Geothermal Energy: A New Life for Old Offshore Oil Wells?

Elaine Maslin
Sunday, February 28, 2021

Old offshore oil wells could be turned into geothermal energy producers under a plan by a new consortium. The group, The Aquarius North Sea Geothermal Consortium, is “actively” working with North Sea operators to see if old wells could be used to generate geothermal energy for existing platforms. But a future goal is greenfield geothermal exploration.

Kirsten Pasturel, CEO of ZeGen Energy, says there’s huge potential with some mature oil fields producing over 100,000 barrels of water per day, at temperatures hot enough to generate power.

“The potential is huge when you look at the amount of water produced on the UK Continental Shelf, previous academic studies suggest some fields in the UK could produce 10-20MW of power based on their produced water volumes," says Pasturel, who has been doing a study with the Oil & Gas Technology Centre (OGTC) in Aberdeen on the feasibility of the idea.

"When wells are no longer economical for oil production, they could be repurposed for geothermal energy instead of just being shut-in," she says.
Using geothermal energy for power could then lower offshore operators’ emissions and costs by reducing reliance on carbon-emitting gas turbines.
“Generating power from geothermal energy is nothing new, and technology exists to do this from low-temperature fluids, but we need to understand the opportunity and value to the UKCS; Can geothermal power be used to replace that supplied by a 5MW or 10MW gas turbine?"

The offshore well portfolio is varied, so solutions will take some engineering and puzzling out.

The other companies in the consortium are dCarbonX, also founded in 2020, and Danish well management firm Ross DK.

There could even be the opportunity to drill new wells, just for water production, suggests

Gillian White, Subsurface Solution Centre manager at the OGTC. But she says that legal and regulatory frameworks for this are also part of the OGTC study.

Another challenge – outside of the scope of the study, which is focusing on energy production for use offshore – would be to get that energy to shore economically, if enough is generated so that it can be exported. That might mean integration with offshore renewable energy systems, says Pasturel, where it could offer a baseload. The study is set to map out the potential across the North Sea and look at available technologies in the market for use offshore.

Categories: Technology Offshore Energy Renewable Energy Geothermal Energy

Related Stories

How Hot Is Your Cable? Understanding Subsea Cable Thermal Performance

Pharos Energy Kicks Off Drilling Campaign Offshore Vietnam

US Pressure on India Could Propel Russia's Shadow Oil Exports

ABL Secures Rig Moving Assignment with India's ONGC

Propane’s Economic Edge for Ports During Trade Uncertainty

Floating Offshore Wind Test Center Planned for Japan

PXGEO Nets First Seismic Survey off Malaysia

Sapura Energy Rebrands to Vantris Energy

China Rolls Out 17MW Floating Wind Turbine Prototype

Baker Hughes, Petronas Team Up for Asia-Pacific Energy Resilience

Current News

PTTEP Orders OneSubsea Systems for Two Deepwater Projects off Malaysia

Russia's Lukoil Takes Up Gunvor’s Offer for Foreign Assets

How Hot Is Your Cable? Understanding Subsea Cable Thermal Performance

Sponsored: UAE Breaks Ground on GW-Scale Renewable Energy Hybrid

Pertamina Joins Petronas in Ultra-Deepwater Asset off Indonesia

Malaysia’s Petronas and Oman’s OQEP Strengthen Oil and Gas Ties

Southeast Asia’s 2GW Cross-Border Offshore Wind Scheme Targets 2034 Buildout

Pharos Energy Kicks Off Drilling Campaign Offshore Vietnam

Viridien to Shed More Light on Malaysia’s Offshore Oil and Gas Potential

US Pressure on India Could Propel Russia's Shadow Oil Exports

Subscribe for AOG Digital E‑News

AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

https://accounts.newwavemedia.com