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Evaluation of Fracturing Effect of Coalbed Methane Wells Based on Microseismic Fracture Monitoring Technology: A Case Study of the Santang Coalbed Methane Block in Bijie Experimental Zone, Guizhou Province

Shaolei Wang, Chuanjie Wu, Pengyu Zheng, Jian Zheng (), Lingyun Zhao, Yinlan Fu and Xianzhong Li
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Shaolei Wang: Key Laboratory of Unconventional Natural Gas Evaluation and Development in Complex Tectonic Areas, Ministry of Natural Resources, Guiyang 550081, China
Chuanjie Wu: Key Laboratory of Unconventional Natural Gas Evaluation and Development in Complex Tectonic Areas, Ministry of Natural Resources, Guiyang 550081, China
Pengyu Zheng: Key Laboratory of Unconventional Natural Gas Evaluation and Development in Complex Tectonic Areas, Ministry of Natural Resources, Guiyang 550081, China
Jian Zheng: Key Laboratory of Unconventional Natural Gas Evaluation and Development in Complex Tectonic Areas, Ministry of Natural Resources, Guiyang 550081, China
Lingyun Zhao: Key Laboratory of Unconventional Natural Gas Evaluation and Development in Complex Tectonic Areas, Ministry of Natural Resources, Guiyang 550081, China
Yinlan Fu: Key Laboratory of Unconventional Natural Gas Evaluation and Development in Complex Tectonic Areas, Ministry of Natural Resources, Guiyang 550081, China
Xianzhong Li: School of Energy Science and Engineering, Henan Polytechnic University, Jiaozuo 454000, China

Energies, 2025, vol. 18, issue 21, 1-29

Abstract: The evaluation of the fracturing effect of coalbed methane (CBM) wells is crucial for the efficient development of CBM reservoirs. Currently, studies focusing on the evaluation of the hydraulic fracture stimulation effect of coal seams and the integrated analysis of “drilling-fracturing-monitoring” are relatively insufficient. Therefore, this paper takes three drainage and production wells in the coalbed methane block on the northwest wing of the Xiangxia anticline in the Bijie Experimental Zone of Guizhou Province as the research objects. In view of the complex geological characteristics of this area, such as multiple and thin coal seams, high gas content, and high stress and low permeability, the paper systematically summarizes the results of drilling and fracturing engineering practices of the three drainage and production wells in the area, including the application of key technologies such as a two-stage wellbore structure and the “bentonite slurry + low-solid-phase polymer drilling fluid” system to ensure wellbore stability, low-solid-phase polymer drilling fluid for wellbore protection, and staged temporary plugging fracturing. On this basis, a study on microseismic signal acquisition and tomographic energy inversion based on a ground dense array was carried out, achieving four-dimensional dynamic imaging and quantitative interpretation of the fracturing fractures. The results show that the fracturing fractures of the three drainage and production wells all extend along the direction of the maximum horizontal principal stress, with azimuths concentrated between 88° and 91°, which is highly consistent with the results of the in situ stress calculation from the previous drilling engineering. The overall heterogeneity of the reservoir leads to the asymmetric distribution of fractures, with the transformation intensity on the east side generally higher than that on the west side, and the maximum stress deformation influence radius reaching 150 m. The overall transformation effect of each well is good, with the effective transformation volume ratio of fracturing all exceeding 75%, and most of the target coal seams are covered by the fracture network, significantly improving the fracture connectivity. From the perspective of the transformed planar area per unit fluid volume, although there are numerical differences among the three wells, they are all within the effective transformation range. This study shows that microseismic fracture monitoring technology can provide a key basis for the optimization of fracturing technology and the evaluation of the production increase effect, and offers a solution to the problem of evaluating the hydraulic fracture stimulation effect of coal seams.

Keywords: coalbed methane development; production well construction technology; staged fracturing; microseismic fracture monitoring; low-permeability reservoir (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: Q Q0 Q4 Q40 Q41 Q42 Q43 Q47 Q48 Q49 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025
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