LUO Xianbo, FENG Haichao, LIU Dong, et al. Development patterns and strategies for offshore high-intensity steam stimulation with large well spacing[J]. Petroleum Reservoir Evaluation and Development, 2025, 15(1): 116-123.
DOI:
LUO Xianbo, FENG Haichao, LIU Dong, et al. Development patterns and strategies for offshore high-intensity steam stimulation with large well spacing[J]. Petroleum Reservoir Evaluation and Development, 2025, 15(1): 116-123. DOI: 10.13809/j.cnki.cn32-1825/te.2025.01.015.
Development patterns and strategies for offshore high-intensity steam stimulation with large well spacing
driving a strong demand for thermal recovery development. Over years of practice
steam stimulation has been successfully applied to thin layer heavy oil
edge and bottom water heavy oil
and extra heavy oil. Accurately understanding the flow characteristics and development patterns of steam stimulation in offshore heavy oil reservoirs with large well spacing is essential for designing
adjusting
optimizing
and enhancing production and efficiency in thermal recovery development plans. Precise evaluation of thermal recovery effectiveness and development status is also critical. The study focuses on the quantitative characterization of the actual thermal field distribution and the steam override phenomenon in the thermal fluid zone
aiming to accurately depict changes in the heating radius. It summarizes the patterns and development experiences related to production decline
validity period
production pressure difference
and associated gas in offshore steam stimulation with large well spacing. From this analysis
three decline stages and average decline rates of offshore steam stimulation are identified. Based on these findings
the study proposes a development strategy for large well spacing steam stimulation in offshore heavy oil reservoirs
using reservoir numerical simulation methods for prediction. The study recommends horizontal wells for steam injection
especially in edge water reservoirs
with well placement over 150 to 200 meters from the oil-containing boundary. High steam dryness and large-cycle injection rates are suggested to enhance formation heat utilization efficiency. It is also found that offshore large well spacing thermal recovery has an average effective period of 329 days
with a first-cycle average monthly decline rate of 13.5%. The optimal production pressure difference for wells ranges from 3.5 to 5.0 MPa. The results offer valuable insights for scaling up offshore heavy oil thermal recovery development.