4.5 Article

Evaluation of Gas Production from Marine Hydrate Deposits at the GMGS2-Site 8, Pearl River Mouth Basin, South China Sea

Journal

ENERGIES
Volume 9, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/en9030222

Keywords

dual hydrate layer; natural gas hydrate; depressurization; massive hydrate layer; Pearl River Mouth Basin; Guangzhou marine geological survey 2 (GMGS2)

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Funding

  1. National Science Fund for Distinguished Young Scholars of China [51225603]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51406210, 51476174]
  3. Key Arrangement Programs of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [KGZD-EW-301-2]

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Natural gas hydrate accumulations were confirmed in the Dongsha Area of the South China Sea by the Guangzhou Marine Geological Survey 2 (GMGS2) scientific drilling expedition in 2013. The drilling sites of GMGS2-01, -04, -05, -07, -08, -09, -11, -12, and -16 verified the existence of a hydrate-bearing layer. In this work gas production behavior was evaluated at GMGS2-8 by numerical simulation. The hydrate reservoir in the GMGS2-8 was characterized by dual hydrate layers and a massive hydrate layer. A single vertical well was considered as the well configuration, and depressurization was employed as the dissociation method. Analyses of gas production sensitivity to the production pressure, the thermal conductivity, and the intrinsic permeability were investigated as well. Simulation results indicated that the total gas production from the reference case is approximately 7.3 x 10(7) ST m(3) in 30 years. The average gas production rate in 30 years is 6.7 x 10(3) ST m(3)/day, which is much higher than the previous study in the Shenhu Area of the South China Sea performed by the GMGS-1. Moreover, the maximum gas production rate (9.5 x 10(3) ST m(3)/day) has the same order of magnitude of the first offshore methane hydrate production test in the Nankai Trough. When production pressure decreases from 4.5 to 3.4 MPa, the volume of gas production increases by 20.5%, and when production pressure decreases from 3.4 to 2.3 MPa, the volume of gas production increases by 13.6%. Production behaviors are not sensitive to the thermal conductivity. In the initial 10 years, the higher permeability leads to a larger rate of gas production, however, the final volume of gas production in the case with the lowest permeability is the highest.

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