Shale gas resource estimates: methodology and uncertainties Prof. Zoe Shipton Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of Strathclyde.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Unconventional energy sources - a new European perspective?
Advertisements

© NERC All rights reserved UK Shale gas: How much gas? How safe to extract? Prof Mike Stephenson British Geological Survey.
Oil and Gas Deposits Fossil Fuels: Reference: Pages
Citizens petitions on shale gas extraction in Bulgaria and Poland Workshop on The exploration and exploitation of shale gas in the European Union and its.
Petroleum Geology and the Permian Basin
USGS Oil and Gas Resource Assessments and Hydraulic Fracturing Brenda Pierce, U.S. Geological Survey June 8, 2012.
© NERC All rights reserved Is shale gas a global game- changer? Mike Stephenson.
NATURAL GAS. What is it? Waste product produced by bacteria and enzymes that break down organic matter Mostly methane (CH 4 ) with a small amount of other.
Petroleum, Natural Gas, and Coal
U.S. Energy Information Administration Independent Statistics & Analysis APEC Energy Working Group Workshop on Unconventional Gas Vancouver,
U.S. Energy Market: Part 1 Consumption We consume 26% of World Energy or nearly 20 mmbo per day Mature market economy.
Fossil Fuels and the Environment Definition: complex hydrocarbons from dead organic matter. Stored suns energy, converted to chemical energy via incomplete.
Non-traditional fossil fuels Carbon sequestration.
NATURAL GAS. What is it? Waste product produced by bacteria and enzymes that break down organic matter Mostly methane (CH 4 ) with a small amount of other.
Nonrenewable Energy Oil & Petroleum. Nonrenewable vs. Renewable? nonrenewablerenewableWhat is the difference between nonrenewable and renewable? net energyWhat.
Fracking 101 Gordon J. Aubrecht, II Sustainable Delaware, Earth Day, 22 April 2012.
FOSSIL FUELS II NATURAL GAS. Natural Gas Vehicles (2009)
Unconventional Natural Gas By Adrian Casaday, Caroline Dykes, Alyssa Hooks, & Marnee Kirkpatrick.
PERSIAN GULF OIL BY WILL CAMARDA ESS 315. Location  The majority of the Persian Gulf Oil Fields are located in the Persian Gulf Basin  Located between.
1. © 2013 Petroch Services Pty Ltd BP Version J11002– Occupational Hygiene in the Oil & Gas Industry Occupational Hygiene in the Oil & Gas Industry Day.
Petroleum Engineering Presented by : Mostafa Khojamli November
Energy & Its Impact on Global Society Jerome K. Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University Dept. Mathematics & Sciences.
An INTRODUCTION TO ISSUES IN ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY OF OIL SHALE AND TAR Sands Jeremy Boak, Colorado School of Mines Justin Birdwell, U. S. Geological Survey.
Reserve Evaluation for Enhance Oil Recovery Purposes Using Dynamic Reserve Evaluation Model Woodside Research Facility GPO Box U 1987 Perth West Australia.
Using the UNFC-2009 to classify Renewable Energy Resources ABLC 2014 Washington, D.C. Raffaella Cristanetti DuPont Industrial Biosciences.
Torey VanSickle,Aaron Koch Travis Day, Sam Mwangi.
Shale Gas Development Presentation to: APEC Unconventional Natural Gas Workshop Sally Kornfeld Team Leader – International Oil and Gas Activities Office.
MISSION POSSIBLE UNCONVENTIONAL HYDROCARBONS IN THE FUTURE POLISH ENERGY MIX Sławomir Brodziński Under-Secretary of State, Chief National Geologist Ministry.
Fossil Fuels Resource Use Cycle. I. Resource Use Cycle Formation and Concentration Location and Identification Mining and Refining Production Use Disposal.
Global CBM Geographies: A Remote Sensing Perspective By Y.Dheeraj ( ) R
Bruce B. Henning Vice President, Energy Regulatory and Market Analysis The New Energy Reality: Implications for Natural Gas and Oil Pipeline.
Fossil Fuels Chapter 19.
Hydraulic Fracturing or “Fracking”. Natural Gas: Clean Energy? Natural gas power plants produce: half as much CO 2 (greenhouse gas) less than a third.
 Petroleum is a naturally occurring flammable liquid that is found in geologic formations below Earth’s surface and consists of a mixture of hydrocarbons.
The Carboniferous shales of the Midland Valley of Scotland: geology and resource estimation Mike Stephenson (BGS) Director of Science and Technology Presenting.
U.S. Shale Gas Resources, Reserves and $$$ John B. Curtis Potential Gas Agency Colorado School of Mines.
Part Four, Issue 7 Oil and Natural Gas.
ENGINE LAUCHING CONFERENCE ORLEANS Geothermal energy and strategies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions C. Fouillac Research Direction.
Fossil Fuels. Energy Use 85% nonrenewable energy Use of coal Use of oil Nuclear has leveled off Developing countries: depend on biomass (fuelwood, charcoal)
Fluid Saturation Introduction
Robert Bryce.  George Mitchell: Texas energy baron  1997 discovered hydraulic fracturing ▪ Hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking,” (a drilling process.
Powered by Rock Dr Liam Herringshaw Earth's Energy Systems.
OIL PRIMER Characteristics of Reservoir Rocks Origin and Accumulation of Oil and Gas Petroleum Traps.
Methane Mining Justin Anderson ChE 562 November 3, 2004.
Powered by Rock Dr Liam Herringshaw Earth's Energy Systems.
Coal Bed Methane by Widodo W. Purwanto a Departemen Teknik Kimia b Pengkajian Energi Fakultas Teknik Universitas Indonesia.
Energy Resources. Energy resources: coal, petroleum, and natural gas Considered fossil fuel because derived from remains of plants and/or animals Composed.
Shale Gas in the United States: Recent Developments and Outlook.
TRANSFORMING AND DISRUPTING SHALE GAS AND OIL IN U.S. ENERGY SUPPLY RICHARD NEHRING SHALE PLAYS IN THE MOUNTAIN WEST DENVER, NOVEMBER 12, 2010.
ENV 233: INTRODUCTION TO NATURAL RESOURCES MANAGEMENT FOSSIL FUELS RESOURCES Steve Ampofo Department of Earth & Environmental.
FOSSIL FUELS II NATURAL GAS. Mixture of light hydrocarbons: Mixture of light hydrocarbons:
Coalbed Methane Assessment and Analysis of Produced Water Disposal Options, Northern Cheyenne Reservation, Montana Project FEW Shaochang Wo, Principal.
 BASIC TERMS AND CONCEPTS (1) Petroleum: refers to crude oil and natural gas or simply oil and gas. (2) Crude oil: refers to hydrocarbon mixtures produced.
Developing U.S. Shale Gas and Oil Resources: Problems and Prospects for the Next Decade Peter D. Blair, Executive Director NRC Division on Engineering.
RESOURCE TYPEEXAMPLES Nonrenewable Potentially Renewable Renewable.
Nonrenewable Energy. Energy Concepts Measuring Energy – Energy: Joule, Calorie, BTU, kWh – Power: Watt (W), Horsepower (hp) Thermodynamics – First Law.
A quick guide to fracking
Natural Gas Overview. Natural Gas is a Fossil Fuel. Fossil fuels are made from plants and animals. The energy in natural gas came from energy stored in.
Fig. 16-2, p. 357 Oil and natural gas Floating oil drilling platform Oil storage Coal Contour strip mining Oil drilling platform on legs Geothermal energy.
International Association of Oil and Gas Producers Europe’s Indigenous Oil and Gas Production GSE Workshop Brussels – 24th May 2007.
Abundant Shale Gas Resources: Some Implications for U.S. Climate Policy Rutgers University April 28, 2010 Stephen Brown Resources for the Future.
Heavy Oils By: Rebecca Mowbray Molly Riddles & Kate Sweeney.
Earth Energy Advisors Weekly Energy Report –
Day 2: Natural Gas and Oil
SPE DISTINGUISHED LECTURER SERIES
Energy & Its Impact on Global Society
Where do you think most bottled water comes from in the United States?
UK Shale gas: How much gas? How safe to extract?
Unit 3: Natural Resources
What are Lebanon’s oil and gas prospects
Presentation transcript:

Shale gas resource estimates: methodology and uncertainties Prof. Zoe Shipton Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of Strathclyde

Unconventional gas commercial quantities of methane (± ethane, hydrogen, carbon monoxide etc) obtained by means other than traditional methods of drilling into naturally permeable rocks containing free gas phases extraction of ‘conventional gas’ often also involves reservoir stimulation by fracking, pumping, ‘flooding’ (with air, CO 2, or even fire) etc the distinction between ‘conventional’ and ‘unconventional’ thus largely boils down to geology: conventional reservoirs are typically sandstones (and sometimes other hard rocks) whereas unconventional gas targets include rocks traditionally regarded as ‘source rocks’ rather than reservoir rocks: shale, coal etc Conventional oil and gas wells, onshore UK = wells drilled = wells from which gas has been produced

Tight gas: relatively impermeable rock, limestone or sandstone Shale gas: gas trapped in fine‐grained sedimentary rock -shale Coal‐bed methane (CBM): gas trapped in coal seams, adsorbed in the solid matrix of the coal

Unconventional gas Fossil sources of unconventional gas: – Shale gas – Coalbed methane – Underground coal gasification Renewable sources of unconventional gas: – anaerobic digestion – biomass gasification – hydrogen from electrolysis of water

Pearson et al (2012) Unconventional Gas: Potential Energy Market Impacts in the European Union. EU JRC Scientific and Policy Reports Reserves vs resource

Recovery factor Amount of hydrocarbon left in the formation e.g. collapse of pore network, compartmentalisation, “attic oil” Conventional hydrocarbons 70-80% Shale gas 15-35% In practice the only way to determine the recovery factor is to produce

Discovered vs undiscovered Conventional petroleum relies on a petroleum system Shale gas: drilling into the shale will usually yield gas (no migration), technical and economic feasibility unknown until tried

SPE Petroleum Resources Management system Discovered shale gas resources = – Existence of significant moveable hydrocarbons (well tests, core, log data) – Evidence that similar areas support commercial gas production Society of Petroleum Engineers (2011) 'Guidelines for Application of The Petroleum Resources Management System. pdf

“If and when the Government does decide to issue estimates of UK shale gas resources it should set a good example and ensure that it is explicit about which definition it is using. “the definition which is most relevant to the general public … is recoverable resources” “The Government should clearly communicate the uncertainty inherent in [the] figures” From Committee on Energy and Climate Change 7 th report – The impact of shale gas on energy markets cmenergy/785/78502.htm

Very large variability… Even when production is mature! Pearson et al (2012)

TRR shale gas estimates in Europe original assessment Poland's TRR = 5.3 tcm (187.2 tcf) reduced to tcm ( tcf) Pearson et al (2012)

Technically recoverable resource Min (trillion cubic meters, tcm) Min (trillion cubic feet, tcf) Max (tcm)Max (tcf Global European UK One trillion cubic metres (35.32 tcf) is equivalent to ~10 years of UK gas consumption at current demand levels Assuming UK total demand is approximately 1,000,000 GWh, equivalent to ~10tcm. Figures from Committee on Energy and Climate Change 7 th report – The impact of shale gas on energy markets

UK estimates - methodology The unconventional hydrocarbon rescources of Britain’s onshore basins – Shale Gas onshore_paper/UK_onshore_shalegas.pdf Resource estimates made against analogues for producing shale gas plays in the US Used area of outcrop of the geological units UKUS JurassicAntrim Shale (47mmcf/km2) Carboniferous (U. Bowland)Barnett Shale (268 mmcf/km2) New BGS estimates within a matter of weeks….

UK estimates - CBM BGS estimate total UK CBM resource 2,900 bcm coals with the right depth, thickness, gas content and adequate separation from underground mine workings Recovery factors of 1% to 30-40% (US) 10% = 290 bcm The unconventional hydrocarbon rescources of Britain’s onshore basins – Coal Bed methane (CBM) _CBM.pdf

“…it is impossible to determine reliable estimates of shale gas in the UK … until we have practical production experience.” “ …the Government should encourage exploratory shale gas operations … to improve current estimates, providing that public concern over environmental impacts is recognised and taken into account.” “It should require shale gas companies to share their gas content and production figures with relevant research bodies (subject to commercial confidentiality)” Committee on Energy and Climate Change 7 th report

Where is the uncertainty? Very little previous work on shales (not cored) Heterogeneous rock types (sweet spots) Geological model (outcrop area vs rock volume – new BGS estimates) Assumed recovery factor – varies from 15-40% Decline curve analysis Technological advances may be significant

“Sweet spots” Localised area with higher recovery factor rock strength horizontal stresses, stress anisotropy total organic carbon thermal maturity natural fractures/faults e.g. faulting in the Woodford karst collapse chimneys in the Barnett natural fracturing in the Marcellus

Interpreting uncertain geological data e.g. Changes in geological interpretation at Sellafield from 1937 to 1995 (investigations stopped 1997) All models provided by Midland Valley Exploration (MVE) Geological data inherently under-constrained and therefore uncertain Bond et al. (2007, 2012) 445 interpretations of a seismic image: 21% “ correct ” 184 self- defined experts: 35% correct

Geological concept uncertainty and risk vchdth US basins largely “undeformed” UK basins significantly folded and faulted Preece Hall earthquakes – more later from Paul

Offshore unconventional gas? No current offshore production globally Technically possible Publically more acceptable? Ideally in next years before platforms decommissioned Source: Knight et al. (1996) Geol. Soc. Special Publ. 109: 43-57

Shale Gas vs Shale Oil and Oil Shale Shale oil "How much money you can make out of the liquids that you are producing during the shale gas operations. If the shale gas is fairly wet then, even though the dry gas you are selling is not earning you any money, you will earn a lot of money from producing the liquids and that is the key to the continuation of the revolution in the US at the moment.” (Para 10. ECC report) Oil shales – possible to retort in situ West Lothian oil shale fm. Very shallow - so environmental no no.

Thank you!