Journal of Canadian Petroleum Technology
Volume 50,
Number 3,
March 2011,
pp. 21-33
Summary
The ever-increasing world demand for energy to satisfy current needs and
future economic growth has forced the oil and gas industry to exploit
challenging energy resources. Heavy oil and oil sands are challenging because
of the complexity of reservoirs together with high-oil viscosities, which are
often greater than hundreds of thousands to millions of centipoise. Most
steam-based recovery processes, such as cyclic steam stimulation (CSS) and
steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD), require a competent caprock to prevent
excessive steam losses and maintain good thermal efficiency and production
rates, as well as preventing steam flow to surface. However, there exist
significant amounts of oil sands resources, which have little or no caprock;
thus, at this point, these resources are considered inaccessible. This research
examines the feasibility of using SAGD in oil sands reservoirs with no caprock
with detailed thermal reservoir simulation. The results of this research
provide guidelines that explain how to implement the SAGD process in shallow
oil sands reservoirs with no caprock. This could unlock a resource that is
currently considered inaccessible. The results show that vertical chamber
growth can be controlled to some extent by using variable pressure operating
strategies and coinjection of a noncondensable gas, such as methane. In oil
sands reservoirs without caprocks, pressure control is critical, especially if
there is to be minimal fluid invasion from the oil sands formation into the
water zone above. However, the pressure must be sufficient to delay or prevent
flow of water into the steam chamber. This study is important because in
Alberta, Canada alone there are billions of barrels of shallow oil sands
resources without sufficient caprock to operate conventional high-pressure
steam recovery processes, such as CSS and SAGD. The results of the study
provide a technical basis to design feasible low-pressure steam processes for
such reservoirs.
© 2011. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
17 August 2010
- Meeting paper published:
19 October 2010
- Revised manuscript received:
6 December 2010
- Manuscript approved:
22 December 2010
- Version of record:
1 March 2011