Summary
In North Sea oil and gas fields, seawater injection is used for reservoir
pressure support. Formation water and seawater mixing may lead to sulphate
scaling in the near-wellbore area, tubing, and process systems. Scale-inhibitor
squeeze treatments are applied to protect the producers and extend the field
lifetime. Reducing cost and prolonging the squeeze lifetime is essential. In
some StatoilHydro-operated fields, squeeze lifetime has been evaluated based on
inhibitor-return concentration and cumulative-water treated. Field experience
and laboratory studies have determined the criteria for resqueezing the
wells.
One critical aspect of downhole-scale management is the laboratory
determined minimum inhibitor concentration (MIC) of the squeeze inhibitor. If
the MIC is lower than the concentration of inhibitor required to prevent scale
at real conditions, the well may scale up. Field examples are given in which
sulphate scale was observed downhole and in the tubing around the safety valve
even if the inhibitor concentration was higher than the laboratory-determined
MIC. MIC varies throughout the well lifetime according to variation in brine
chemistry/operating conditions and should be re-evaluated frequently.
Polymer squeeze inhibitors are difficult to measure with sufficient accuracy
at a low concentration. However, adequate preservation of the water samples may
improve the detection. The volume of water produced before reaching MIC can be
significantly increased with improved inhibitor-detection methods.
Laboratory studies have been performed addressing the sensitivity of
inhibitor detection as a function of ion composition, inhibitor concentration,
as well as a particles and preservation additive. Parallel samples have been
taken offshore. MIC has been determined for a range of formation/seawater
mixtures.
This paper describes laboratory analyses, sampling procedures, well
monitoring, inhibitor-return detection, and field/well-lifetime MIC
determination as methods to obtain a long but safe squeeze lifetime.
© 2009. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
4 March 2008
- Meeting paper published:
28 May 2008
- Revised manuscript received:
4 November 2008
- Manuscript approved:
22 November 2008
- Published online:
25 November 2009
- Version of record:
25 November 2009