This paper was prepared for presentation at the SPE Asia Pacific Oil and Gas Conference and Exhibition held in Perth, australia, 18-20 October 2004. A total of eight wells in Bokor field, Sarawak were subjected for microbial treatment using the huff and puff method. Increased gross liquid production and reduced water-cut were the primary means of net oil gained in some of the wells.
This paper was prepared for presentation at the SPE Asia Pacific Oil and Gas Conference and Exhibition held in Perth, australia, 18-20 October 2004. A total of eight wells in Bokor field, Sarawak were subjected for microbial treatment using the huff and puff method. Increased gross liquid production and reduced water-cut were the primary means of net oil gained in some of the wells.
This paper was prepared for presentation at the SPE Asia Pacific Oil and Gas Conference and Exhibition held in Perth, australia, 18-20 October 2004. A total of eight wells in Bokor field, Sarawak were subjected for microbial treatment using the huff and puff method. Increased gross liquid production and reduced water-cut were the primary means of net oil gained in some of the wells.
This paper was prepared for presentation at the SPE Asia Pacific Oil and Gas Conference and Exhibition held in Perth, australia, 18-20 October 2004. A total of eight wells in Bokor field, Sarawak were subjected for microbial treatment using the huff and puff method. Increased gross liquid production and reduced water-cut were the primary means of net oil gained in some of the wells.
Simulation Analysis of Microbial Well Treatment of Bokor Field, Malaysia
Zahari Ibrahim, SPE, Petroleum Management Unit, Mohd Ismail Omar, SPE, Khor Siak Foo, SPE, and Ezrin J ohanna Elias, PETRONAS Research & Scientific Services and Mohamad Othman, SPE, PETRONAS Carigali Copyright 2004, Society of PetroleumEngineers Inc.
This paper was prepared for presentation at the SPE Asia Pacific Oil and Gas Conference and Exhibition held in Perth, Australia, 1820 October 2004.
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Abstract
A total of eight wells in Bokor field, Sarawak were subjected for microbial treatment using the huff and puff method. All treated wells responded differently to the treatment. Increased gross liquid production and reduced water-cut were the primary means of net oil gained in some of the wells while others showed no significant changes after treatment. Well production performances and laboratory analysis are insufficient to conclude these discrepancies.
To further evaluate and understand the well performances, an extensive simulation study has been conducted using the CMG-STARS simulator on two treated wells, which are B-1 and B-3. The simulation results were compared and matched to the actual well production trends to verify the well model built. Sensitivity analysis was performed to quantify various possible treatment impacts. The approach developed successfully represents the well responses and gives an insight look at the microbial behavior responsible for oil recovery.
Introduction
Microbial well stimulation treatments have been advancing rapidly and fast becoming a promising well production enhancement technique in many parts of the world. The success of any microbial treatment project very much relies on the candidate well characteristics and the treatment program applied.
In many of the field cases carried out worldwide so far, facultative bacteria were used as they can grow as aerobes if oxygen is present or as anaerobes if otherwise. This group of bacteria produces relatively large amounts of surfactants (lipopeptides surfatin and rhamnolipid), solvents (acetone, ethanol, butanol, iso-propanol and 2,3-butanediol), organic acids (acetic, lactic, butyric) and large quantities of gases (carbon dioxide, methane and nitrogen). Each of these oil recovery-enhancing chemicals has contributed differently on the oil recovery mechanism. One product may have a more profound recovery impact than the others depending on the environment that the cells are subjected to in the reservoir. The nutritional conditions that support the cell growth and cell viability has also shown to determine the recovery mechanism.
Project Background. PETRONAS has conducted microbial stimulation treatment on a total of 8 wells of the Bokor Field, Sarawak in 2000 and 2002. Background on the field and its applications can be found in References 1 and 2. Generally, all the treated wells responded differently to the treatment. Increased gross liquid production and reduced watercut were the primary means of net oil gained in some of the wells while others showed no significant changes after the treatment.
The objective of this study was to simulate the treatment and subsequent performance of two selected wells, which are the B-1 well and B-3 well. These two wells were chosen due to its ambiguous well response following microbial treatment in J uly 2000. The additional oil gains recorded from the well may one thought as the direct impacts from the microbial treatment or it might due to the changes in gas lift setting after the treatment. Combination of both effects could have also been perceived as giving the positive benefit.
Well production performances and laboratory analysis lack the quantitative measures needed to understand the discrepancies of the varied results. This study has successfully provided a methodology and an approach for simulating possible processes and provides an improved understanding of the contributing factors to incremental production and mechanisms that took place.
Well History
B-1 indicates a general decline in production rates from about 1200 bpd to about 200 bpd over 20 years of production period. Watercut had shown significant decrease following the microbial treatment. As for B-3, it also shows a production decline trend over the same period from approximately 1600 bpd to about 600 bpd. It is observed that there is an apparent increase in liquid production rate after implementation of microbial treatment in J uly 2000 (Reference 1).