ORYX GTL: from conception to reality
Transcription
ORYX GTL: from conception to reality
G A S TO L I Q U I D S The Oryx GTL plant is the first newgeneration commercial-scale gas-to-liquids plant using the lowtemperature Fischer-Tropsch process. Oryx GTL from conception to reality Qatar has ambitions to become the GTL capital of the world. Kevin Halstead of Foster Wheeler provides a case study of Oryx GTL, the first new-generation commercial-scale gas-to-liquids plant using the low temperature Fischer-Tropsch process. The new technology provides an attractive alternative to crude-derived transportation fuels. Some of the many technical challenges faced throughout the project are outlined. ryx GTL, a joint venture between state-owned Qatar Petroleum (51%) and South African-based petrochemical company Sasol Ltd (49%), is the world’s first new generation, commercialscale, gas-to-liquids (GTL) facility. Oryx GTL is the first of a series of projects for Qatar, whose stated ambition is to become the “GTL capital of the world.” The plant is located at Ras Laffan Industrial City (RLIC), a significant industrial development of 100 km2, located 75 km north of Qatar’s capital, Doha. RLIC already has significant LNG and chemical processing facilities in operation and contains extensive infrastructure to support additional gas processing facilities including a well-equipped modern port. Oryx GTL is a grassroots facility able to O Nitrogen+Syngas 292 | March - April 2008 process 9.3 million m3/d of lean natural gas from Qatar’s North gas field to produce 34,000 bbl/d of liquids (24,000 bbl/d of GTL diesel, 9,000 bbl/d of naphtha and 1,000 bbl/d of liquefied petroleum gas). Fischer-Tropsch process Prior to the startup of Oryx GTL there were three GTL plants in operation in the world using the Fischer-Tropsch (F-T) process – two in South Africa operated by Sasol and PetroSA (under Sasol licence) and one in Malaysia, operated by Shell. The F-T process, discovered in the early 1920s by Franz Fischer and Hans Tropsch, converts a hydrogen and carbon monoxide mixture (syngas) into long-chain hydrocarbons and water when passed over an iron- or cobalt-based catalyst. The F-T process was taken forward in the 1930s by German company Ruhrchemie, in conjunction with other partners, one of which was Lurgi. The F-T process was used to produce fuel during the Second World War. In the early 1950s, Sasol bought the rights from these companies and utilised the technology to develop its coal-to-liquids (CTL) process. Sasol’s early plants utilised Lurgi coal gasifiers and Sasol Synthol reactors for CTL conversion, producing high-grade fuels and chemical feedstock. Since 1989 the Sasol Advanced Synthol (SAS) reactors have been used. All of these early plants utilise high-temperature Fischer-Tropsch (HTFT) technology with an iron-based catalyst. 43 GAS TO LIQU IDS Fig 1: Oryx GTL project stages versus oil price 70 GTL feasibility GTL pre-feasibility 60 Oryx FEED Oryx feasibility Oryx EPC 50 40 $/bbl economic viability of GTL likely to proceed 30 20 10 economic viability of GTL subject to review 0 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 average monthly data from July 1988 through March 2006 New generation technology © oilnergy.com, 2006 In 1993, Sasol successfully proved its lowtemperature Fischer-Tropsch (LTFT) technology, with an iron-based catalyst, to convert coal-derived syngas to liquid products. The plant is a relatively small 2,500 bbl/d commercial-scale facility which has recently been converted to natural gas. Sasol has continued to develop and refine its LTFT processes to utilise high-performance cobalt-based catalyst in the Sasol Slurry Phase Distillate™ (Sasol SPD™) process used for Oryx GTL. Feasibility economics Sasol employed Foster Wheeler to conduct pre-feasibility studies for the use of Sasol’s GTL processes in 1995. These studies were initially based on a generic GTL plant located in a remote coastal region producing 20,000 bbl/d of GTL product. Designs were developed and capital costs estimated based on stick-built and fully modularised designs. One of the objectives of the studies was to reduce the total project costs from initial estimates of over $30,000 per bbl/d of the plant’s capacity (which would have given a 20,000 bbl/d plant a $600 million price tag) to an economically viable level. The feasibility studies at the time assumed an available feed gas price of 44 $0.5/MMBtu, a low price versus the normally expected price for feed gas, but considered reasonable for remote, stranded or waste gas. This translated to an estimated oil equivalent price of around $4.5/bbl of product produced. Estimated operating costs of $4.5/bbl were roughly equal to estimated feedstock costs. The estimated capital cost was roughly twice feedstock costs at $9/bbl. In conclusion, for the generic GTL plant to be economically attractive, an oil price at least in the upper teens was required. By factoring in location-specific criteria to the generic plant estimate, an estimate at which Oryx GTL would be economically attractive, versus the oil price, was established as a basis for project economics. Having established that the viability of a gas to liquids plant is sensitive to oil price, Fig. 1 charts the various project stages as a timeline superimposed over the fluctuating oil price. As would be expected in such situations during early feasibility and again during early front-end engineering design (FEED) the project and its team were on a rollercoaster ride as concerns on project viability came under scrutiny with the fluctuating price of oil. The feasibility study for Oryx GTL started in 2001. With an attractive oil price prevailing this quickly progressed into a full-scale FEED. Front-end engineering design During the FEED, Foster Wheeler’s main areas of responsibility were the prequalification and selection of suitable bidders, development of the engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contract terms and integration of the three main technologies. This included production of design specifications for all unlicensed units, infrastructure and interfaces and development of project-specific plant layout, standards and specifications, such that the invitation to bid (ITB) package produced was suitable for soliciting high-quality lump sum turnkey EPC bids. The final ITB was completed and issued in July 2002. The project team, jointly led by Sasol and Foster Wheeler (including licensors and package suppliers), had to address a number of integration challenges during the feasibility and FEED stages. Many of the challenges undertaken resulted in overall reductions in capital cost without significantly affecting operating costs, making the overall project more resistant to fluctuating oil prices. The following highlights some of the main process challenges: ● Syngas production (approx 30% of the total capital cost of the GTL facility) primarily consists of two air separation units (ASUs) to produce oxygen, and natural gas reforming processes which include Nitrogen+Syngas 292 | March - April 2008 GAS TO LIQU IDS failure, start-up and restart durations and ensuring that the plant would remain online when individual units trip. To support this strategy, reliability and maintainability analyses and dynamic simulations of the full plant model ensured maximum cost-effective availability. ● The security of supply of hydrogen was essential in achieving plant availability requirements to protect the sulphur sensitive catalysts and create the required operating conditions in the key processes. Hydrogen management was crucial in the overall plant design considerations. Foundations of the crane rig used at the Oryx GTL plant. partial combustion to make synthesis gas in an autothermal reformer (ATR). Oxygen is produced in the ASUs through cryogenic separation of air. This is a hugely expensive physical process and consumes large amounts of energy. The Oryx GTL ASUs were the world’s largest oxygen units in terms of capacity. The availability of the turbine drivers and compressors had to be rigorously modelled, and challenges, due to the sheer size of the equipment, driver type and cooling arrangements, had to be mitigated to ensure that overall plant availability requirements were met. The ATR required significant pre-heat energy to produce the quantities of syngas necessary for the process. Optimal recovery of energy from the resultant hot syngas exiting the ATR and allocation of users was essential to improve overall energy efficiency. ● The F-T conversion process represents approximately 15% of the overall capital cost of the facility. The slurry bed reactor is highly exothermic and heat recovery via cooling to provide steam generation is critical in controlling the temperature in such a large vessel. As with the ATR, recovery and use of this energy was necessary to optimise plant efficiency. ● Product work-up, representing approximately 10% of the total capital cost, uses proprietary hydroprocessing tech- 46 nology to convert the wax produced in the F-T conversion to primarily GTL diesel and naphtha by carefully controlling overcracking to obtain the desired product slate. ● The remaining 45% of total capital costs was accounted for in the supporting process units (10%), offsites (20%) and utilities (15%). This balance of the work, to integrate the three main licensed technologies, formed Foster Wheeler’s main area of involvement. It required effective interface management, expertise across a number of industries such as gas processing, chemicals, petrochemicals, refining and power generation, and co-ordination and specification of all required supporting facilities and overall plant philosophies such as plant control and the complex steam balance. ● Overall, the GTL plant is exothermic and an energy producer, releasing large amounts of useable energy as waste heat from high- and low-grade producers. This energy is used to power the process with the high-grade producers matched to high energy users as explained above. The main challenge is that high-grade energy demand exceeds availability, so low-grade heat must be used cost-effectively to obtain an economic design. ● Plant availability challenges were overcome by minimising common modes of The FEED included enquiry, evaluation and development of contract terms to allow the selection of the ASU technology provider. Foster Wheeler could thereby develop the plant layout beyond what would normally be expected for a FEED, and there was a firm price for a significant portion of the plant. Bidders had to negotiate and integrate the selected ASU into their bid price. Additionally, as part of the FEED, Foster Wheeler developed a comprehensive cost estimate and a detailed project schedule from several build scenarios to arrive at the optimum plant configuration, price and schedule. The company identified project critical paths and included methods of addressing these in the issued ITB. For example, availability of vendor data was one critical path and was addressed to some degree by ensuring that bidders provided fully conditioned bids for identified key and long lead equipment. Vendors were selected before the EPC contract was awarded and all these orders were placed in the first month of the EPC contract, securing early vendor data and equipment deliveries to suppor t construction. The major technology suppliers for Oryx GTL were Haldor Topsøe (synthesis gas production), Sasol (Fischer-Tropsch technology), and Chevron (product work-up). Foster Wheeler was responsible for the overall management and co-ordination of the bid review process. Bid evaluation, clarifications and negotiations were concluded by the end of December 2002. On conclusion of the financial requirements, the EPC contract was awarded in March 2003. At the time of award, the oil price had risen to a level of around $25/bbl and market forecasts predicted this oil price level was likely to remain. In the event, the price Nitrogen+Syngas 292 | March - April 2008 G A S TO L I Q U I D S of oil has soared to exceptional levels. The FEED had examined the various construction build scenarios with associated detailed scheduling and guided the bidders to address these in their bids. The following outlines some of the critical activities that needed to be addressed: Completion of critical engineering discussed above was essential to release construction work fronts and facilitate fast-track civil design to support the required early start on site. ● The FEED determined concrete as the selected material for piperacks and structures. Therefore, pre-casting of piperacks and structures was required to allow erection of extensive banks of air coolers and thereby open up the area to allow pipe erection, a critical activity. There are not many piperacks in the world using the double width design as used on Oryx GTL. The piperacks consisted of two bays of 8-m width, giving a total width of 16 m. ● A significant number of heavy lifts were required, fifteen of greater than 200 tonnes. Some of these directly influenced construction sequencing. Heavy lift strategies were required for assessment during the EPC bid review and the key principles were essentially established before EPC award. The plot layout implications and construction build sequencing were addressed early in the EPC phase at model and constructability reviews. ● Utilities and support units needed to be in operation early, to support commissioning of the process units. Power, water air, steam were critical path items to allow firstly hydrotesting, line flushing and blowing and then to generate motive power for oxygen and hydrogen production. These items were identified during the FEED and requirements defined in the issued EPC ITB documentation. All were moved forward during bid evaluation with early review and consolidation after award. ● Key plant components The Oryx GTL plant uses the Sasol SPD™ process comprising synthesis gas production, low-temperature Fischer-Tropsch conversion and product work-up. These core processes are supported by: ● ASU for oxygen, nitrogen and instrument air; Nitrogen+Syngas 292 | March - April 2008 The world’s largest cold boxes used at the plant weighed approximately 550 t each. Heavy ends recovery (HER) for C5+ and fuel gas recovery; ● Water treatment unit to separate hydrocarbons and oxygenates from water; ● Hydrogen production (HPU) for hydrogen and steam; ● Utilities and offsites to provide power, water, steam, plant air, effluent treatment, tankage and export capability. During the FEED it was established that a single-train configuration would in some cases result in unit/equipment capacities outside current proven experience. Therefore, the ASU, synthesis gas production and F-T synthesis units were built with two parallel operating trains. Product work-up, being a long-established refinerybased process, comfortably accommodated the required capacities. Gas conversion to synthesis starts in the synthesis gas production unit, licensed by Haldor Topsøe. The gas is first desul● phurised, then preheated and adiabatically pre-reformed with steam before entering the autothermal reformer (ATR). In the ATR the feed is mixed with oxygen and steam in Haldor Topsøe’s open flame CTS burner, where partial combustion takes place before further steam-methane reforming in the catalyst bed to produced high-temperature synthesis gas. This high-temperature gas (approx. 1,000°C) is cooled to produce HP steam, primarily used to drive the ASU compressors. The main reactions in the reforming process gas are: CH4 + H2O CH4 + 3/2O2 CO + H2O CO + 3H2 CO + 2H2 CO2 + H2 The cooled synthesis gas feeds the LTFT reactor, licensed by Sasol, entering at the bottom of the slurry bed of liquid hydrocar- 47 GAS TO LIQU IDS Fig 2: Outline block diagram for Oryx GTL fuel gas air external recycle heavy ends recovery hydrogen production to syngas production oxygen air separation natural gas LPG natural gas syngas syngas production F-T synthesis liquid products hydrogen MP steam HP steam product work-up naphtha GTL fuel reaction water BFW plant condensates treated water effluent treatment utilities oxygenates steam, BFW, power to users plant effluents bons and F-T catalyst. It is converted into paraffinic hydrocarbon chains via the exothermic F-T synthesis reaction: CO + 2H2 → - CH2- + H2O The exothermic reaction inside the LTFT reactor is cooled by steam and the MP steam generated is primarily used to drive the steam turbine generators required to power the plant. The heavier fractions are removed from the slurry and fed into the product work-up unit, licensed by Chevron. Proprietary hydrocracking and fractionation techniques, known and proven in the refining industry, are used to break down these long-chain hydrocarbons into the required product slate of GTL diesel (70-80% and naphtha (20-30%). The HER unit, designed by Foster Wheeler, and water treatment unit, designed by Sasol, supplement the core processes. The HER recovers C5+ material from the F-T synthesis off-gas. The liquid products are fed to the product work-up process and gases are recycled to the ATR and for use as fuel, the latter sent to effluent treatment. The ASU and HPU support the core 48 processes. The ASU primarily separates oxygen from air to supply synthesis gas production and also supplies plant air, instrument air and nitrogen. The HPU uses steam-methane reforming to produce the required plant hydrogen via pressure swing absorption. Hydrogen is essential to the overall process so availability is assured by backup synthesis gas feed from synthesis gas production. The relationship and principal material flows between these units are shown on the overall block flow diagram in Figure 2. Project execution Once the EPC contract was awarded, a multi-company project management team (PMT) was appointed to manage the EPC contractor. Personnel were selected from Sasol, Qatar Petroleum and Foster Wheeler, so the team had an interesting mix of corporate and ethnic cultures, which were successfully blended into an effective resultsdriven team. Engineering progressed to schedule and the PMT was relocated to site some 15 months after EPC award. Construction started in October 2003 and the heir apparent His Highness Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani laid the foundation stone in December 2003. The construction was conventional ‘stick built’ and proceeded to schedule with phased equipment and material deliveries making work areas available. There were some challenges with local concrete supply, equipment delivery delays and steel shortages and the team had to address these challenges to keep the contract progressing. The utilities and support units needed to be in operation early to support commissioning of the plant and form several of the critical activities on the project schedule. Power, water, air and steam were essential items to allow completion of construction. If you were to look at an overview of the GTL Oryx facility, the notable characteristics would be the extensive banks of air coolers and A-frame coolers that provide approximately 85% of total cooling capacity. The sheer size of some equipment posed challenges. The ASU contains the world’s largest cold box and single-shaft air compressors, and the world’s heaviest lift by a land crane was undertaken when the Nitrogen+Syngas 292 | March - April 2008 GAS TO LIQU IDS Complex piperack arrangements at the plant. F-T reactors, 2,100 t each, were lifted into position. There were six fired heaters, each one a large complex structure requiring a long on-site build duration and a significant work area. The ATR required complex refractory and exotic pipework material fabrication and there is an extensive quantity of steam tracing required on the wax circuits. Commissioning The fully-integrated facility required careful and detailed planning of the plant commissioning and start-up, a subject that was discussed in detail during the EPC bid evaluation to ensure full understanding of the complexity of this phase, as described in the FEED documentation. The plant was designed to be almost standalone, importing only start-up power, cooling water and raw water and discharging effluent within strict environmental limits. The utilities and support units therefore must be in operation to support phased start-up of the plant. The very different phases of construction, commissioning and operation, by necessity have to take place simultaneously and in close proximity. This multi-phase period had to be performed under strict safety procedures to allow construction trades to work safely and in segregation from commissioning and operation of demarcated ‘live’ facilities. 50 To facilitate the commissioning sequence, the design philosophy to permit power distribution, integrated control system availability and essential start-up equipment such as boilers to be available was fully developed during the FEED phase. Additionally, services such as fire and gas systems for safety protection; air for blowing and instrument operation; firewater; cooling water and raw water for flushing and steam generation for blowing and motive power all needed to be available for commissioning. With utilities in operation, the water and effluent treatment, flare, nitrogen, oxygen and hydrogen production units could be started up, and feed gas introduced and processed, followed by sequential commissioning and start-up of syngas production, F-T conversion and product work-up. The plant was officially inaugurated in June 2006 by His Highness, Sheikh Hamad Bin Khalifa Al Thani, Emir of the State of Qatar. Plant improvement With the building, start-up and operation of Oryx GTL, lessons have been learned which will further enhance the next generation of GTL plants. Already some enhancements learned from the operation and shutdown of Sasol’s existing GTL facilities have taken place in areas such as the Haldor Topsøe open flame CTS burners, wax treatment and catalysts. Future GTL prospects As Oryx GTL approached start-up there was much interest throughout the oil and gas industry, particularly from countries such as Australia, Indonesia, Russia and Algeria, looking to diversify the way in which they can monetise their gas reserves. A Qatar Petroleum and Sasol Chevron joint venture has since examined possibilities for increasing the capacity of Oryx GTL by 67,000 bbl/d. Additionally, integrated GTL facilities for extracting and processing gas to obtain 140,000 bbl/day have been investigated. Outside Qatar, Chevron Nigeria, together with NNPC, is building a 34,000 bbl/d GTL plant in Escravos, Nigeria. Escravos GTL is of similar capacity and technology to Oryx GTL and was also engineered by Foster Wheeler. Foster Wheeler has published several papers addressing larger, integrated GTL facilities that combine GTL processes with offshore gas extraction and onshore gas■ receiving and processing facilities. Acknowledgement This article is based on articles first published in the July 2006 editions of The Chemical Engineer and Hydrocarbon Engineering. Nitrogen+Syngas 292 | March - April 2008