4.8 Article

Water Issues Related to Transitioning from Conventional to Unconventional Oil Production in the Permian Basin

期刊

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
卷 51, 期 18, 页码 10903-10912

出版社

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b02185

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资金

  1. Cynthia and George Mitchell Foundation
  2. University of Texas at Austin Energy Institute
  3. Tight Oil Resource Assessment consortium
  4. William L. Fisher Endowed Chair in Geological Sciences
  5. Jackson School of Geosciences

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The Permian Basin is being transformed by the shale revolution from a major conventional play to the world's largest unconventional play, but water management is critical in this semiarid region. Here we explore evolving issues associated with produced water (PW) management and hydraulic fracturing water demands based on detailed well-by-well analyses. Our results show that although conventional wells produce, similar to 13 times more water than oil (PW to oil ratio, PWOR = 13), this produced water has been mostly injected back into pressure-depleted oil-producing reservoirs for enhanced oil recovery. Unconventional horizontal wells use large volumes of water for hydraulic fracturing that increased by a factor of similar to 10-16 per well and similar to 7-10 if normalized by lateral well length (2008-2015). Although unconventional wells have a much lower PWOR of 3 versus 13 from conventional wells, this PW cannot be reinjected into the shale reservoirs but is disposed into nonproducing geologic intervals that could result in overpressuring and induced seismicity. The potential for PW reuse from unconventional wells is high because PW volumes can support hydraulic fracturing water demand based on 2014 data. Reuse of PW with minimal treatment (clean brine) can partially mitigate PW injection concerns while reducing water demand for hydraulic fracturing.

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