Milestone reached at Rosneft underground storage facility
Published by Pippa Luck,
Editorial Assistant
Tanks and Terminals,
Verkhnechonskneftegaz, an enterprise of Rosneft Oil Co.’s oil and gas production complex, has pumped 2.5 billion m3 of associated petroleum gas (APG) into an underground gas storage facility East Siberia, Russia, since the start of its rational use programme. The gas storage facility was commissioned in 2019.
The development of the company’s gas business follows the global trend of using cleaner gas fuel. The implementation of the ‘APG Management Improvement Programme’ reduces greenhouse gas emissions and improves the environmental situation in the producing regions.
The APG storage injection technology was implemented for the first time in Eastern Siberia at the Verkhnechonskoye oil and gas condensate field. The unique feature of this technology is the accumulation of associated gas in a temporary underground storage facility for subsequent rational use, rather than for maintaining reservoir pressure.
The technology has brought the level of APG utilisation at the Verkhnechonskoye oil and gas condensate field to 97%, which is one of the highest rates in the industry.
The associated gas produced together with crude oil at the Verkhnechonskoye field is used for the technological needs of the field, for the operation of a gas turbine power plant and as fuel for oil heating furnaces and boiler houses.
As part of the project, a gas compressor station with a capacity of more than 1 billion m3/yr, a 41 km gas injection pipeline, and six gas injection wells for APG injection were built at the Verkhnechonskoye field. The storage area is 330 km2, or about a quarter of the total area of the field.
Read the article online at: https://www.tanksterminals.com/storage-tanks/11032021/milestone-reached-at-rosneft-underground-storage-facility/
You might also like
VTTI and Snam finalise acquisition of Adriatic LNG
Italy's largest LNG terminal is now owned by VTTI and Snam with 70% and 30% ownership, respectively.