Enhanced Oil Recovery Techniques and Nitrogen Injection Bandar Duraya Al-Anazi King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia

Similar documents
EOR Field Experiences in Carbonate Reservoirs in the United States

Overview of Enhanced Oil Recovery

Km with most biodegraded reservoirs up to 2.5 Km below the sediment surface.

Steam Injection. Dr. Helmy Sayyouh Petroleum Engineering Cairo University

CO 2 EOR Research in Saudi Aramco. Nabeel Al-Afaleg, PhD Saudi Aramco 3 rd CSLF Workshop January 27 29, 2008 Al-Khobar, Saudi Arabia

STUDY OF THE VARIOUS EOR METHODS (Chemical Injection and Steam flooding with case studies)

Enhanced Oil Recovery

The Effect of Different Carbon Dioxide Injection Modes on Oil Recovery

Incremental Oil Recovery from Depleted Oilfields in a Low Oil Price Environment

CO 2 EOR Operational Considerations Case Study

Petroleum Engineering

Chemistry of Petrochemical Processes

Beyond CSS, SAGD and VAPEX. Zhangxin Chen

Optimization of Chemical Flooding in a Mixed-Wet Dolomite Reservoir

ENHANCED OIL RECOVERY USING LOCAL ALKALINE

This is Reservoir Engineering COPYRIGHT. By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:

Thermal Recovery Status and Development Prospect for Heavy Oil in China

Mature Fields: Key Factors for Successful EOR Projects*

E&P A Hart Energy Publication

SPE EOR: Past, Present and What the Next 25 Years May Bring George J. Stosur, SPE, Petroleum Consultant, Washington, D.C.

Updated screening criteria for steam flooding based on oil field projects data

An Introduction to Enhanced Oil Recovery Techniques

Down Hole Flow Assurance

An Experimental Investigation of Performance Evaluations for Seawater and CO 2 Injection Using Dual Core Methodology at Reservoir Conditions

Effect of ph-values on the contact angle and interfacial tension

HYSYS WORKBOOK By: Eng. Ahmed Deyab Fares.

Estimation of Boil-off-Gas BOG from Refrigerated Vessels in Liquefied Natural Gas Plant

Appraising the Performance of Cyclic Production Scheme through Reservoir Simulation, a Case Study Tariq Al-Zahrani, Saudi Aramco

PERMIAN BASIN: HISTORICAL REVIEW OF CO 2 EOR PROCESSES, CURRENT CHALLENGES AND IMPROVED OPTIMIZATION POSSIBILITIES

10/2/2013. Gas CHEMICAL PLANTS AMMONIA METHANOL UTILITIES TOWN GASS SUPPLIES ENERGY INTENSIVE INDUSTRIES. Power Generation

CO 2 -Enhanced Oil Recovery, Applying a Mature Technology in Kentucky

Purpose: To demonstrate the ability to create a single line foam stream using an in-line eductor and foam nozzle (or attachment).

OTC Copyright 2011, Offshore Technology Conference

Phase Behavior of UAE Crude-Oil/Carbon Dioxide System at Reservoir Temperature

Heavy Crude Oil Recovery

TECHNICAL INFORMATION ABOUT UNDERGROUND STORAGE RESERVOIRS FOR NATURAL GAS

CO 2 Recovery and Sequestration at

EXPERIMENTAL INVESTIGATION OF COOLING EFFECTS RESULTING FROM INJECTING HIGH PRESSURE LIQUID OR SUPERCRITICAL CO 2 INTO A LOW PRESSURE GAS RESERVOIR

The Prediction of Minimum Miscible Pressure for CO 2 EOR using a Process Simulator

FEASIBILITY STUDY OF TOP-DOWN IN-SITU COMBUSTION IN FRACTURED CARBONATE SYSTEMS

AN OVERVIEW OF THE LOW AND HIGH TEMPERATURE WATER-OIL RELATIVE PERMEABILITY FOR OIL SANDS FROM DIFFERENT FORMATIONS IN WESTERN CANADA

Teknologi Pemrosesan Gas (TKK 564) Instructor: Dr. Istadi ( )

Technology For Enhancing Marginal Well Profitability

Evolution of an LNG Terminal: Senboku Terminal of Osaka Gas

Enhanced Oil Recovery. Chemical Flooding. ENHANCED OIL RECOVERY Cairn India Limited.

GT-LPG Max SM. Maximizing LPG Recovery from Fuel Gas Using a Dividing Wall Column. Engineered to Innovate

Selection of the Optimum Production Scenario for One of Iranian Offshore Oil Reservoirs

SPE Abstract. Introduction

Gaps and Challenges for Light and Tight EOR

Reservoir Engineering

Research Article CO 2 Minimum Miscibility Pressure Determination of Pure Hydrocarbons in Different Temperatures Using Slimtube Simulations

Downsizing a Claus Sulfur Recovery Unit

Chemistry Resource Kit

Enhanced oil recovery mechanism of low oxygen air injection in high water cut reservoir

A PROTOCOL TO EVALUATE CAPROCK INTEGRITY FOR THERMAL HEAVY OIL AND BITUMEN RECOVERY OPERATIONS

A New Approach of Pressure Profile and Oil Recovery during Dual and Single Coreflooding of Seawater and CO 2

Moving from Secondary to Tertiary Recovery Stages. 9 TH ANNUAL WYOMING EORCO2 CONFERENCE JULY 14-16, 2015 Casper, WY By Jim Mack MTech Ventures LLC

Pore Scale Investigation of Carbonated Water Injection with and without Gravity

Feasibility of Near-Miscible Flooding By Production Gas Rejection with Varying CO2 Content in Qinhuangdao Oilfield

Primary Recovery Mechanisms

Qualitative Phase Behavior and Vapor Liquid Equilibrium Core

Analysis Fraction Flow of Water versus Cumulative Oil Recoveries Using Buckley Leverett Method

Viscosity Standards for High-Pressure, High- Temperature, and High- Viscosity Conditions. Kurt Schmidt Houston, Texas, USA January 22, 2010

University, 222 Wangsimni-ro, Seongdong-gu, Seoul , Korea 2) ABSTRACT

Oil & Gas Production Measurement Solutions. Superior flow and density measurement

A New Approach to Simultaneously Enhancing Heavy Oil Recovery and Hindering Asphaltene Precipitation

SPONTANEOUS CO2 EMULSION GENERATION; A NEW APPROACH FOR MOBILITY CONTROL

POTENTIAL OF EOR IN ALBERTA OIL POOLS PHASE 1 REPORT FOR ENERGY RESOURCES CONSERVATION BOARD (ERCB) (June 2011)

Nitrogen production plants HPN

"SECONDARY VS. TERTIARY OIL RECOVERY FROM A TWO-DIMENSIONAL POROUS MEDIA BY MICROEMULSION FLOODING"

MOLECULAR GATE TECHNOLOGY FOR (SMALLER SCALE) LNG PRETREATMENT

Sulfur Tail Gas Thermal Oxidizer Systems By Peter Pickard

VVER-440/213 - The reactor core

Optimal Tertiary Recovery Strategies for Mature Wells. More Oil, Naturally. Daan Veeningen

Feasibility of Gas Drive in Fang-48 Fault Block Oil Reservoir

The Science and a Case History of CO 2 Conformance Through the Use of Complex Nano Fluids

HEAVY OIL PRODUCTION ENHANCEMENT UNCONVENTIONAL HEAVY OIL PRODUCTION OPTIMIZATION

Controlling NOx and other Engine Emissions

BOILERS. Outline. Introduction. Types of Boilers. Assessment of a Boiler. Energy Efficiency Opportunities 2/16/2014

Fossil Fuels and the environment

SPE MS. Abstract

SULFUR RECOVERY UNIT. Thermal Oxidizer

SPE DISTINGUISHED LECTURER SERIES is funded principally through a grant of the SPE FOUNDATION

INFLUENCE OF RESERVOIR PARAMETERS ON BACTERIAL ENHANCED OIL RECOVERY

EVALED. Evaporator and Crystallizer WATER TECHNOLOGIES

AKAKUS OIL OPERATIONS- LIBYA Gas Utilization& Flare Emission Reduction Project

CHAPTER 1 THE CHEMICAL PROCESS INDUSTRY THE CHEMICAL PROCESS INDUSTRY

Recovery Process - Cold Heavy Oil

Storage and Handling of Quaternary Amines

On-Line Gas Analysis In Air Separation Plants

Improving Natural Gas Liquefaction Plant Performance with Process Analyzers

POROUS FLOW WITH PHYSICO-CHEMICAL PROCESSES MICROSCOPIC STUDY. Guo Shangping Huang Yanzhang Hu Yaren Zhou Juan Cheng Yongmin

MODELING THE RELATIVE PERMEABILITY RELATIONSHIP IN A TAR SAND FORMATION

Building an Enhanced Oil Recovery Culture to Maximise Asset Value. Marco Rotondi Stavanger, 28 th April 2015

GASKET MATERIALS. Click the Product Name to go Directly to Any Page Expanded PTFE Sheet Material QUIMFLEX SH 100% Expanded PTFE Sheet...

Producing a well. Folie 1

with Physical Absorption

Understanding the Behaviors of Gas Condensate Reservoirs

FTSI Fracture Fluids 101

Transcription:

Enhanced Oil Recovery Techniques and Nitrogen Injection Bandar Duraya Al-Anazi King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia Introduction The present state of modern industrial development is characterized by the consumption of enormous quantities of petroleum. It is not used simply for the production of various fuels and lubricants; with each passing year more and more p e t roleum is used for manufacturing synthetic ru b b e r, synthetic fibers, plastics, drugs, and thousands of other products. While demand for petroleum products continuous to rise, petroleum production worldwide is in a steady decline. However, new developments in technology and the rise in world oil prices give promise that substantial portions of otherwise neglected oil can be recovered. These new technical developments fall under the broad heading of enhanced oil recovery (EOR). Enhanced oil recovery is a collection of general methods, each with its own unique capability to extract the most oil from a particular reservoir. Each has been investigated rather thoroughly both from a theoretical and laboratory perspective, as well as in the field. Over the years, interest in enhanced oil recovery (EOR) has been tempered by the increase in oil reserves and production. Many techniques have been investigated in the laboratory and the field for improving oil recovery. Historically the discovery of major oil fields in the world added larg e volumes of oil to the worldwide market. In addition, estimates of reserves from reservoirs in the Middle East increased significantly, leading to the expectation that the oil supply would be plentiful. Although large volumes of oil remain in mature reservoirs, the oil will not be produced in large quantities by EOR processes unless these processes can compete economically with the cost of oil production from conventional sources. Thus, as reservoirs age, a dichotomy exists between the desire to preserve producing wells for potential EOR processes and the lack of economic incentive because of the existence of large reserves of oil in the world. During the life of a well, oil recovery has three stages or categories which are: 1-Primary Oil Recovery 2-Secondary Oil Recovery 3-Tertiary Oil Recovery Enhanced Oil Recovery Techniques The term enhanced oil recovery (EOR) basically refers to the recovery of oil by any method beyond the primary stage of oil production. It is defined as the production of crude oil from reservoirs through processes taken to increase the primary reservoir drive. These processes may include pressure maintenance, injection of displacing fluids, or other methods such as thermal techniques. There f o re, by definition, EOR techniques include all methods that are used to increase cumulative oil produced (oil recovery) as much as possible. Enhanced oil recovery can be divided into two major types of techniques: thermal and non-thermal recovery. Non-Thermal Recovery Non-thermal recovery techniques can be broken down into the following: Pressure Maintenance. More complete recovery of oil is achieved by special technological methods. A c o m m o n method employed today is artificial maintenance of formation pressure. This traditional step for increasing oil recovery involves the injection of fluid into (or near) an oil reservoir for the purpose of delaying the pressure decline during oil production. Pressure maintenance can significantly increase the amount of economically recoverable oil over that to be expected with no pressure maintenance. Waterflooding. Production can be increased after a decline in pressure from the water drive or pressure maintenance by a technique called waterflooding, which is the injection of water through injection wells to push crude oil toward producing wells. Water is pumped into the productive layer at injection pressure through bore holes in a volume equal to (or greater than) the volume of oil extracted. So, the formation energy in the deposit is kept at the optimum level. The original lifetime of the well is prolonged, which greatly reduces the amount of drilling operations and consequently reduces the cost of the oil. Gas Injection. There are two major types of gas injection, miscible gas injection and immiscible gas injection. In miscible gas injection, the gas is injected at or above minimum miscibility pressure (MMP) which causes the gas to be miscible in the oil. On the other hand in immiscible gas injection, flooding by the gas is conducted below MMP. This low pressure injection of gas is used to maintain reservoir pressure to prevent production cut-off and thereby increase the rate of production. Gas injection processes can be broken down into the following techniques: Liquefied Petroleum Gas Miscible Slug. Displacement by miscible slug usually refers to the injection of some liquid solvent that is miscible upon first contact with the resident crude oil. In particular, this process uses a slug of propane or other liquefied petroleum gas (2 to 5% PV [pore volume]) tailed by natural gas, inert gas, and/or water. Thus, the solvent will bank oil and water ahead of it and fully displace all contacted oil. Enriched Gas Miscible Process. In the enriched gas process, a slug of methane enriched with ethane, propane, or butane Continued on Page 29 28 CSEG RECORDER October 2007

Enhanced Oil Recovery Techniques and Nitrogen Injection Continued from Page 28 (10 to 20% PV) and tailed by lean gas and/or water is injected into the reservoir. When the injected gas contacts virgin reservoir oil, the enriching components are slaked from the injected gas and absorbed into the oil. High Pressure Lean Gas Miscible Process. This process involves the continuous injection of high pressure methane, ethane, nitrogen, or flue gas into the reservoir. The lean gas process, similar to enriched gas, involves multiple contacts between reservoir oil and lean gas before forming a miscible bank. But, there is a difference in the enriched gas process where light components condense out of the injected gas and into the oil, then intermediate hydrocarbon fractions (C2 to C6) are stripped from the oil into the lean gas phase. Carbon Dioxide Process. Oil displacement may be initiated by a number of mechanisms due to injection of CO2 into oil reservoirs. Carbon dioxide is not usually miscible with reservoir oil upon initial contact, however it may create a miscible front like the lean gas process. So, there are two major types of CO2 floods; miscible flood in which the gas is injected at or above the MMP, and immiscible flood in which flooding by the gas is conducted below the MMP. Miscibility is initiated by the extraction of large amounts of heavier hydrocarbons (C5 to C30) by CO2. Chemical Processes. Chemical flood is another technique to increase the mobility of oil in order to enhance oil recovery. This technique is based on adding additives or chemicals to the displacing fluid or to the residual oil to control viscosity and interfacial tension. Chemical processes include micellar polymer flooding, caustic flooding, and polymer flooding. Micellar Polymer Flooding. Micellar solutions are mixtures of surfactants, cosurfactants, electrolytes, hydrocarbon, and water. Surfactants are substances known as surface active agents, such as soap. Cosurfactants are used for stability such as alcohols. Electrolytes are salts used to control viscosity and interfacial tension such as sodium chloride or ammonium sulphate. Hydrocarbon used is light crude at most. These solutions, which are designed on a field by field basis, are proposed to displace reservoir oil and miscible water. Caustic Flooding. An in situ emulsification process is employed by caustic or alkaline injection. The added chemicals to the injection water are caustic soda, sodium silicate, sodium carbonate, or sodium h y d roxide. These chemicals are mixed with the residual oil in the reservoir. The crude oil must contain natural organic acids; most common are the naphthenic acids. When the alkaline injected water and acidic crude react, soaps are produced at the oil water interface. These soaps cause oil to be movable. Polymer Flooding. Polymer floods a re improved waterfloods by i n c reasing the viscosity of the Article Cont d Continued on Page 30 October 2007 CSEG RECORDER 29

Article Cont d Enhanced Oil Recovery Techniques and Nitrogen Injection Continued from Page 29 displacing fluid which provides an increase in displacement efficiency. In addition, increasing the displacing fluid s viscosity and lowering its relative permeability through plugging will improve the mobility ratio and this will make an improvement in areal and vertical sweep efficiency. Thermal Recovery. Thermal recovery refers to oil recovery processes in which heat plays the principle role. The most widely used thermal techniques are in situ combustion, continuous injection of hot fluids such as steam, water or gases, and cyclic operations such as steam soaking. Steam Injection. Heat is injected into a reservoir to reduce the oil viscosity and, consequently, to improve the displacement efficiency. As a result of improved mobilization efficiency crude oil is expanded and flows easily through the porous media toward the wellbore. The process may involve steam soak that is sometimes called steam stimulation or huff and puff. In this process, steam is injected down a producing well at a high injection rate, after which the well is shut in. The injected steam heats up the area around the well bore and increases recovery of the oil immediately adjacent to the well. After a short period of injection the EOR METHODS Non-Thermal Thermal Chemical Flood Waterflood Gas Drives Steam Injection Polymer Flooding Surfactant Flooding Miscible Gas Immiscible Gas Cyclic Steam Stimulation Steam Flooding Fracture/Conduction Stimulation Alkaline Flooding Combination with Chemicals Emulsion Flooding Hot Waterflooding Miscible (Solvent) In situ combustion Combination Forward Combustion Reverse Combustion Mining F i g u re 1. EOR Methods (After Sarma, 1999.) Continued on Page 31 30 CSEG RECORDER October 2007

Enhanced Oil Recovery Techniques and Nitrogen Injection Continued from Page 30 Article Cont d F i g u re 1.1. Miscible Displacement process (After Green and Willhite, 1998). well is placed back on production until the producing oil rate declines to economic limits. The cycle is then repeated a number of times until no additional response to steam injection is observed. Nitrogen Injection As previously discussed one of the enhanced oil re c o v e r y methods is gas injection. In miscible gas injection, the gas is injected at or above the minimum miscibility pressure (MMP) which causes the gas to be miscible in oil. When flooding by the gas is conducted below MMP it is known as immiscible gas injection. Primary conditions affecting miscibility are: composition, fluid characteristics, pressure, and temperature. One gas employed for these gas injection techniques is nitrogen. N i t rogen has long been successfully used as the injection fluid for EOR and widely used in oil field operations for gas cycling, reservoir pressure maintenance, and gas lift. The costs and limitations on the availability of natural gas and CO2 have made nitrogen an economic alternative for oil recovery by miscible gas displacement. Nitrogen is usually cheaper than CO2 or a hydrocarbon derived gas for displacement in EOR applications and has the added benefit of being non-corrosive. MMP which can be used as a screening tool to help decide if nitrogen miscible flooding is feasible. History of Nitrogen Over a hundred years after the discovery of nitrogen, a method to liquefy nitrogen was devised in 1883 by Wroblewski and Olszewski. Today commercial production of liquid nitrogen is obtained from the fractional distillation of liquid air. Air is liquefied by compression and progressive refrigeration at a pressure of 665 psi. and liquid nitrogen boils off at -320.45 F. Only quite recently materials and equipment have been developed to handle very cold liquids like nitrogen on a commercial level. The field of science that deals with the technology of handling liquids colder than -187 F is called cryogenics. All the liquids and the equipment to handle these cold liquids are considered cryogenic There are few known correlations to determine the MMP of nitrogen since the available literature data on the MMP of nitrogen with crude oils and synthetic oil are scarce. Nitrogen MMP of different oils is a function of the temperature, reservoir fluid composition, and pressure on miscibility. Determination of the MMP of nitrogen with the particular oil is necessary to ensure the successful operation of the miscible flood. There f o re, re s e a rc h needs to be done to exemplify the process for determination of the MMP for nitrogen. Here we will briefly discuss the nitrogen injection process and the determination of nitro g e n M M P. It is hoped in the future to develop a more accurate and reliable c o r relation for estimating nitro g e n Continued on Page 32 October 2007 CSEG RECORDER 31

Article Cont d Enhanced Oil Recovery Techniques and Nitrogen Injection Continued from Page 31 liquids and cryogenic equipment. Special steels and aluminium are the most widely used cryogenic construction materials; however, copper and bronze alloys are also used for specific applications (Dowell (1982), Barber (2005)). refining, public utility, missile, and food processing industries. Recent developments with liquid nitrogen for food preservation show a strong growth potential for nitrogen use in this industry. Interest in nitrogen for oil and gas well stimulation work is focused on the compact source of high energy gas available at a reasonable cost. Without expensive compressor equipment, gas at 15,000 psi pressure is available for well stimulation use through liquid nitrogen and its cryogenic handling devices (Dowell (1982), Barber (2005)). F i g u re 1.2. Miscible Displacement process of Lean Gas (Nitrogen) (After Klins, 1 9 8 4 ). Use of Nitrogen The chemical industry is the largest user of industrial nitrogen. A large portion of its nitrogen use is for the manufacture of ammonia for fertilizers. Smaller users of nitrogen are the electronics, aircraft, Table 1 Nitrogen Slug F i g u re 1.3. Nitrogen injection process of miscible displacement. Nitrogen, when injected at high pressure, can form a miscible slug which aids in freeing the oil from the reservoir rock (Sarma, 1999) (See Figure 1.2 and 1.3). Field Supply of Liquid Nitrogen The location of plant facilities to manufacture liquid nitrogen is only limited by the availability of power; since the raw material is air. A liquid nitrogen plant will also produce liquid oxygen and other rare gases found in the air. Rail cars are available to transport liquid nitrogen from the plant to the end user or larger suppliers. This extensive distribution has a stabilizing effect on the market price. The rail cars and the truck transports used to transport liquid nitrogen are vacuum jacketed cryogenic tanks. An inner tank made of stainless steel holds the liquid nitrogen. The outer shell of mild steel provides an evacuated space for insulating purposes. The tanks are provided with pre s s u re release valves to release nitrogen gas as pressure builds up in the tank due to gas expansion by heat. Rail cars will hold 1,200,000 SCF of liquid nitrogen. Commercial truck tanks carry 7,000 gal of liquid nitrogen (or 651,840 SCF) (Dowell, 1982). R References Chemical Symbol N2 Molecular Weight 28.016 Triple Point -345.9ºF at 1.82 psig Normal Boiling Point -320.45 F Latent Heat of Evaporation 85.67 BTU/lb Critical Temperature -232.87ºF Critical Pressure 492.3 psig Specific Heat (Cp) 77ºF 0.447 1 BTU/(lb) (ºF) Specific Heat (Cv) 70 F 0.3197 BTU/(lb) (ºF) Ratio of Specific Heat 1.401 Thermal Conductivity 60 F 0.01462 BTU/sq ft hr(ºf/ft) Density of Saturated Vapor at 14.7 psia 0.03635 Ib/cu ft Specific Gravity of Saturated Vapor at 14.7 psia (air = 1.0) 0.967 Density of Liquid Nitrogen at Normal Boiling Point 50.443 Ib/cu ft 1 Ib Liquid Nitrogen 0.1483 gal 1 Ib Liquid Nitrogen 13.81 SCF 1 gal Liquid Nitrogen 6.743 Ib 1 gal Liquid Nitrogen 93.12 SCF 100 SCF Nitrogen 7.247 Ib at -320.4ºF 100 SCF Nitrogen 1.075 gal at -320.4ºF Klins, M. A.: Carbon Dioxide Flooding, International Human Resourc e s Development Corporation, Boston, 1984. Sarma, H. K.: Gas Processes: Principles and Field Application, Japan National Oil Corporation, Chiba-Shi, Japan, 1999. Schumacher, M.M.: Enhanced Oil Recovery, Secondary and Tertiary Methods, Noyes Data Corporation, New Jersey, USA, 1978. Sebastian, H.M. and Lawrence, D.D.: Nitrogen Minimum Miscibility Pressure, SPE 24134 paper was prepared for presentation at the SPE/DOE Eight symposium on Enhanced Oil Recovery held in Tulsa, Oklahoma, April 22-24, 1992. Stalkup, Fred I. Jr.: Miscible displacement, Second Printing, Society of Petro l e u m Engineers of AIME, Dallas, New York, 1984. Barber Steven.J: Nitrogen Gas Controlled forced cooling of power plant Production Equipment, presented at the 25th annual electric untility chemistry workshop at the University of Illinois, May, 2005. Continued on Page 33 32 CSEG RECORDER October 2007

Article Cont d Enhanced Oil Recovery Techniques and Nitrogen Injection Continued from Page 32 Dowell: Nitrogen Services Manual, September, 1982. Firoozabadi, A. and Aziz, K.: Analysis and Correlation of Nitrogen and Lean Gas Miscibility Pressures, SPERE (Nov. 1986) p. 575-582. Are you Glaso, O. S.: Miscible Displacement; Recovery Tests with Nitrogen, paper SPE 17378, SPERE, pp 61-68, February, 1990. Green, Don W., Willhite G. Paul: Enhanced Oil Recovery, Society of Petroleum Engineers, Richardson, Texas, 1998. Hanssen, J. E.: Nitrogen as a Low-Cost Replacement for Natural Gas, Reinfection Offshore, paper SPE 17709 presented at SPE Gas Technology Symposium, Dallas, June 1988. Hudgins, D. A., Llave, F. M., and Chung, F. T. H.: Nitrogen Miscible Displacement of Light Crude Oil: A Laboratory Study, paper SPE 17322 presented at SPE/DOE Enhanced Oil Recovery Symposium, Tulsa, April 1988. looking for a job or an employee? Bandar Duraya Al-Anazi is a student in King Saud University in the Petroleum and Natural Gas Engineering Dept. He entered KSU in 2003. He is a member of Society of P e t roleum Engineers (SPE), American Association of P e t roleum Geologists (AAPG), Society of Exploration Geophysicists (SEG), Dhahran Geosciences Society (DGS), Candidate Fellowship the Geological Society of London, Society of Petrophysicists and Well Log Analysts (SPWLA), European Association of Geoscientists & Engineers (EAGE), Canadian Society of Exploration Geophysicists (CSEG), The E d i n b u rgh Geological Society (EGS), The Petroleum Exploration Society of Australia (PESA), Canadian Well Logging Society (CWLS), Aberdeen Formation Evaluation Society (AFES), and was a secretary of SPE-KSU chapter from 2004-2006 and is elected as president for the chapter from 2006-2007. E-mail: Bandar.alanazi@gmail.com CSEG members can post their resumes on the job postings section on the CSEG website (www.cseg.ca) or view the listed job postings. CSEG corporate member companies can post employment notices on the CSEG website or view the posted applicant resumes. This service is FREE for CSEG members and corporate member companies. For more information please contact the CSEG office: Attention: Sheryl Meggeson October 2007 CSEG RECORDER 33