Abstract

Abstract Asphaltenes flow in equilibrium with the liquid phase as other components of the produced hydrocarbon. If asphaltenes are in solution during production, there are not negative impact to well productivity. However, asphaltenes could precipitate as pressure, temperature and composition change. If precipitated, due to pressure decrease, asphaltene could deposit as a solid phase in the formation rock near wellbore becoming an obstruction to flow and inducing formation damage. Skin due to asphaltene deposition near wellbore was confirmed in several wells of a carbonate reservoir. Asphaltene deposition was also observed in the production tubing. The objective of this work is to investigate the main variables affecting asphaltene deposition in the Magwa-Marrat field is South East Kuwait and develop a technique to manage and/or decrease formation damage due to this solid deposition phenomena. In order to estimate the skin value and predict the location of any impairment to production, a pressure gauge was set at 1,000 ft above the top of the perforations and the well was equipped with a permanent multiphase meter device. A series of pressure buildup tests and multi-rate tests were run to disseminate Darcy skin from non-Darcy skin. Pressure transient analysis (PTA) delivered total abnormal pressure losses from the formation near wellbore to the gauge location, while multi-rate tests (MRT) allowed to investigate rate dependent skin. Well tests at different rates were also run to investigate the relationship between fluid velocity and asphaltene deposition. Once the elements of total skin were split into Darcy skin and Non-Darcy skin, a tubing clean-out and a stimulation job were designed and implemented to eliminate the asphaltene deposits and remove the damage. Total skin was reduced from +30 to −3.5 and productivity index was increased by a factor greater than ten (10). The production rate to mitigate asphaltene deposition was successfully determined. The well has been on production for about 1 year without developing any additional damage and without further deposition of asphaltene in the production tubing as the well has been flown above the minimum flow velocity that would allow asphaltene deposition. A combination of well intervention combined with determination of operating conditions have been developed to successfully produced asphaltenic hydrocarbons at flowing bottom hole pressure (FBHP) below asphaltene onset pressure (AOP). This methodology has been successfully implemented. If the liquid velocity is high enough to carry precipitated asphaltene out, solid deposits are not observed and there is not harm to productivity. The technique has worked for a case where reservoir pressure has been depleted below asphaltene onset pressure (AOP). This is a fundamental change in the globally applied industry approach that urges to produce asphaltenic hydrocarbons at FBHP above AOP.

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