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Intellectual Property and Confidentiality Notice. © 2009 BP plc. All rights reserved.
This document contains confidential information, which is the exclusive and proprietary
property of BP plc and affiliates. In whole or part, this document or its attachments
MAY NOT be reproduced by any means, disclosed or used for any purpose without the
express written permission of BP plc or affiliates.

Integrated Asset Modelling


with the IPM Toolkit
Training Class
General Introduction

EPT
delivering breakthrough solutions
2

Day 1 & 2: Prosper – Well Modelling


Day 3: MBAL - Reservoir Modelling
Day 4: GAP - Network Modelling

Day 5: Workshop

Lots of Examples !

EPT, Base Management Specialist Technical Support Team

EPT
delivering breakthrough solutions
BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc
What is Integrated Asset Modelling ?
System Optimisation

Process
Facilities Oil/Gas Export
= $$$

Gas & water


Production injection
Wells wells
Flowlines
Power /
fluid / gaslift

Reservoir

BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


Slide 3
What is Integrated Asset Modelling ?
Why IAM?

Encouraging an integrated approach to the management,


modelling and optimisation of assets

• To achieve maximum technical understanding


Adding Technical Value

• To realise maximum productivity


Adding Commercial Value

• Modelling appropriate for results/understanding required


Fit for purpose
BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc
What is Integrated Asset Modelling ?
System Optimisation Using the PetEx IPM Toolkit

Process
Facilities Oil/Gas Export
= $$$
GAP

Gas & water


Production injection
Wells
PVTp Flowlines wells
Prosper Power / (Fluid) Prosper
fluid / gaslift

Reservoir

BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


MBal
Slide 5
6

Introduction to Well Modelling


& Petroleum Experts Prosper

EPT
delivering breakthrough solutions
BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc
BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc

Prosper – Outline

1. Introduction
2. Inflow Performance Relationship
3. Vertical Lift Performance
4. Artificial Lift
5. Matching a Model to Well Test Data
6. Quicklook
7. Fluid Modelling PVT
8. ESPs
9. Multilateral Inflow Example
Slide 7
Building a well model

1. Introduction

BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc

Slide 8
Why build a well model?

Uses of a well model:


• Predicting Well Performance as Conditions Change

• Optimising Artificial Lift

• Investigating completion performance

• Determining well work opportunities

• Generating Lift Curves


– for GAP Production Network Models
– for Reservoir Simulators, etc.
Slide 9 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc
Well Productivity Fundamentals
Well performance has 2 components:

1. Inflow from Reservoir to bottom of well


• Flow through permeable media - affected by:
– Fluid characteristics
– Rock properties
– Completion design

2. Flow through casing/tubing to wellhead


• Multi-phase flow - affected by:
– Fluid characteristics
– Completion design (tubing)
Slide 10 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc
Key parameters affecting well productivity
• Inflow • Tubing
– Reservoir pressure – Oil & Gas gravities
– Fluid viscosity – GOR
– Permeability – Watercut
– Length of producing interval – Diameter
– Deviation – Depth
– Wellbore diameter – Deviation
– Completion design – Surface roughness
• Perforation diameter/number open – Restrictions
• Gravel pack properties – Wellhead pressure
– Damage (mechanical skin)

BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


Slide 11
Well performance calculation - nodal analysis
Divide system into separate sections:
1. flow through Reservoir to Well – IPR

2. flow to Surface in tubing – VLP

VLP
• Production rate is when the pressure & temperature
from these match at chosen node
• Usually choose node at mid-completion depth
IPR

Slide 12
BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc
VLP/IPR Curves

Inflow Performance Relationship (IPR)


• Shows the Pressure Reduction at the

Pressure
Bottom of the Well Required to
Produce at a Specific rate
• Defines drawdown as a function of
rate

Pressure
Rate
Vertical Lift Performance (VLP)
• Shows the Pressure Required at the
Bottom of the Well to produce the
Fluids Out of the Well Rate

Pressure
• Defines pressure at the bottom of the
well as a function of rate

Rate
BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc
Slide 13
14

And Now … Using Prosper


Oil Well 1

EPT
delivering breakthrough solutions
BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc
Prosper main screen

Double-
click on
‘panels’
&
Options PVT Inflow
‘checkboxes’
to open
menus

AL

Tubing Calculations
Description
Slide 15 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc
Steps in Building a Well Model

1. Selecting options for:


a. the well type
b. the fluid type

2. Entering data to define:


a. the fluid’s PVT characteristics
b. the flow into the well - Inflow Performance Relationship (IPR)
c. the well itself – deviation, tubing etc.

3. Matching to flowing well test data


a. the inflow model
b. the tubing roughness or flow correlation
Slide 16 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc
Selecting the Well Options
Prosper well models can be:
• Production wells
– Oil/Water, Retrograde condensate or gas
– Single or multi-layer
– Single bore or Multi-lateral
– Naturally Flowing or with Artificial Lift

• Water Injection wells

• Gas Injection Wells

Prosper can also model pipelines/flowlines


Slide 17 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc
Data Input & Calculation Units
Prosper can work in most units:
• Option to change the entire units set or change individual
parameters in the Units menu
• Input and Results units can be different
• Change units for single parameters ‘on the fly’ by right
clicking on the (grey) units field in the data input areas –
note that values already entered will be converted

Slide 18 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


Building a Prosper Model

2. Inflow Performance
Inflow Performance Relationship, IPR
defines drawdown as a function of rate

Slide 19 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


From Reservoir to Wellbore

• Prosper has a wide range of models


– Options depend on fluid type

– from simple (PI, C&n etc.)


• Quick to run
• Matched to test data
• Good when there is little physical data but have production data

– to complex (Darcy, partial penetration, rel perm effects, etc.)


• Good to predict performance if rock properties etc are known
• Allow effect of length, deviation, etc to be calculated
• Adjustments to ideal case made via skin values

Slide 20 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


Inflow Performance
• Most of the pressure drop happens near to the well as
flow converges to the wellbore
• Fortunate because this is where we can make a difference
by completion design!

Pressure

Slide 21 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc

Basic IPR Equations

• PI Entry (straight line portion of IPR curve for under-saturated oils and assuming flowing
wellbore pressure remains above bubble point)

Q = J x (Pres–Pwf)

where Q is liquid rate (STB/d), J (a constant) is PI (Productivity Index), P res is reservoir pressure
(psia) and Pwf is BHFP (psia)

J = kh/141.2oBo[ln(re/rw)-0.75]

where k is permeability in mD, h is height in ft, o is viscosity in cp, Bo is formation volume factor
in bbl/STB and r is radius in ft

re
rw

Slide 22
Basic IPR Equations

• C&n (gas)

Q = C x (Pres2 – Pwf2)n

where C is a constant only under pseudo-steady state flow in scf/d/psia 2

where n is a value between 0.5 (turbulent flow) and 1 (laminar flow)

Refer to p132 in Golan & Whitson, Well Performance, 2nd ed.


Slide 23 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc
BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc

Typical IPR Curves


Bottom
hole
pressure

IPR with different


Reservoir Pressures

Curves intersect
axis at reservoir
pressure Curves intersect rate axis at
“Absolute Open Flow”, AOF

Oil wells:
Liquid Rate
Linear for Pwf > Psat

Gas Breakout near well reduces


productivity when Pwf < Psat

Slide 24
BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc

IPR Calculation – data required


• Fundamental information:
– Produced fluid ratio of gas, oil and water
• GOR / CGR
• Watercut / WGR

• Reservoir parameters:
– Pressure, temperature, thickness & drainage area
– Rock permeability & anisotropy

• Completion parameters:
– Wellbore diameter, deviation, producing interval
– Perforation data: number flowing, diameter etc.
– Screen / gravel pack parameters
Slide 25 – Damage to rock (mechanical skin)
BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc

IPR Models in Prosper


Oil Well IPR Models
• PI entry is the simplest model. No detailed reservoir or completion data required. IPR is linear for
Pwf > Psat and includes Vogel productivity for Pwf < Psat.
• Vogel option uses PI model with PI matched to test Rate/Bottom Hole Pressure
• Composite extends Vogel model (above) to account for changes in watercut
• Darcy is classic radial flow equation useful for estimating productivity from petro-physical data
• Fetkovich is Darcy adapted using isochronal theory – gives similar results to Vogel
• Transient is Darcy modified to predict IPR before pseudo-steady state flow has developed. Uses
Darcy model for time after pseudo steady flow is reached.
• Hydraulically Fractured includes length and size of fractures in productivity calculation.
• Horizontal well models using approach of Kuchuk & Goode with options of no flow
boundaries and constant pressure upper boundary
• Horizontal well with dP friction includes friction along the well bore and non-uniform inflow
from heel to toe. Can include sections of blank pipe.
• Horizontal well with transverse fractures for fractured horizontal wells

Slide 26
IPR Models in Prosper (cont.)
Gas Well IPR Models
• Jones includes a linear (Darcy) pressure drop and a rate-squared (non-Darcy) term. Uses
pseudo-pressure, better for high reservoir pressures (>2000 psi)
• Multi-rate Jones requires multi-rate test data (rate and BHFP) to obtain best-fit model using
Jones equation
• Backpressure, Forcheimer, C and N use various “backpressure” equations to describe
the Darcy and non-Darcy inflow behaviour
• Petroleum Experts uses a multi-phase pseudo pressure function to allow for changing gas
and condensate saturations with pressure – applicable to gas condensate modelling or dry gas

Slide 27 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc

Darcy’s Law and Skin

• Darcy’s Law is a model for simple situations, it assumes:


– Vertical well through entire reservoir section
– Well in centre of circular or infinite reservoir
– Steady state production
– Homogeneous – properties same everywhere in reservoir

• We make adjustments for non-ideal conditions -


we call these “Skins”

kh h 1
PI 
141.2 B  re 
ln   S global We can
 rw  affect skin
Slide 28
BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc

Skin
If the well is not ‘ideal’ as Darcy’s Law describes:
• Adjustments are made via non-dimensional parameters named
skins:
– Mechanical skin accounts for damage
– Deviation skin accounts for well not being vertical
– Partial Penetration skin accounts for well not being completed
through entire reservoir thickness
– Gravel pack skin accounts for loss in gravel pack
– Perforation skin accounts for pressure losses as flow converges
through perforations
– Total skin is “sum” of all separate skin values
• Adjustment for fractures is made by revising the wellbore
diameter
Slide 29
BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc
Gravel Pack Formation

Skin Sand Sand

Gravel Pack Skin

Wire Wrapped
Screen

Thin section of invaded gravel / formation sand interface

Slide 30
Skin

Mechanical Damage
around Perforation

Disaggregation of
Soft Sand
After Perforation

Slide 31 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc

Skin Components - position in the reservoir

physical boundary
• Relative to reservoir boundaries
– Flow paths distort and reduce productivity wells

– Include via Dietz shape factor


Drainage area

• Relative to other producers & injectors


– Producers ‘steal’ production
– Injectors provide pressure support no-flow boundary

– Include via Dietz shape factor


considering no flow boundaries

Risk of water or gas breakthrough not modelled directly by Prosper


Slide 32
BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc

Effect of position of well c.f. boundaries


Effective skin
• = ln ( sqrt(31.6 / Dietz shape factor) )
Position of well
• is additive to other mechanical skins
in drainage
• Productivity loss shown for vertical well with mechanical skin = 0 area
105 3

100 2.5
Sk
In flo w Pro ductivity (%)

in
95 2

Effe ctive s kin


y
t ivit
90
u c 1.5
r o d
P
85 1

80 0.5

75 0

70 -0.5
0.1 0.23 0.6 1 2.1 5.4 10 22.6 31.6 100
Die tz S hape Fac to r
Slide 34
BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc

Building a well model

3. Tubing Performance
Vertical Lift Performance VLP relationship
defines pressure at bottom of well as a function of rate

Slide 35
BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc

Pressure in tubing while flowing

Gauge
depth

Bottom
hole Pressure
depth

Wellhead Gauge Bottom Hole


Measured pressure Pressure Pressure
Depth

Slide 36
BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc

From sandface to wellhead


3 components of pressure drop in tubing
• Gravity
– Affected by oil & gas gravity, watercut, GOR, flow
regime
Components of tubing pressure drop
•Friction dP Friction
2000 dP Gravity
–Affected by fluid velocity, dP acceleration
flow regime and wall
pressure drop (psi)

1500
roughness
•Acceleration 1000

–Ignorable for all systems 500


except gas with large
depressurisation 0
0 10000 20000 30000 40000 50000
Liquid production rate (STB/d)

Slide 37
BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc

Typical VLP curves

Bottom
Hole
Pressure
Unstable Stable
Flow flow

VLP with different


Well- Head
Pressures

Liquid Rate

Slide 38
BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc

Tubing pressure drop modelling


Fundamental Well parameters required:
• Deviation survey
– Measured Depths vs. True Vertical Depths

• Completion details
– All restrictions & internal diameter changes
– Wall roughness
– Model down to mid-completion depth except for IPR models with friction

• Geothermal Gradient
– Rock temperatures from wellhead down to reservoir
– Heat transfer coefficient from tubing to formation
• match to test data when possible
• Typically 3 to 12 BTU/hr/ft2/F (can be as high as ~20)
Slide 39
BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc

Flow in a well (or flowline)

• Single phase flow


– Dry gas wells with no water
– Water producers & injectors

• Multiphase flow
– Most oil wells have gas and liquid phases
– Flow regimes
• Describe how phases exist and move in well or pipe
• Differ with rate, ratio of phases and deviation from vertical
• Different flow regimes can occur at different points in well or flowline
because of different local pressure & temperature
– Transition between regimes is often drawn as a 2D flow regime map

Slide 40
BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc

Multi-phase flow upward in vertical pipes

Bubbly Slug Churn Annular


Experiments provide ‘map’
showing where these
different flow regimes
(Taitel & Dukler) flow regime map
occur
Slide 41
Multi-phase flow in horizontal pipes

Stratified smooth flow

Stratified wavy flow

Plug flow

Slug flow

Annular flow

Dispersed bubble flow

Superficical Gas Velocity (m/s)

Slide 42 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


Multi-phase flow terminology
• Phases
– gas, liquid (or solid)

• Hold-up
– proportion of cross-section of pipe occupied by liquid phase

• Slip velocity
– Actual velocity of fluid particles relative to pipe walls

• Superficial velocity
– speed fluid would have if it occupied whole cross-section of pipe
Slide 43 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc
Important

Flow in a well is not always steady and constant, for instance

• Flowlines and wells exhibit slugging


• Gas wells often load up with liquid in late life and may
‘cough-up’ slugs of liquid

• Prosper does not model transient or dynamic behaviour in


wells or flowlines
– Production is assumed to be pseudo steady state.
– Flow Correlations are for averaged behaviour

Slide 44 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


VLP correlations

Multi-phase flow correlations


– Oil wells
• Hagedorn Brown (good for slugging)
• PE2 (excellent all round correlation, improvement over original PE correlation)
• PE3 (great for viscous & bio-degraded oils)
• GRE (mod by Petex), PE4, PE5 (improvement over PE4) & OLGAS2k2P (good
mechanistic models, mostly for flowlines)
– SPE36606 (1996) describes multiphase production through hilly terrain of the Cusiana field,
Colombia; difficult to model but achieved with GRE (mod by Petex)

• Beggs & Brill (also OK for flowlines)


• Fancher Brown (used for data validation only – does not take slip into account,
therefore under predicts pressure)
• Duns & Ros – (good for mist flow, also used for data validation – does not take friction
into account, therefore over predicts pressure)

– Gas wells
• Gray (excellent correlation, has it’s own built-in PVT model)
• PE2

Slide 45 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


Building a well model

4. Artificial Lift

Slide 46 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


Artificial Lift
• Increase production by
– increase in Bottom Hole Pressure
– OR reduction in hydrostatic head in tubing

• Alternatives:
– Gas Lift
• Inject gas near bottom hole to reduce average density
– Electric Submersible Pump (ESP) or Hydraulic Submersible Pump (HSP) or Jet Pump
• To boost bottom hole pressure

• For gaslift and ESPs Prosper has: To get up faster –


– Performance calculation reduce the weight of
the pack
– Design calculations
Or give him a
– ‘Quicklook’ for fast troubleshooting push/pull

Slide 47 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


Basic Gas-Lift Mandrel & Valve Applications

BASIC G AS LIFT M A NDREL TYPES

IPO (Injection Pressure-Operated) Valve

G as • Most commonly used G as


Flo w Flo w
• GFlo
Main
as
w
opening force is the casing G as
Flo w

pressure
• Requires a casing pressure drop
during unloading so upper valves will
close
Typ e 1 Typ e 2 Typ e 3 Typ e 4
IP O PPO PPO IP O
Tub ing Pro duction Tub ing Pro duction Annulus Prod uction Annulus Prod uction

Slide 48 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


Conventional Mandrel System

Tubing Retrievable
The tubing must be
pulled to install/un-
install the valves
screwed into the
mandrels

Wireline Retrievable
The valves may be
run/pulled using a
wireline tool

Slide 49 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


Side Pocket Mandrel System

Tubing does not need to be


pulled in order to change
valve – an orienting sleeve
guides the kick-over tool to
align with the side pocket to
insert or pull valve

Mandrel does not obstruct


flow path

Technique has displaced


conventional mandrel system

Slide 50 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


51

And Now … Using Prosper


Oil Well 2

EPT
delivering breakthrough solutions
BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc
Building a well model

5. Matching a Model to Well


Test Data

Slide 52 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


Matching a Model to Well Test Data
Requires good quality test data BHFP IPR plot
• Preferably including downhole pressure

1. Tune IPR e.g. Reduce


PI or increase skin
– PI or skin parameters to match measured
rate
– Reservoir pressure
measured Rate

2. Tune VLP measured Pressure

– Gravity factor
– Friction Factor e.g. Decrease
friction to match
gauge pressure

Suggest Gauge depth

• Multiple points (3 to 4) at different rates depth


Pressure Gradient Plot
• Check for trends over time

Slide 53 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc

“IPR Matching” in Prosper

Adjust IPR
parameter(s):

–Productivity Index or
skin (oil wells)

–Skin or C&n or a&b


(gas wells)

–Reservoir Pressure

...until intersection
between VLP and IPR is
precisely at the
measured production
rate
Slide 54
55

And Now … Using Prosper


Oil Well 2 - continued

EPT
delivering breakthrough solutions
BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc
Building a well model

6. Quicklook

Slide 56 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


QuickLook Examples

Measured parameters
are consistent

Measured parameters
are inconsistent

Slide 57 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


58

And Now … Using Prosper


Example 2 - continued

EPT
delivering breakthrough solutions
BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc
Building a Prosper Model

7. Fluid Modelling

PVT

Slide 59 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


Hydrocarbon Fluids

• Mixture of many different hydrocarbon components


• Distribution of phases (vapour and liquid) depends on pressure
and temperature
• Gross generalisations:
– Dry Gases
• No hydrocarbon liquid seen above standard temperature and pressure
conditions
– Black oils
• Gas comes out of solution and oil volume reduces as pressure decreases
– Retrograde condensates
• Liquid drops out of vapour as pressure reduces and may be re-vapourised at
low pressures

Slide 60 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc

PVT - Defining the fluid


Fluid properties as Pressure & Temperature change

Prosper Options:
• Oil & Water
• Retrograde Condensate
• Wet and Dry Gas
– all condensate drops out in the separator not the tubing
• Water

PVT description options:


• Tuned Black Oil Model
– Basic data (GOR, gravities etc) plus property table to match to
• Equation of State (EOS)
Slide 61
BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc

Hydrocarbon Fluid Models


Black Oil
• Only 2 ‘components’ – Stock Tank Oil and Separator Gas
• Models for fluid properties vs. Pressure and Temperature
• Models should be tuned to Tables of measured or predicted PVT properties
• Small and fast to compute properties
• Sufficient for most well performance and material balance calculations

Equation of State (EoS)


• Vapour fraction and fluid properties determined by generalised equation of state
model (e.g. Peng Robinson or Soave-Redlich-Kwong)
• Multi-component compositional description
• Component properties and interaction factors should be obtained by matching to lab
measurements on fluid samples
• Slower to compute
• More accurate prediction of phase equilibrium needed for some volatile oil and
condensate systems
Slide 62
BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc

Black Oil PVT – Fundamental parameters

• Saturation pressure - “Bubble point” (Psat)


– Above this pressure only single phase liquid
– Gas comes out of solution below this pressure

• Solution Gas to Oil Ratio (GOR = Rs)


– Amount of gas in solution in the oil Solution GOR

– Reduces as pressure decreases

• Effects:
– Gas breakout impedes oil flow through reservoir Psat Pressure

– Gas (almost always) assists oil lift to surface


(average density reduction)
Slide 63
Gas Oil Ratio

• Solution Gas Oil Ratio


• Produced Gas Oil Ratio
• Free Gas Oil Ratio
• Total Gas Oil Ratio
• Formation Gas Oil Ratio

Slide 64 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


Applying Shrinkage to Well Test data

• The effect of Shrinkage must be applied before putting value


into Prosper (Prosper deals in data at stock tank conditions)
– GOR (Rs) – Prosper

• Formation Volume Factor (FVF = Bo)


FVF
– Volume occupied at condition (specified
temperature and pressure) c.f. what that same
amount would occupy at Stock Tank (standard)
conditions
Psat Pressure
– FVF (Bo) – Prosper

Slide 65 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


Well test data preparation
Shrinkage...in Summary
• Oil rate - reported in Separator Barrels per day?
– the effect of Shrinkage must be applied before putting value into Prosper

– The Black Oil Model is used to calculate the Oil Formation Volume
Factor (Bo) and Gas in Solution (Rs) at separator conditions

– The Bo is used to calculate Stock Tank barrels from Separator barrels

Slide 66 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


Black Oil PVT – Fundamental parameters (continued)

• Viscosity (µ)
– Measure of how easily fluid flows
• Effects:
viscosity
– Impacts inflow productivity

Psat Pressure

Slide 67 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


Black Oil PVT – Fundamental parameters (continued)
• Specific gravity of oil
o
o 
W
– both densities measured at same temperature & pressure
– usually 60oF and atmospheric pressure

• API Gravity of Oil


141.5
o
API   131.5
o

Slide 68 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


Black Oil PVT - Condensates

Fundamental parameters:

• Saturation pressure - “Dew Point”


– Pressure at which gas is saturated with liquid
– Below this pressure liquid drops out of vapour
Liquid
drop-out

• Condensate to Gas Ratio (CGR) Liq Vol

– Ratio of volumes of condensate to gas


(referenced to stock tank conditions) Psat Pressure

– Vapourised CGR is for condensate still in vapour phase

Slide 69 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


Gas PVT – Fundamental parameters

• Formation Volume Factor (FVF = Bg)


Gas Vol
– Volume occupied at conditions c.f. what that
same amount would occupy at Stock Tank FVF = Bg
conditions
VR
Bg 
VSC Pressure

• Specific Gravity of Gas


g Mg
g  
 air 29

Slide 70 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc

Typical oil properties from BP fields


Field Location Oil Gas Saturation GOR FVF Viscosity
gravity gravity Pressure (scf/STB) (bbl/STB)
(cP)
(API) (specific (psi)
gravity)
Harding N.Sea 20 0.6 2529 264 1.1 10.8

Foinaven N.Sea 25 0.6 3050 356 1.2 4.0

Endicott Alaska 23 0.85 6000 1015 1.33 0.6

Pompano GOM 25 0.64 2930 400 1.17 2.3

King West GOM 34 0.7 4669 1065 1.5 0.5

October Egypt 27 0.83 1680 279 1.22 0.9

Chirag Caspian 34 0.7 4300 840 1.4 0.8

Mahogany Trinidad 34 0.64 4820 700 1.4 0.5

Cusiana Colombia 39 0.8 4823 1355 1.7 0.28

Slide 71
72

And Now … Using Prosper


Oil Well 4

EPT
delivering breakthrough solutions
BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc
Building a Prosper Model

8. ESPs

Slide 73 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


ESPs

ESP Components:
• Motor, Electric Cable, Generator, Pump.

Operation:
• Fluid flows into well and past motor into pump.
• Each stage (impeller/diffuser combination) adds
pressure or head to the fluid at a given rate.
• The fluid will build up enough pressure as it reaches the
top of the pump to lift it to the surface and into the
separator or flowline.
• ESPs are susceptible to damage from sand and by
lifting gas and liquid together

Slide 74 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


Building a Prosper Model

9. Multilateral Inflow
Example

Slide 75 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc


Multilateral Inflow Example
To Downhole Equipment

Tie Point (10430 ft TVD) (10441 ft TVD) (10442 ft TVD)


11501 ft MD 12001 ft MD 6inch ID
Junction (10431 ft TVD)
Layer 1
100 ft 500 ft
(10416 – 10466 ft TVD)
Lateral 1

3inch ID 200ft 200ft

Lateral 2 Lateral 3 6inch ID


500ft 500ft
Layer 2
(10496 – 10596 ft TVD)
12101 ft MD 11601 ft MD 11601 ft MD 12101 ft MD
(10532 ft TVD) (10531 ft TVD) (10531 ft TVD) (10532 ft TVD)

Slide 76 BP Confidential and © 2009 BP plc

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