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Tui Field Operations Will Separate Oil from Water
27 March 2006 - Tui oil field operations in offshore Taranaki will separate oil from high volumes of water, project director says.
Oil production from the Tui field in offshore Taranaki is sustainable with water cuts above 90%, Tui project director Randy Stewart says.
In a paper on the Tui development presented to the recent 2006 New Zealand Petroleum Conference, Mr Stewart says that a strong formation water aquifer below the thin, high-quality Kapuni F sands reservoir will lead to an early water break and sustained high water cuts.
“Over the expected life of the Tui area accumulations, 10 times more water will be produced than oil,” he says.
Mr Stewart described Tui's basic production operation as “oil skimming”.
Simulation studies indicated that ultimate oil recovery would be proportionate to the length of well bore contact with the reservoir. This will mean long horizontal well bores.
“Early water breakthrough and rapid initial oil rate decline drive the need for high total liquid flow rates and processing capacity over most of the field’s 10 year producing life,” he says.
Oil recovery is predicted to increase with increasing oil and water production. Much of the oil production, after initial high flow, would come in a long tail at high water cuts.
First oil from Tui is scheduled for mid 2007. Initial high production rates of 50,000 bopd would decline to about 17,800 bopd within 5 years.
About 48% of total recovery would occur in years three to ten at water cuts greater than 91%, Mr Stewart says.
The economic production limit at prices of US$50 a barrel, would be 2,400 barrels a day.
Gas produced from the field would be used both for the required artificial lift of oil and water (in a closed loop) and to fuel the floating production storage and offloading (FPSO) vessel.
As gas output declined toward the end of the field, nitrogen would be substituted for the gas lift.
The Tui field will be the first in New Zealand to have subsea wellheads. Water depth at the Tui field is 125 m.
Mr Stewart says subsea control modules, which can operate valves and chokes and monitor instrumentation, will be set on each wellhead. A 5 inch by 2 inch, 5,000 psig working pressure Cameron horizontal tree has been selected to equip each of the four producing wells.
Diverless subsea connections were selected over diver-assist connections for installation and intervention at the subsea control modules. Diverless connections had a significant economic advantage when viewed in the context of vessel use, mobilisation, and weather downtime.
The subsea wellhead tree will have a multiplexed electro-hydraulic control system to control the tree functions through the umbilical line to the topsides control module on the FPSO. Chokes will be installed to manage flowline pressures — these will have inserts which can be retrievable by a remotely operated vehicle (ROV) operating underwater.
Provision in the subsea control module trees is made for injection of wax inhibitors, pour point depressants, methanol, and for corrosion and scale inhibitors.
From each well there will be three lines up to the FPSO, the oil production line, the gas lift injection line and the hydraulic umbilical line. To reduce unnecessary abrasion in the harsh ocean conditions the lines will be partially suspended on mid-water arches.
The lines will connect to the FPSO through a special internal turret mooring system located through the bottom of the ship just behind the bow.
The FPSO will be the chartered Suezmax tanker M/T Ionikos currently being converted by contractor Prosafe Production Services Pte Ltd.
Mr Stewart says the internal turret mooring, which allows the FPSO to weathervane 360 degrees around the mooring axis while accommodating sea motion, was chosen to minimize induced loads on the vessel. The vessel is designed to withstand 100-year environmental conditions.
The FPSO, as well as containing the normal processing and storage operations, will also control the subsea system for the field. The vessel will have accommodation for 41 and have a rear helideck for helicopter transport.
Mr Stewart says the project management team are based in Houston, the subsea team in Edinburgh and Aberdeen while New Plymouth will be the logistics base.
