Oil and Gas Potential of the National Petroleum Reserve, Alaska
By
K.J. Bird (U.S. Geological Survey)
The U.S. Geological Survey has re-evaluated the quantities of undiscovered petroleum that might exist beneath the National Petroleum Reserve, Alaska (NPRA). This is the first complete reevaluation of the petroleum potential of the NPRA in more than 20 years and it is part of an ongoing USGS evaluation of North Alaskan petroleum potential. It is intended to provide an updated, scientifically based perspective of petroleum potential at a time when petroleum infrastructure has reached the eastern edge of the NPRA, while within the NPRA, exploration is in progress, discoveries have been announced, and federal lease sales are scheduled.
Significant factors in this resurgence of interest in
NPRA petroleum potential are several discoveries within the last 10 years just
east of NPRA of high gravity, low-sulfur oil in Brookian and Beaufortian
reservoirs with
depositional
trends that extend into the NPRA; new seismic
technology that is able to identify subtle stratigraphic traps; and dramatic
reductions in both cost and environmental disturbance related to oil development
and production that make these relatively small (by Prudhoe standards)
accumulations economically attractive.
With a team of specialists covering a wide range of
disciplines, our re-evaluation consisted of new field work, seismic
reprocessing, gravity, magnetic, fluid-flow, and structural modeling, and
analysis
of
sequence
stratigraphy, petroleum systems, and hydrocarbon
mass-balance. The assessment is based upon deposit simulation modeling in
geologic
plays
. We report estimates of in-place, technically recoverable, and
economically recoverable resources. Results with supporting data are planned for
publication on-line and as hard-copy summary of digital publications.
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.