitate distribution of the hydraulic fluid in the umbilical to the SCM's control valves, the umbilical may be connected to a receptacle on a junction plate located on the subsea tree. The junction plate typically includes a hydraulic distribution line arrangement extending from the receptacle to the SCM's control valves. Where an umbilical also contains an electrical line, the electrical line can be routed from the receptacle to an electrical connection on the SCM.
At times during the life of a well, equipment must be replaced or installed or a well workover or intervention may be required. During these operations, it is key that the operation of the subsea tree be temporarily turned over to a surface workover vessel and that the production mode of operation be locked out to prevent accidental operation by sources other than the vessel when critical equipment or workover operations are underway.
To assure that the vessel has complete control of the subsea tree, an installation/workover control system (IWOCS) is typically utilized. The IWOCS includes its own umbilical that may contain both hydraulic and electrical feeds to control the subsea tree during the installation or workover operations. Typically then, the production umbilical is disconnected from the receptacle on the junction plate and parked on a seabed parking plate. This assures that the production umbilical will not accidentally operate any of the subsea tree components.
Referring to the prior art as illustrated in
Another arrangement is where the control fluid power is provided by a dedicated hydraulic power pack on the ROV. In this case, the power pack must contain sufficient fluid to replenish the supply to the tree functions, as there is typically not a dedicated supply line from the surface. The requirement that hydraulic fluid in the distribution lines 20 be replenished via an internal ROV reservoir is impractical due to impact on unit size and weight and will add operational cost for retrieval time to replenish the ROV reservoir. Additionally, the discharge of fluid to the sea is obviously wasteful and may have a detrimental impact on the environment.
A need exists for a technique to solve one or more of the problems described above.
In an embodiment of the present invention, the tree exhaust line is routed to a production, fixed junction plate and vents to sea outboard of the removable junction plate. An ROV control system may be used to operate an SCM or subsea tree during well installations, interventions, or workovers. The ROV may be deployed from a vessel and flown towards a subsea tree by an operator on the vessel. Once at the tree, the ROV disconnects a production umbilical from the fixed junction plate located at the tree. The ROV may park the production umbilical on a parking plate to ensure that it does not accidentally operate the SCM or the subsea tree during well installation/workover operations. The ROV then connects its flying lead to the fixed junction plate to establish hydraulic communication with a hydraulic skid on the ROV. The hydraulic skid may further be adapted to establish communication with both the hydraulic supply line and the exhaust line of the SCM. In this embodiment, a pump is located on the hydraulic skid as part of a loop that repressurizes the hydraulic fluid fed to the SCM after it is spent.
The ROV-based control system eliminates the capital and installation cost problems associated with the traditional IWOCS system. The plumbing arrangement between the ROV skid, the junction plate, and the SCM allows spent hydraulic fluid to be repressurized and reused in the SCM, further reducing the control fluid discharge to seawater.
Referring to
In this embodiment, a tree exhaust line 36 is provided that is routed to reroute hydraulic fluid to sea through the fixed junction 30 and the removable junction 32. The production umbilical 34 connected to the fixed junction 30 via the removable junction 32 provides at least one solenoid operated control valve 38 of a Subsea Control Module (SCM) 50 with hydraulic fluid via SCM hydraulic supply line 54. In this embodiment, the SCM has a small accumulator 39 with pressurized hydraulic fluid. The SCM 50 solenoid operated control valves 39 control hydraulic fluid pressure for opening and closing at least one subsea tree valve 51. In one mode, the solenoid-operated control valves 39 direct pressurized fluid to the subsea valve 51. In another mode, the solenoid-operated control valves 39 vent hydraulic fluid used to operate the subsea tree valves 51 to sea through the fixed junction 30 and removable junction 32. As with all the components described herein, the subsea tree 26 is shown schematically and not scaled relative to other components. An electrical connection 52 on the SCM 50 allows an electrical umbilical 58 to serve the electrical requirements of the SCM 50 and the subsea tree 26.
Referring to
With the production umbilical 34 (
In the operation of this installation/workover embodiment, the ROV flying lead 72 will provide the ROV 70 with hydraulic fluid and electrical power supplied from a vessel on the surface. The hydraulic fluid will be introduced into a connection hydraulic line 90 via hydraulic line 74 and will be supplied to the SCM 50 via hydraulic supply line 54. Hydraulic fluid vented from the subsea valves 51 is directed via exhaust line 36 from the SCM 50 back to the return line 92. Both lines 90 and 92 are coupled to the fixed junction 30 via removable junction 73. The return line 92 will allow the vented hydraulic fluid to circulate into the ROV skid section 71 for repressurization by the pump 82. The pump 82 discharges the pressurized control fluid into the hydraulic line 90 in the skid 71 and back into the hydraulic supply line 54 for reintroduction to the SCM 50. In operation, the electrical portion of the ROV umbilical 72 further supplies power to the pump 82
In another embodiment schematically shown in
The system eliminates the capital and installation cost problems associated with the traditional IWOCS system. The plumbing arrangement between the ROV hydraulic skid 71, the fixed junction 30, and the SCM 50 allows vented hydraulic fluid to be captured and repressurized for re-use in the SCM 50. Further, the proposed arrangement reduces the control fluid discharge to seawater.
This written description uses examples to disclose the invention, including the best mode, and also to enable any person skilled in the art to practice the invention, including making and using any devices or systems and performing any incorporated methods. These embodiments are not intended to limit the scope of the invention. The patentable scope of the invention is defined by the claims, and may include other examples that occur to those skilled in the art. Such other examples are intended to be within the scope of the claims if they have structural elements that do not differ from the literal language of the claims, or if they include equivalent structural elements with insubstantial differences from the literal language of the claims.