New technology aims to increase oil production
New technology aims to increase oil production
HOUSTON (AP) — Imagine having a nice ripe orange, ready for squeezing, but being able to get out only a small amount of juice. There’s got to be more, but you just can’t get at it.
That’s the frustration of the global-oil business.
The industry is spending billions on technology to increase the amount of oil it can extract from the ground. Oil companies typically recover only about one in three barrels of oil from their fields, but they can’t afford to leave so much crude untapped at a time when it’s difficult to access new reserves. Recovering more oil has enormous implications, not only for the companies’ balance sheets, but also for the world’s diminishing supply.
One of the latest attempts to learn where the oil is hiding would involve injecting hundreds of millions of tiny carbon clusters deep into natural underground reservoirs, where changes to their chemical makeup would signal whether they’ve come across oil, water or other substances.
The clusters, referred to as “nano- reporters” and roughly 30,000 times smaller than the width of a human hair, also can tell the temperature, pressure and other factors that can help a company zero in on more oil.
Major oil companies, including Royal Dutch Shell, BP, ConocoPhillips and Marathon, are funding the research at Rice University. Scientists at Rice say they hope to begin field tests in the next year.
The industry is also upgrading the ways it plies more oil out of the earth, techniques that involve heat and chemical injections or gas and water pressure. These methods account for 3 percent of world oil production, according to the International Energy Agency, the Paris-based policy adviser to 28 countries.
If oil companies could recover 50 percent of the crude in their fields instead of 35 percent, it would double the world’s proved reserves of about 1.2 trillion barrels, the IEA says.
Though it could take a couple of decades to reach 50 percent, even a modest increase in the amount of oil recovered in coming years will alter the debate about peak oil — the point at which half the world’s reserves have been depleted.
The debate pits those who say there’s enough oil to last a hundred years or more against those who see a looming scramble for a shrinking supply. The latter group foresees supply shortages and price spikes that could cripple the global economy.
Nansen Saleri, the former head of reservoir management for Aramco, Saudi Arabia’s national oil company, said improving worldwide recovery rates by 10 percent to 15 percent could provide an additional 50-year supply of oil at current consumption rates.
“I’d say 15 to 20 percent [recovery] is doable, especially if you assume we’re going to be in a robust price environment,” said Saleri, whose Houston-based consulting business, Quantum Reservoir Impact, helps producers improve recoveries.
The key is obtaining detailed information about what’s going on thousands of feet below the earth’s surface. That knowledge can improve the odds of drilling accurately and cut down on costs. The industry has made significant advances in seismic testing and other imaging and sensing technology, but reservoirs remain, in many ways, deep, dark mysteries.
As they’re pumped with water through a reservoir’s nooks and crannies, the molecular makeup of the Rice University nanoreporters is designed to change depending on what they encounter — petroleum, hydrogen sulfide, other substances.
The nanoreporters have tags similar to bar codes on retail packages that will tell scientists how long they’ve been underground — three months, six months, nine months, longer. Companies can then pinpoint where oil might be trapped. For example, if a large number of nine-month nanoreporters come across oil while three-month nanoreporters don’t, scientists can assume the crude is deeper in the reservoir.
Lead scientist Jim Tour likens the nanoreporters to secret agents because they’re able to infiltrate tiny pores in the reservoir and gather important information.
Besides the research at Rice, Royal Dutch Shell is doing its own work on oil-seeking nano-particles. Shell scientist Sergio Kapusta said the research is several years from being ready for application, but the “smart” particles eventually could be used to relay real-time information from within the reservoir.
“Getting those ‘secret agents’ out and interrogating them is one approach,” Kapusta said. “What would be great is if [we] could figure out a way to interrogate them even while they’re behind enemy lines.”
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