DOE - Fossil Energy Techline - Issued on: September 7, 1999 Projects to Enhance Low-Cost Stripper Gas ProductionJames Engineering, Holditch-Reservoir Technologies to Study Ways to Prolong Life of Gas "Stripper Wells"More than half of the onshore natural gas wells in the lower-48 states -- some 176,000 wells -- are low-volume wells called "stripper" wells. Many face plugging and abandonment. And their numbers are increasing. Now, the Department of Energy has selected two research projects that could give new life to these wells. Both projects will develop and demonstrate low-cost software programs that could reveal ways to prolong - or perhaps increase - production from stripper gas wells. The projects will be conducted by:
Stripper gas wells -- defined as those that produce 60,000 cubic feet or less of natural gas per day -- account for about 8% of natural gas produced domestically, excluding Alaska and offshore sites. Since 1993, the number of wells falling into this category has increased from 160,000 to the current number of more than 176,000. Because of rising maintenance and production costs coupled with decreasing wellhead prices for natural gas, the number of gas wells being plugged and abandoned -- in many cases, prematurely -- is also increasing. At the same time, the United States is projected to increase its demand for natural gas by more than one-third during the next 10 years. Although gas stripper wells account for a relatively small portion of gas supply, preserving their production can be a key factor in meeting future domestic gas demands. The department's Federal Energy Technology Center will manage these projects. The Center is the major research arm of the department's Office of Fossil Energy. -End of TechLine- For more information, contact: Technical contact: |