
Well Integrity Study for CO_2 WAG Application in Mature Field X, South Sumatra Area for the Fulfillment as CO2 Sequestration Sink
Author(s) -
Steven Chandra,
Prasandi Abdul Aziz,
Muhammad Raykhan Naufal,
Wijoyo Niti Daton
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
scientific contributions oil and gas/scientific contributions oil and gas
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2541-0520
pISSN - 2089-3361
DOI - 10.29017/scog.44.2.557
Subject(s) - casing , corrosion , petroleum engineering , oil field , water injection (oil production) , environmental science , creep , oil production , coiled tubing , materials science , enhanced oil recovery , metallurgy , engineering
The most of today's global oil production comes from mature fields. Oil companies and governments are both concerned about increasing oil recovery from aging resources. To maintain oil production, the mature field must apply the Enhanced Oil Recovery method. water-alternating-gas (WAG) injection is an enhanced oil recovery method designed to improve sweep efficiency during injection with the injected water to control the mobility of . This study will discuss possible corrosion during and water injection and the casing load calculation along with the production tubing during the injection phase. The following study also performed a suitable material selection for the best performance injection. This research was conducted by evaluating casing integrity for simulate water-alternating-gas (WAG) to be applied in the X-well in the Y-field, South Sumatra, Indonesia. Corrosion prediction were performed using Electronic Corrosion Engineer (ECE®) corrosion model and for the strength of tubing which included burst, collapse, and tension of production casing was assessed using Microsoft Excel. This study concluded that for the casing load calculation results in 600 psi of burst pressure, collapse pressure of 2,555.64 psi, and tension of 190,528 lbf. All of these results are still following the K-55 production casing rating. While injecting , the maximum corrosion rate occurs. It has a maximum corrosion rate of 2.02 mm/year and a minimum corrosion rate of 0.36 mm/year. With this value, it is above NORSOK Standard M-001 which is 2 mm/year and needs to be evaluated to prevent the rate to remain stable and not decrease in the following years. To prevent the effect of maximum corrosion rate, the casing material must use a SM13CR (Martensitic Stainless Steel) which is not sour service material.