The Surface Equipment

After the fluid reaches the top, it is likely to be directed toward a manifold connecting a number of wells. The reservoir fluid consists of oil, gas (even if the flowing bottomhole pressure is larger than the bubble-point pressure, gas is likely to come out of solution along the well), and water.

Traditionally, the oil, gas, and water are not transported long distances as a mixed stream, but instead are separated at a surface processing facility located in close proximity to the wells. An exception that is becoming more common is in some offshore fields, where production from subsea wells, or sometimes the commingled production from several wells, may be transported long distances before any phase separation takes place.

Finally, the separated fluids are transported or stored. In the case of formation water it is usually disposed in the ground through a reinjection well. The reservoir, well, and surface facilities are sketched in Figure 1-6. The flow systems from the reservoir to the entrance to the separation facility are the production engineering systems that are the subjects of study in this book.

The Well

Entrance of fluids into the well, following their flow through the porous medium, the near-well zone, and the completion assembly, requires that they are lifted through the well up to the surface. There is a required flowing pressure gradient between the bottomhole and the well head. The pressure gradient consists of the potential energy difference (hydrostatic pressure) and the frictional pressure drop. The former depends on the reservoir depth and the latter depends on the well length.

If the bottomhole pressure is sufficient to lift the fluids to the top, then the well is “naturally flowing.” Otherwise, artificial lift is indicated. Mechanical lift can be supplied by a pump. Another technique is to reduce the density of the fluid in the well and thus to reduce the hydrostatic pressure. This is accomplished by the injection of lean gas in a designated spot along the well. This is known as “gas lift.”