SPE Reservoir Evaluation & Engineering
Volume 15,
Number 5,
October 2012,
pp. 520-532
Summary
A pilot carbon dioxide (CO2) -miscible flood was initiated in the
Lansing-Kansas City C formation in the Hall-Gurney Field, Russell County,
Kansas. The reservoir zone is an oomoldic limestone located at a depth of
approximately 2,900 ft. The pilot consisted of one CO2 injection
well and three production wells. Continuous CO2 injection began in
December 2003 and continued through June 2005, at which point 16.19 million lbm
of CO2 had been injected into the pilot area. Injection was
converted to water in June 2005 to reduce operating costs to a break-even level
with the expectation that sufficient CO2 was injected to displace
the oil bank to the production wells by water injection. By March 2010, 8,736
bbl of oil had been produced from the pilot. Production from wells to the
northwest of the pilot region indicated that oil displaced by CO2
injection was produced from five wells outside of the pilot area, to the
northwest. Approximately 19,166 bbl of incremental oil was estimated to have
been produced from these wells as of March 2010. There was evidence of a
directional permeability trend toward the northwest through the pilot region.
The majority of the injected CO2 remained in the pilot region, which
was maintained at or above the minimum miscibility pressure (MMP). Although the
four-well pilot was uneconomical, the estimated oil recovery attributed to the
CO2 flood is 27,902 bbl, which is equivalent to a gross
CO2 usage of 4.8 Mcf/bbl.
© 2012. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
14 February 2012
- Meeting paper published:
15 April 2012
- Revised manuscript received:
30 May 2012
- Manuscript approved:
12 July 2012
- Published online:
17 October 2012
- Version of record:
30 October 2012