Hi, really like this web site so I joined. We have a well in Sabine Parish that is pontentialled at 12 mcfd in December 2010. The well produced 39,000 in February so I asked the operator and was told the well had alot of H2S. So I did research and learned about sour gas. I am finding that I know very little about Nat gas production. Anyway, what I cannot find out is this a really bad thing to have a well with H2S. Will the well ever produce to its potential. I see where Centerpoint is building a treatment plant in the area which may be good for this well. Any comment about wells having H2S is appreciated, thanks.
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Bob, hydrogen sulfide (H2S) is an issue for pipelines because it can be highly corrosive in the presence of water. Also, very high levels of H2S in natural gas can be hazardous and is known as poison gas when these higher levels are present.
Because of these issues natural gas transmission pipelines have established limits for the H2S content with the most common limit being 4 parts per million (ppm) [0.25 grain per 100 standard cubic feet]. Most of the gas produced in the southern areas of the Haynesville Shale play require treatment in an amine facility prior to delivery to the gas transmission pipeline.
I am really new to this and trying to learn as much as I can, the well in my section has been shutoff again because of HS2. So is this now a doomed well or can the gas be treated to get within the specs needed for the pipeline. How is this done, is a new pipeline needed to route the gas to a treatment plant or does this need to be done at the wellhead somehow. The well is near Noble/Sardis so are there any treatment plants in this area (S4-t8-r12). Feelin kinda blue about this as my excitment of being a part of a producing well that is not producting is fading fast.
CenterPoint has a treatment plant at Robeline and Clearlake for treating all of Shell's and EnCana's wells in De Soto and Sabine Parish. It is up to the operator to make sure that the H2S meets their agreed upon contractual obligations before it enters the gathering pipeline. Normally less than 50 ppm.
Pelican,
Can you explain how this works? I'll try, and you correct me when/if I go wrong. So every SWEPI/EnCana well has a pipe that leads to a small gathering line that only takes SWEPI/EnCana gas? And these small SWEPI/EnCana gathering lines go to larger SWEPI/EnCana pipelines that all eventually lead to one of these two treating facilities? Then, once treated, the gas is sold into some nearby big pipeline that takes it to market? Is that how it works?
Henry, the CEFS gathering/treating systems were built primarily to serve EnCana/Shell but likely gather some other operator's gas production also. Any non-EnCana/Shell interest in their operated units is probably handled through this system under marketing arrangements with EnCana and/or Shell. See attached for diagram of CEFS gathering system.
EnCana/Shell hold capacity on some of the downstream pipelines so the actually sales may occur closer to the market area.
I have heard that the well has been shut in until Shell gets the H2S under control.
Thanks for the news, I appreciate it even if bad news. They are planning to drill an alternate on this section 4-T8N-R12W. So why would they do an alternate well if the H2S is really high for the 4h-1 well?
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AboutAs exciting as this is, we know that we have a responsibility to do this thing correctly. After all, we want the farm to remain a place where the family can gather for another 80 years and beyond. This site was born out of these desires. Before we started this site, googling "shale' brought up little information. Certainly nothing that was useful as we negotiated a lease. Read More |
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