Risk-Weighted Volumetric Analysis to Estimate Gas
Reserves and Evaluate Coalbed
Methane
Potential of the Lower Matanuska Valley,
Cook Inlet Basin, Alaska
By
D.O. Ogbe, J.B. Packer (University of Alaska, Fairbanks), and J.G. Clough (Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys)
Cook Inlet Basin fill exceeds 25,000 feet of Tertiary
sediments with the highest coalbed
methane
potential concentrated in the
Oligocene to Miocene Tyonek and Paleocene Chickaloon formations. A risk-based
methodology for estimating the gas reserves in coal beds was developed to
evaluate the coalbed
methane
potential of a 75,000- acre unit located in the
lower Matanuska Valley at the northern end of the Cook Inlet Basin.
In 1994, the first exploratory coalbed
methane
well
(AK94-CBM- 1) was drilled by the Alaska Department of Natural Resources in the
Matanuska Valley to collect information on coal seam thickness and
methane
gas
content. Based upon limited data obtained from this well, a volumetric method
was utilized to estimate the initial gas content and water in place. Probability
distributions of variables that include coal seam thickness, areal extent,
initial connate water saturation, effective porosity, initial adsorbed gas
content, and formation volume factors were estimated using correlations
developed from coal rank and depth data. A risk-based Monte Carlo Simulation was
utilized to calculate gas reserves and coalbed
methane
potential.
Our results indicate that the lower Matanuska Valley
75,000-acre unit contains approximately 1.8 to 2.7 trillion cubic feet (tcf) of
initial gas in place. Risk-weighted reserve estimates range from 1 to 1.8 tcf of
gas that could be recovered from the unit. Our research approach indicates that
abundant coalbed
methane
reserves are likely present within the study unit. This
methodology can be applied to determine the coalbed
methane
reserves in other
areas of the Cook Inlet Basin.
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.