Baker Hughes leads consortium on rehabilitating abandoned wells for geothermal
Carlo Cariaga 8 Dec 2022 www.thinkgeoenergy.com/baker-hughes
Baker Hughes is heading the Wells2Watts consortium which aims to produce geothermal energy from abandoned oil and gas wells, and non-productive geothermal wells.
Baker Hughes is spearheading the geothermal energy consortium Wells2Watts, which aims to transform dry-nonproductive geothermal wells and non-productive oil and gas wells into geothermal wells capable of generating renewable electrical power. This is a private industrial partnership with Continental Resources, INPEX, and Chesapeake Energy Corporation that looks to accelerate technology development and commercially scale geothermal as a baseload energy supply.
The consortium will focus on how technology can retrofit a well at the end of its productive life for geothermal energy and renewable electricity production. The near-term focus of the consortium includes opportunities using closed-loop geothermal technology.
“This unique geothermal consortium supports Baker Hughes’ strategic commitment to position for new frontiers by innovating new opportunities for traditional oil and gas customers to generate low carbon and geothermal solutions. Further, this highlights our disciplined approach to long-term, sustainable growth to bring renewable energy in the U.S. and beyond,” said Maria Claudia Borras, executive vice president of Oilfield Services and Equipment at Baker Hughes.
Largely funded by its industry partners, the consortium also receives support from technology providers, including Vallourec and GreenFire Energy, through in-kind materials and labor contributions for construction, testing and piloting purposes.
The first consortium project will center around the test well at the Baker Hughes Energy Innovation Center located at the Hamm Institute for American Energy in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, to create the first-of-its-kind closed loop geothermal laboratory in the world. The test well will simulate relevant subsurface environments to test the closed-loop system for many well configurations, validate engineering performance models, and offer scale for field pilot efforts.
“This consortium goes hand in glove with Continental Resources’ longstanding commitment to producing the energy our world needs while being stewards of our natural resources. We look forward to working with these collaborating companies using our complementary skills and innovative technology to transform completed wells into geothermal wells. This a great example of the industry coming together to pursue new areas to provide the energy the world needs,” said Bill Berry, CEO of Continental Resources.
“INPEX entered the geothermal energy industry in 2011 and is currently involved in multiple geothermal projects in Japan and .... We are very pleased to join the Wells2Watts geothermal energy consortium and excited to collaborate with the consortium members. We have a shared ambition to solve environmental problems through new technologies and hope to pave the way for commercial utilization of closed loop systems enabling us to supply energy with an affordable price,” said Yoshiro Ishii, senior vice president, Renewable Energy & New Business of INPEX.
Baker Hughes has been a leader in geothermal energy development for over 40 years, bringing reliable heat and power production to over 25 different countries. Wells2Watts will initially focus on projects within North America and Asia Pacific. The consortium was signed in November 2022 and is part of collaboration between Baker Hughes’ existing Oilfield Services and Equipment New Energy and Carbon Management business and the Industrial Energy Technologies Energy Innovation Center.
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I can only hope that this idea works. It would fabulous if it did! Solar and wind have such an above ground footprint! Especially wind; they build those things so tall! Gosh, there would be untold thousands of potential sites for this idea. It would be cool if they could even do it on shallow wells. And soon! I have no idea how much temp they need.
It also makes me wonder who would get royalties or rentals, if any, the mineral owner or surface owner? I dunno but am thinking the surface owner, since it's a closed loop and I assume that nothing is mined or produced.
I'm glad you find the idea of interest. I am quite familiar with the decline in "state oil", onshore and in state waters of the GOM. At the current rate of annual decline, production will reach theoretical zero in ten years, or less. A lot of small, independent oil companies have gone under. That's a lot of jobs that could be done by workers plugging and abandoning orphan wells and working on geothermal projects. There is plentiful federal financial aid for both but our elected representatives appear only marginally interested. For limited applications, there could be real benefits as a primary source of electricity or as a back up source when the grid goes down. The question that I have and that I have not seen an answer to is, can this be scaled up? Are we talking individual wells? Or groups of wells that are feeding a common generating plant?
The bottom hole temperature of a well would be the determining factor. For that reason I don't think shallow wells would fit the bill. That being said, there are plentiful "deep wells", think Hosston and Cotton Valley that might just fit the bill. Interesting question as to who benefits, the land owner or the mineral owner. Much the same question as who benefits in the case of carbon sequestration.
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