Abstract

Abstract Natural gas consumption is expected to grow significantly in coming decades in response to cleaner energy initiatives. Underground gas storage (UGS) will be key to addressing supply and demand dynamics for this transition to be successful. This technical paper will demonstrate the importance of an integrated subsurface characterization and monitoring approach not only for the construction of UGS, but also to guarantee safe and efficient operation over many decades. Key to long-term success of UGS is maximizing working capacity with respect to volume and pressure and maintaining well injection and withdrawal capabilities. Initial assessment steps involve determination of maximum storage capacity and an estimation of required cushion gas volumes. In similar manner to conventional field evaluation, we perform an integrated geological, geophysical, petrophysical and geomechanical characterization of the subsurface. However, for UGS facilities, the impact of cyclic variations of reservoir pressures on subsurface behavior and cap rock integrity also needs to be evaluated to determine safe operating limits at every point in time during the life of the UGS project. The holistic approach described above allows the operator to optimize the number of wells, well placement, completion design, etc. to ensure long-term safe and efficient operations. Furthermore, close integration of subsurface understanding with optimization of surface facilities, such as the compression system, is another critical component to ensure optimum UGS performance and deliverability. Moreover, another important task of the final phase of UGS facilities design involves enablement of sustainable operation through an asset integrity management plan. This phase is articulated around reservoir surveillance plans that monitor pressure, rock deformation and seismicity, in addition to regular wellbore inspection. Through close operations monitoring and the utilization of advanced data analytics, observations are compared to existing models for validation and operation optimization. Importantly we show that adapted monitoring programs provide critical long-term insight regarding the field response during successive cycles, leading to significant improvement in working gas capacity. A key consideration of this integrated UGS development strategy is based on the seamless integration of subsurface characterization, wellbore construction and well completions to ensure technical and commercial flexibility. The approach also emphasizes the integration with surface facilities design to ensure a true "Storage to Consumer" view for effective de-bottlenecking. Coupled with integrated subsurface integrity monitoring, this ensures a faster, cost efficient and safe response to the construction and operation of UGS facilities.

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