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Estimates of Undiscovered Natural Previous HitGasNext Hit Volumes, Onshore North Slope: A Retrospective

By

K.J. Bird (U.S. Geological Survey)

 

Increasing demand for natural Previous HitgasNext Hit and renewed interest in pipeline construction to the North Slope bring new relevance to estimates of undiscovered natural Previous HitgasNext Hit resources, a North Slope resource previously considered non-economic for at least 20 years. The most recent North Slope-wide assessment (onshore and State offshore) of undiscovered natural Previous HitgasNext Hit resources was part of the U.S. Geological Survey’s 1995 National Assessment of U.S. Previous HitOilNext Hit and Previous HitGasNext Hit Resources. In that assessment, a mean-value of 64 trillion cubic feet (TCF) of technically recoverable Previous HitgasNext Hit was hypothesized to occur in nine petroleum plays. Slightly more than 90-percent of the Previous HitgasNext Hit was estimated to occur separate from Previous HitoilNext Hit as non-associated Previous HitgasNext Hit accumulations. Interestingly, this is the opposite of the volumes of Previous HitgasNext Hit already discovered, i.e., most Previous HitgasNext Hit is associated with Previous HitoilNext Hit accumulations.

 

Estimates of non-associated Previous HitgasNext Hit show considerable uncertainty with values of 95th- and 5th-percentile estimates ranging from about 5 to 140 TCF. Approximately 70-percent of the Previous HitgasNext Hit (mean-value) was estimated to occur in structural traps in the Brooks Range fold and thrust-belt. Within this belt, about one-third of this resource was postulated to occur in Brookian reservoirs and two-thirds in Ellesmerian reservoirs.

 

In the 1995 assessment, the proportion of Previous HitoilNext Hit vs. Previous HitgasNext Hit was significantly influenced by a newly available analysis of the region’s thermal history. In the fold- and thrust-belt, this resulted in a decrease in Previous HitoilNext Hit and an increase in Previous HitgasNext Hit estimates relative to an earlier assessment. Apatite fission-track analyses since 1995 show that structural traps formed 10–40 m.y. after peak hydrocarbon generation. This information promises to have a significant influence on the evaluation of fold- and thrust-belt resources in the new regional assessment currently being conducted. 

 


 

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90008©2002 AAPG Pacific Section/SPE Western Region Joint Conference of Geoscientists and Petroleum Engineers, Anchorage, Alaska, May 18–23, 2002.