Oraznazar KHESHDEKOV
The gas industry, being one of the largest sectors of the country’s national economy, plays an important role in ensuring the prosperous life of the Turkmen people and achieving the prosperity of our fatherland. Under the leadership of President Serdar Berdimuhamedov, who worthily continues the initiatives of the Hero of Arkadag, large investments are being made in the further development of this sector, the discovery and development of new hydrocarbon deposits, and the introduction of environmentally friendly innovative technologies into the industry.
Huge reserves of natural gas and many years of experience in the oil and gas industry allow us to successfully achieve our goals. We decided to present to our readers a series of articles devoted to the development of the gas industry in our country, representing more than half a century. They use information from outstanding scientists and specialists who left an indelible mark on the development of this industry, in particular, information from Gurbanguly Yazyev.
On January 1, 1966, the production association “Türkmengazsenagat” was created in Turkmenistan (Ashgabat city) and the Aral Sea expedition of the Soyuzburgaz trust was transferred under its authority.
Then, on the basis of this trust, the Türkmengazagtaryş trust was created.
If we go back a little earlier and look back at the work carried out in the past, it becomes clear why there was a need to create such a large production base.
In Turkmenistan, the search for geological structures containing gas deposits began in the pre-war period. At the first stage of research work, small-scale geological photography work was carried out mainly in Eastern Turkmenistan and within 12 years (1929-1940) 23 geological structures were discovered here. During the Great Patriotic War (1941-1945), only 2 structures were discovered in the eastern region of the country.
Of course, gas exploration expanded significantly in the post-war years. Research activity has noticeably intensified in all regions of Turkmenistan, the total number of open structures and areas with oil and gas prospects has exceeded 1000.
Until the mid-1950s, work on the extraction of associated gas was carried out in the southwest of Turkmenistan in the Caspian Sea region, where, as a result, significant oil reserves were discovered, and work was organized on their development and processing of raw materials. However, the volumes of produced associated gas remained insignificant.
The first gushing flow of natural gas in Turkmenistan was obtained at the Gyzylgum gas condensate field in 1952 and in 1962 it was put into operation. Due to the fact that the volumes of natural gas produced at the Gyzylgum gas condensate field were small, there was no need to create an independent gas production enterprise. The extracted “blue fuel” was used for the needs of the population and production facilities of the city of Nebitdag (now Balkanabat).
Until 1966, Turkmenistan remained the main oil producer in all of Central Asia. Small volumes of associated hydrocarbon gases were also produced from oil fields developed in Western Turkmenistan.
Several deposits of natural gas with small reserves were discovered. However, the limited demand for gas from local consumers and the production capacity available at that time, as well as the lack of a gas pipeline for transportation to industrially developed cities located in the center of the then Soviet Union, served as a certain obstacle to the development of the gas industry.
Despite the discovery of large gas condensate deposits in the oil fields of Western Turkmenistan in 1959-1965, the history of the gas industry of Turkmenistan is inextricably linked with the beginning of the development of natural gas fields located in the central and southwestern parts of the country.
Work on deep drilling in the oil and gas region in Central Turkmenistan began in 1957 by the Türkmenburnebit trust.
In addition, here, starting from 1959, prospecting and research drilling work was carried out by the geology department of the Council of Ministers of the Turkmen SSR. In the period from 1962-1965 in the north and northeast of the country, more precisely at the sites
Goyungyrylan, Sarygamysh, Gurganjik, Nurumgyr, Choksakyr, Zhdanovskaya,
Tarimgaya, Oktyabrskaya, Shorkol, Amandag, Odzhak exploration and drilling work was carried out by the Aral Sea expedition of the Soýuzburgaz trust.
In 1959, the first industrial flow of natural gas was obtained in the Central Karakum Desert, then, in 1962, the Bayramaly gas field was discovered in the eastern region, which contributed to an increase in the scale of exploration work throughout the platform part of Turkmenistan.
The number of promising gas-bearing structures and fields served as the basis for the creation and development of the gas industry and meeting the needs of the national economy. Thus, the Türkmengazsenagat software was created to organize and conduct all activities carried out here.
The Ojak gas condensate field is one of the largest fields discovered in Central Asia. It is located in the northern part of the Karakum Desert and is the first field with huge natural gas reserves discovered in the northeastern part of Turkmenistan.
Construction, prospecting and exploration work at the Ojak mine began in 1964, and in February 1966 the first industrial gas flow was obtained from the 1st well. In the same year, 8 months later, the field was put into pilot production. On November 23, 1966, transportation of the first cubic meters of natural gas began along the Bukhara-Ural gas pipeline, which runs 13 km north of the field. In November 1967, this gas pipeline was connected to the first stage of the Central Asia – Center gas pipeline system (CAC-I).
As a result of drilling operations carried out at the multi-layer Ojak field, sediments of the Permian-Triassic, Jurassic, Cretaceous, Paleogene and Neogene-Quaternary periods were discovered. The total depth here is 3700 meters. 16 deposits belonging to the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods, characterized by productivity, consist of layers that are sandstones with small interlayers of clay. Gas deposits in the form of separate accumulations are located in geological structures called traps.
The gas from this field contains methane (90-95%), nitrogen from 0.4 to 4.5% and carbon dioxide from 0.2 to 0.4%. There is no hydrogen sulfide. Useful thicknesses of productive strata vary from 10 to 38 meters. All open deposits throughout the field have been developed. Their depth ranges from 1490 to 2180 meters.
As noted, the Bukhara – Ural and Central Asia – Center gas pipelines lie near the Odzhak field. Moreover, the location of productive formations at shallow depths, the volume of gas reserves, the standard method of drilling wells, the presence of a small amount of heavy hydrocarbons and carbon dioxide, as well as the absence of hydrogen sulfide in the gas composition served as an impetus for the speedy use of hydrocarbon raw materials for the development of the national economy.
This caused the need for accelerated development of the field, which in turn contributed to the construction of production facilities, the creation of improved working and living conditions for those involved in this production process. At one time, through the joint efforts of specialists from the Türkmengazsenagat Production Association and scientists from the Central Asian Research Institute, a project was developed with the aim of accelerating the development of the Ojak gas condensate field, increasing the technical and economic efficiency of development through the use of the method of simultaneous-separate operation (SSE) for the implementation of separate development of 2- x or more layers of one well. This project was first applied at the Ojak field.
In the process of developing gas fields, good results are achieved when wells are put into operation simultaneously with geological exploration work. The use of this method makes it possible to calculate the volume of deposits based on data obtained during prospecting and drilling operations at wells. The commissioning of the Ojak field using this accelerated method contributed to the reduction of the number of exploration and production wells by 18 units, that is, a reduction in the drilling of production wells by 36 thousand meters.
This field was put into operation 5 years earlier than the period prescribed by the rules. As a result, the volumes of gas extracted from Ojak alone for use in the national economy amounted to about a billion cubic meters. This method was also applied during the launch of the multi-layer gas condensate fields Nayip, Northern Nayip, Kukurtli and Eastern Nayyip, as a result, thousands of meters of production wells were saved, tens of billions of gas were additionally produced and sent ahead of schedule to the needs of the national economy.
The use on an industrial scale of the method of simultaneous-separate exploitation (SSE) from several productive horizons makes it possible to reduce the cost of hydrocarbon production by reducing the cost of operation and maintenance of production wells, reducing capital investments in the construction of reservoirs, oil gatherings and reducing costs during their operation and repair, as well as reducing capital investments for drilling production wells. The BSE method was applied to 61 wells from 78 production wells of the Odzhak gas condensate field, to 112 wells from 212 multilayer gas condensate fields of North-Eastern Turkmenistan (Odzhak, Nayyip, Northern Nayyip, Kukurtli).
Thus, 51.2 billion cubic meters of natural gas were obtained from additionally commissioned formations (data from 1980), which amounted to 25.3% of the volume of all gas produced.
In addition, gas production using the ORE method, along with highly productive formations, makes it possible to put into operation low-productive formations, as well as obtain the necessary geological and production values during the development of gas fields. Türkmengazsenagat software at one time successfully coped with all of the above tasks. /// Nebit-gaz, 21 May 2024