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In the recent past,
once a gas reservoir had been discovered and delineated,
development would routinely proceed with the drilling of wells to a
pre-determined spacing, and
production of these wells to depletion. Unlike oil reservoirs, which
were known to leave large volumes in the ground that could only be
produced through Secondary and Tertiary recovery techniques, it was generally not appreciated
that large volumes of gas might remain between, beneath, or behind the
casing of the existing wells. However, in the early 1980s, the Department of
Energy, in
conjunction with industry and academic partners, successfully introduced
the concept of secondary recovery into the gas industry.
DOE-sponsored work in the Texas Gulf
Coast helped foster the awareness that premature pressure loss,
avoidable formation damage, and inefficient infill drilling practices
were wasting large volumes of the nation’s gas resource. For example,
advanced technologies that had previously been limited to exploration
applications, such as 3-D seismic and vertical seismic profiling, were
found to be helpful in delineating the stratigraphic complexities that
hindered complete gas recovery. In the years following the study,
recovery efficiencies in the targeted districts jumped nearly 30
percent. Recently, NETL has expanded these efforts to the offshore fields in the Gulf of Mexico and
to large,
mature fields in Appalachia, with similar results. Currently, NETL is
pursuing projects to extend the concepts of secondary gas recovery to
unconventional reservoirs. For example, a recent project in
the San Juan Basin of New
Mexico has shown that significant volumes of additional reserves
can be added to developed fields by tailoring infill well patterns to
interpreted trends in reservoir heterogeneity.
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