Summary
Because fossil fuels are still dominant sources of energy supply, the
petroleum industry is called upon not only to provide an effective management
of oil and gas reserves in order to meet rising energy demand, but also to do
that in a safe and efficient manner, with as small an ecological footprint as
practically possible. Consequently, also taking into account the fact that
conventional oil and gas reserves are declining, petroleum companies are forced
to develop and adopt new technologies to increase oil and gas recovery and to
expand their upstream activities to still unexploited areas, which often
implies development of deep-buried oil and natural-gas reservoirs characterized
by unfavorable reservoir conditions such as high temperature and pressure and
even a certain amount of impurities.
Croatian experience with natural-gas production from deep-buried reservoirs
is based on the development of several gas fields in the northwestern part of
Croatia. The development of the largest natural-gas fields in Croatia--Molve,
Stari Gradac, and Kalinovac gas fields--began at the beginning of the 1980s.
The main characteristic of all the mentioned fields are extremely unfavorable
reservoir conditions, with reservoir depth of more than 3000 m, high initial
reservoir pressures (more than 450 bar), high temperature (180°C), and a
significant share of CO2 (10 to 54%), H2S (800 ppm), and
some other nonhydrocarbon compounds such as mercaptans (30 mg/m3)
and mercury (1000 to 1500 μg/m3). Several other gas fields with
similar reservoir conditions were discovered and developed in the last 25 years
in the same region. Today, the petroleum industry in Croatia has almost 30
years of experience in processing sour natural gas with a well-established
methodology of auditing processing-plant outlet-gas influences on the
environment. These experiences and future plans regarding this subject will be
presented in this paper.
© 2011. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
4 March 2010
- Meeting paper published:
25 January 2010
- Revised manuscript received:
30 June 2010
- Manuscript approved:
6 October 2010
- Published online:
28 April 2011
- Version of record:
1 June 2011