10 - Maximising Oil Recovery with Low Salinity Water Flooding
Submitting Institutions
Heriot-Watt University,
University of EdinburghUnit of Assessment
General EngineeringSummary Impact Type
TechnologicalResearch Subject Area(s)
Earth Sciences: Geophysics
Engineering: Resources Engineering and Extractive Metallurgy
Medical and Health Sciences: Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology
Summary of the impact
The data generated from research undertaken by ERPE has enabled BP to
leverage an
investment of $125M for full field implementation of Lo-Sal®
EOR technology in the Clair Ridge
Field, west of Shetland.
This research has provided BP with a step change in understanding of how
to maximise oil
recovery and production. Low Salinity Water Flooding has been shown to
increase oil recovery by
an average of ~16% when compared to standard "High Salinity" water
flooding. Based on this
work, BP made a strategic decision in September 2012 to use Low Salinity
Water Flooding as their
default position for field development, by adopting this significant
development in water-flooding
technology.
Underpinning research
The key researchers involved throughout the REF period were: Prof Sorbie
and Dr McDougall,
Mike Singleton (Senior Research Fellow), Robin Shields, (Research
Associate) and Will Thomas
(Experimental Officer).
The most important outputs from the research were the broadening and
development of
understanding over a period of fifteen years from 1995 onwards about the
nature of wettability and
its influence on oil recovery, and how that is affected by salinity. There
were three key
breakthroughs:-
- Identifying the impact of wettability on oil recovery through
waterflooding
- An analysis of experimental data to increase pore-scale understanding
of oil recovery
- Setting up the parameters around the impact of wettability change on
oil recovery, which led to
a viable model for Low-Salinity waterflooding.
Over the REF2014 period, ERPE built extensive experience in core flooding
through the Joint
Industry Project (JIP) on oil field scale. BP approached ERPE to
collaborate on this issue as BP
had been working on field application of the low salinity waterflooding
over a period of years, but
had been unable to obtain accurate and conclusive evidence of the
underlying mechanisms of the
process. Developing the understanding of the impact of wettability on oil
recovery [1,2,3] and how it
can be applied to experimental data to enable pore scale modelling was a
step change in
understanding the phenomenon.
Since January 2005, BP has provided ~£650k of funding for this exclusive
study, the results of
which have been predominantly reported to BP through confidential reports
and data sets. There
have, however, been 2 papers published, in conjunction with BP, on the
subject which details
certain aspects of the proposed low salinity mechanism and the application
of it in the field.
In this project, many possible models and mechanisms for low salinity
water flooding have been
explored experimentally. This data obtained provided insight into some of
the factors controlling the
increased oil recovery observed when low salinity brine is injected into
oil saturated reservoir core
samples. Extensive chemical analyses were performed on the effluent
showing the extent of
interaction between the injected brine, the oil and the rock matrix. A
paper from this work was
awarded the Best Paper Award at the Society of Core Analysts Conference
2006 in Trondheim,
Norway and later accepted for the Journal of Petrophysics in February
2008. [4]
To complement the extensive experimental dataset, a pore-scale theory of
how the low salinity
water flooding effect works was derived. The theory demonstrated how
pore-scale effects resulted
in a reduction of residual oil saturation during low salinity oil
waterflooding. The understandings
gained from the research [1,2,3] and the results from extensive chemical
analyses [4] led to ERPE
proposing the pore scale mechanism for Lo-Sal®.
The theory was able to approximate the
magnitude of the effect, and allow some clear, experimentally-verifiable
predictions to be made [5].
References to the research
The references identified with * are the ones which best indicate the
quality of the underpinning
research.
[1] McDougall S.R.,. Sorbie K.S "The Impact of Wettability on
Waterflooding: Pore-Scale
Simulation" Society of Petroleum Engineers, Reservoir Engineering,
vol.10, no.3,p208 - 213
1995 DOI:10.2118/25271-PA
85 Google Scholar (GS) citations
This paper identified the impact of wettability on oil recovery through
waterflooding.
[2] Dixit, A.B., McDougall, S.R., Sorbie, K.S., "Pore-Level
Investigation of Relative Permeability
Hysteresis in Water-Wet Systems" Society of Petroleum Engineers
Journal, vol.3 no.2, pp115-123,1998,
DOI: 10.2118/37233-PA 44
GS citations
This paper provides an assessment of the impact of wettability on the
phenomenon of relative
permeability.
[3] *Dixit A.B.; McDougall S.R., Sorbie K.S., Buckley J.S. "Pore-Scale
Modeling of Wettability
Effects and Their Influence on Oil Recovery" Society of Petroleum
Engineers Reservoir
Evaluation & Engineering, vol. 2, No. 1, p25, 1999 DOI:
10.2118/54454-PA 75 GS citations
This paper analyses experimental data and develops the pore-scale
understanding of oil
recovery.
[4] * Lager A, K. J. Webb, Black C. J. J, Singleton M. Sorbie K. S "Low
Salinity Oil Recovery — An
Experimental Investigation" Society of Petrophysicists and Well-Log
Analysts Petrophysics,
vol.49, no. 1, 2008. http://www.onepetro.org/mslib/servlet/onepetropreview?id=SPWLA-2008-v49n1a2
132 GS citations
This paper identified a clear picture of the potential mechanism of how
low salinity
waterflooding happens and what needs to be done.
[5]* Sorbie K. S. and Collins I.R. (BP) "A Proposed Pore-Scale
Mechanism for How Low Salinity
Water Flooding Works" Society of Petroleum Engineers Improved Oil
Recovery Symposium,
April 2010, Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA, DOI: 10.2118/129833-MS
17 GS citations
Theoretical examination of the parameters around the impact of wettability
change on oil
recovery.
Details of the impact
BP's decision to implement low Salinity waterflooding in the £4.5 billion
Clair Ridge development
was underpinned by ERPE research. The direct costs of implementing low
salinity waterflooding
include $125M for desalination facilities to create `low salinity' water
from seawater. BP justified
this investment on the basis of 42 million barrels of additional recovery
(equivalent to around $4.5
billion of additional income at today's oil price) — a significant
increase in the estimated 640 million
barrels of recoverable oil from waterflooding using seawater.
The decision to implement low salinity required a high level of
confidence in the technique's
success to persuade BP management and the field partners. That confidence
was built on
theoretical and experimental results provided by ERPE, and two field tests
(a single well tracer test
and a field trial in the Endicott field, Alaska). In the field trial at
Endicott, low salinity water was
injected in one well and the incremental oil production observed in
another. Endicott proved up the
laboratory trials at full scale. The trial involved an injector and a
producer 1040 feet apart, and the
incremental oil recovery was equal to 10% of the total pore volume in the
swept area [3]. The
confidence generated by the combination of the experimental dataset and
verifiable pore-scale
theory was sufficient for BP to move forward to a single-well tracer test,
and a field trial, providing
them with the `pyramid of proof' that they required to take the technique
all the way through the
field deployment.
Without the theoretical and experimental results, the two field trials
would not have happened, and
low salinity would not have been implemented in Clair Ridge. According to
BP's Chief Adviser on
Low salinity for BP "ERPE has made a significant contribution to the
fundamental understanding of
the mechanism by which Low Salinity Water Flooding increases oil
recovery. Without such
understanding and contribution from ERPE, BP would not be in a position
to change their Water
Flood strategy to a default base case position of Low Salinity Water
Flooding." [S1]
Sources to corroborate the impact
[S1] Chief Adviser, Lo-Sal, BP Exploration. Will confirm that the work
undertaken by ERPE
provided BP with the high level of confidence required to invest in
Lo-Sal, and without this
research, BP would not have been able to change their strategy.
[S2] "Low Salinity Enhanced Oil Recovery — Laboratory to Day One Field
Implementation — Lo-Sal
EOR into the Clair Ridge Project", Robbana, Buikema, Mair, Williams,
Mercer, Webb, Hewson,
Reddick, Abu Dhabi International Petroleum Conference and Exhibition,
11-14 November
2012. DOI:10.2118/161750-MS
This paper references the research undertaken at ERPE as
the grounds for BP's decision making process. Reference 6 here cites the
underpinning ERPE
research, included in this case study as [4]"
[S3] "Demonstration of Low-Salinity EOR at Interwell Scale, Endicott
Field, Alaska", Seccombe,
Lager, Jerauld, Jhaveri, Buikema, Bassler, Denis, Webb, Cockin, and Fueg,
BP. At the SPE
Improved Oil Recovery Symposium, 24-28 April 2010, Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA.
Reference 3
here cites the underpinning ERPE research, included in this case study as
[4]"