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In flood of subsea tools, shale-busting tech draws eyes at OTC
Fuel Fix ^ | MAY 5, 2015 | Collin Eaton

Posted on 05/06/2015 4:25:37 AM PDT by thackney

HOUSTON – High-horsepower pumps and big hydraulic fracturing trucks, the primary tools used to bust open U.S. shale rock, have carved out parking spaces of their own at the Offshore Technology Conference.

They’re an attraction for foreign onlookers interested in the technology that brought a rush of American oil to market. But more and more, they’re a jumping off point for oil producers looking to break open hard sandstone reservoirs found in deeper offshore fields, like at Chevron’s Jack/St. Malo project in the Gulf of Mexico.

Offshore producers have fractured conventional wells for decades, but advances in the landlocked U.S. shale industry have begun to bleed into the offshore side of the business.

As oil companies have waded into deeper waters, offshore fracturing work has gotten much bigger as producers have run into tougher rock comparable to hard sandstone in South Texas and the Anadarko Basin in

Oklahoma and the Texas Pandhandle, said Steve Szymczak, a director in Baker Hughes’ pressure pumping division, in an interview at Baker Hughes’ booth at OTC.

“It’s a whole new frontier for the industry,” Szymczak said. Hydraulically fracturing a hard offshore sandstone reservoir can yield 40 times more oil from it. “It’s important to add the cost in order to get that prize.”

That’s why major oil field service companies like Baker Hughes and Halliburton have launched new, bigger hydraulic fracturing vessels in recent months.

Halliburton, the world’s largest hydraulic fracturing supplier, earlier this year christened the Stim Star IV vessel, a 312-foot long, 6,300-ton-capacity ship designed to handle multiple fracturing stages within an offshore well, as well as carry bigger pressure pumps and more proppant, the fine-grain sand or man-made material used to hold open fractures in a well.

Offshore fracturing jobs are smaller than onshore shale work, as the deep-sea rock is more permeable. It takes between 500,000 to 1 million pounds of man-made proppant to puncture an offshore well, compared to the 3 million pounds it takes on land. The rock isn’t as easy to pierce as the oil-soaked layers of sedimentation that have run down the Mississippi River into the Gulf and that are above the harder formations.

“It’s hard rock like the old days,” Szymczak said. “It’s a big challenge for the industry.”

If oil companies had to fracture at the same level of their peers on land, it wouldn’t be affordable in regions like the Gulf of Mexico, said Stephen Ingram, Halliburton’s director of business development for the Gulf of Mexico.

“The economics of reservoirs with extraordinarily low permeability doesn’t make sense offshore,” Ingram said.

At OTC, some shale-busting technologies on display, including those at the Schlumberger booth, have found their way offshore.

“They’ve done a lot of asset stimulation offshore, so it’s nothing new, but they’re bringing a lot of knowledge and technology we’ve learned from on land to the offshore market,” said Avo Keshishian, a product “champion” at Schlumberger.

“Given OTC’s global footprint and the number of clients that come from all across the world,” Keshishian said, “even if some don’t use it directly, they want to know about the technology, just given the importance of unconventionals right now in the market.”


TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: energy; hydrofrac; offshore; oil

1 posted on 05/06/2015 4:25:37 AM PDT by thackney
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To: thackney

http://www.halliburton.com/en-US/ps/stimulation/vessels/stim-star-vessel.page

2 posted on 05/06/2015 4:32:25 AM PDT by thackney (life is fragile, handle with prayer)
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To: thackney
It is good to see some Tech that America is leading the world in.
3 posted on 05/06/2015 4:39:10 AM PDT by 2001convSVT (Going Galt as fast as I can.)
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http://www.halliburton.com/en-US/ps/stimulation/vessels/stim-star-vessel-ii.page

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http://www.halliburton.com/en-US/ps/stimulation/vessels/stim-star-vessel-iii.page

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The Stim Star IV was one of the boats trying to fight the leak of the Deep Water Horizon / Mercado oil well.

http://coastguard.dodlive.mil/2010/05/bp-attempts-top-kill-to-stop-oil-leak/

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Halliburton's stimulation vessel fleet is designed to deliver the latest, most cost-effective technologies and skilled personnel to operators' wellsites, worldwide. Comprising the largest fleet in the industry, the vessels are equipped to deliver fracturing, acidizing and sand control treatments and are currently deployed to the Gulf of Mexico, Mexico, West Africa, North Sea and the Middle East.

http://www.halliburton.com/en-US/ps/stimulation/vessels/default.page?node-id=hgoxbxsw

4 posted on 05/06/2015 4:39:36 AM PDT by thackney (life is fragile, handle with prayer)
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To: thackney

Barring massive political interference the Oil Age has really just begun. Perhaps it will reach a level that even if all American sources are shut off by the Climate Tyranny it will go on all over the rest of the world and new American derived technology will make for major oil production in places that seem now to have no oil at all.


5 posted on 05/06/2015 5:39:34 AM PDT by arthurus (it's true!)
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To: thackney

I notice the line of ‘conventional’ vs ‘unconventional’ reservoirs are really getting blurred when I see articles like this.

Make no mistake: the Deepwater reservoirs are conventional, not unconventional.

The only reason fraccing is considered on them is to make more production per well in order to be profitable.

Think of it as acceleration of reserves which make money.

Geologists can provide optimum definitions, but an unconventional reservoir describes one that does not conform with the typical gravity-segregation of hydrocarbons in a reservoir. It is not just anything that happens to need a frac like this article says.


6 posted on 05/06/2015 5:56:53 AM PDT by bestintxas (every time a RINO loses, a founding father gets his wings.)
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