Environments (Mar 2020)

Revised Estimation Method for Emissions from Automated Plunger Lift Liquid Unloadings

  • Adam Pacsi,
  • David W. Sullivan,
  • David T. Allen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/environments7040025
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 4
p. 25

Abstract

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A variety of liquid unloading techniques are used to clear accumulated liquids from the wellbore to increase production rates for oil and gas wells. Data from national measurement studies indicate that a small subset of wells with plunger lift assist, that vent with high frequency and short event duration, contribute a significant fraction of methane emissions from liquid unloading activities in the United States. Compared to direct measurement of emissions at 24 wells in a field campaign, the most commonly used engineering emission estimate for this source category, which is based on the volume of gas in the wellbore, does not accurately predict emissions at the individual well (R2 = 0.06). An alternative emission estimate is proposed that relies on the duration of the venting activity and the gas production rate of the well, which has promising statistical performance characteristics when compared to direct measurement data. This work recommends well parameters that should be collected from future field measurement campaigns that are focused on this emission source.

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