Chemical flooding is one of the classical EOR methods, together with thermal methods and gas injection.It is not a new method; indeed, the first polymer flood field pilots date back to the 1950s while the firstsurfactant-based pilots can be traced back to the 1960s. However, while both gas injection and thermalmethods have long been recognised as field proven and are being used at a large scale in multiple fields,it is not the case for chemical EOR. Although there have been over 500 polymer flood pilots recorded, and almost 100 surfactant-based fieldtests, large scale field applications are few and far between. This situation seems to be evolving however,as more and more large scale chemical projects get underway. This paper proposes to review the status ofchemical EOR worldwide to determine whether it is finally coming of age. The status of chemical EOR projects worldwide will be reviewed, focusing on recent and current large-scale field developments. This will allow to establish what is working and where the industry is stillencountering difficulties. This review will cover North America, South America, Europe, the Middle East,Asia and Africa. It is clear that polymer flooding is now indeed becoming a well-established process, with many large-scale projects ongoing or in the early stages of implementation in particular in Canada, Argentina, India,Albania and Oman in addition to China. Strangely enough, the US lags behind with no ongoing large-scalepolymer flood. The situation is more complex for surfactant-based processes. At the moment, large-scale projects canonly be found in China and – although to a lesser extent – in Canada. The situation appears on the brink ofchanging however, with some large developments in the early stages in Oman, India and Russia. Still, theeconomics of surfactant-based processes are still challenging and there is some disagreement between thevarious actors as to whether surfactant-polymer or alkali-surfactant polymer is the way to go. This review will demonstrate that polymer flooding is now a mature technology that has finally made itto very large-scale field applications. Surfactant-based processes however, are lagging behind due in partto technical issues but even more to challenging economics. Still there is light at the end of the tunnel andthe coming years may well be a turning point for this technology.
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