Hydrate Risk Assessment and Restart-Procedure Optimization of an Offshore Well Using a Transient Hydrate Prediction Model

October 2012 • Oil and Gas Facilities 49 Summary A produced-hydrocarbon stream from a wellhead encounters formation of solid gas-hydrate deposits, which plug flowlines and which are one of the most challenging problems in deep subsea facilities. This paper describes a gas-hydrate model for oil-dominated systems, which can be used for the design and optimization of facilities focusing on the prevention, management, and remediation of hydrates in flowlines. Using a typical geometry and fluid properties of an offshore well from the Caratinga field located in the Campos basin in Brazil, the gas-hydrate model is applied to study the hydrate-plugging risk at three different periods of the well life. Additionally, the gas-hydrate model is applied to study the performance of the injection of ethanol as a thermodynamic hydrate inhibitor in steady-state flow and transient shut-in/restart operations. The application of the transient gas-hydrate model proved to be useful in determining the optimal ethanol concentration that minimized the hydrate-plugging risk.