Abstract

In coal seam gas (CSG) reservoirs, hydraulic connectivity usually exists between the coal and overlying permeable formation, which results in the delay of the dewatering process and a large volume of produced water. The cross-formational water flow can dramatically influence the production of CSG reservoirs, reduce the economic viability of production and increase the impact on the environment.To assess the cross-formational water flow of a CSG well, this study investigates the effects of cross-formational water flow from the overlying permeable formation on gas production. Simulation models are constructed to represent the water crossflow in four connection scenarios, including contact zone with and without penetrated fracture, and no-contact zone with and without penetrated fracture. The penetration ratio, defined as the ratio of fracture height in permeable formation to the formation thickness, is employed to characterize the extension degree of hydraulic fracture in the overlying formation. The effects of cross-formational water flow on CSG production are analyzed using dimensionless production curves and relative permeability curves calculated from the production history. The field application of this study is demonstrated by the production history of fractured CSG wells in the Qinshui Basin, China.The simulation results show that if the overlying formation is directly connected to the coal seam (contact zone scenario), the hydraulic fracture leads to the decrease of the peak gas production rate with the cumulative water production increasing dramatically. If the overlying formation is connected to the coal seam by hydraulic fractures only (no-contact zone scenario), gas production increases in two stages. Initially, the gas production rate exhibits a slow increase, followed by a fast increase before reaching the peak rate. When the hydraulic fracture penetrates the overlying formation, a 10% increase of the penetration ratio results in 0.55% and 1.82% increase of cumulative water production in the indirect and direct connection scenarios, respectively. In both scenarios, 10% penetration ratio increase leads to 7.41% reduction of gas production rate. The methods and simulation results presented in this work can be used to evaluate the impacts of cross-formational water flow on gas production and identify the cross-formational water flow in CSG wells from production history.

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