SPE Production & Operations
Volume 25,
Number 1,
February 2010,
pp. 125-131
Summary
When oil wells can no longer flow naturally at the desired rate,
artificial-lift methods are often employed. Most mechanical installations of
artificial-lift equipment require a complete workover of the well, involving
pulling the well apart and rerunning the completion with additional
artificial-lift components. These methods can prove prohibitively expensive
and/or risky, and they may not pass the economic hurdle for implementation. A
tubing punch and packoff gas lift system, also known as an "econo-gas lift" or
retrofit gas lift system, may provide a less risky and more economically viable
means of bringing dead wells back on production or optimizing flowing wells. To
the best of our knowledge, the use of retrofit gas lift systems has been
untested in a tension-leg-platform (TLP) environment and poses a new set of
challenges as compared to its use onshore or in shallow-water locations. A case
of the gas lift retrofit of an oil well on a TLP in the Gulf of Mexico (GOM)
demonstrates the usefulness of the proposed method. This paper shows how a
retrofit gas lift system was used for capturing remaining reserves from a
loaded TLP well. The specific case relates to the Shell Ursa A9 well, and this
paper presents the new technologies employed and the successes and challenges
associated with bringing the well back on production.
© 2010. Society of Petroleum Engineers
View full textPDF
(
1,120 KB
)
History
- Original manuscript received:
15 July 2009
- Revised manuscript received:
11 September 2009
- Manuscript approved:
28 September 2009
- Published online:
16 February 2010
- Version of record:
1 March 2010