SPE Production & Operations
Volume 27,
Number 4,
November 2012,
pp. 404-413
Summary
Over the years, environmental legislation has forced changes in the types of
scale-inhibitor molecule that can be deployed in certain regions of the world.
These regulations have resulted in changes from phosphonate scale inhibitor to
polymer-based chemistry, particularly in the Norwegian and UK continental shelf
where phosphonates have been either on the substitution list or phased out for
many applications. Over the past 10 years, significant improvements in
inhibitor properties of the so-called "green" scale inhibitors have been made.
However, for one particular operator, the squeeze application of this green
scale inhibitor resulted in poorer than expected treatment lifetimes and
significant operating cost because of the frequency of retreatment. To overcome
the increasing operating cost, an evaluation was made of the current treatment
chemicals vs. the older, more-established phosphonate scale inhibitors. The
results for the laboratory evaluation suggested that the older chemistry would
extend treatment life and reduce operating cost. A case was made to the
legislative authority, who approved the use of the phosphonate scale inhibitor,
and field applications started. The squeeze lifetimes for the red phosphonate
chemistry were shown to be significantly better than the existing yellow/green
inhibitors. During the following months, other scale inhibitors with improved
environmental characteristics were developed and evaluated. One such molecule
was shown to have similar coreflood retention to that of the applied red
phosphonate and presented no formation damage. This paper presents the
laboratory evaluation of the new scale inhibitor, and illustrates the
improvement observed with this new inhibitor through field squeeze-treatment
results from a well treated with both the red and new yellow environmental
profile inhibitor chemicals.
This paper outlines the challenges with environmental legislation and how it
has been possible to develop technical solutions (in terms of environmental vs.
safety issues and with new inhibitor chemicals) to meet the challenges of
offshore scale control.
© 2012. Society of Petroleum Engineers
View full textPDF
(
1,289 KB
)
History
- Original manuscript received:
18 May 2011
- Meeting paper published:
12 April 2011
- Revised manuscript received:
9 November 2011
- Manuscript approved:
22 December 2011
- Published online:
14 June 2012
- Version of record:
13 November 2012