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The Foothills of Western Canada, a Fold and
Thrust Belt Natural Gas
Play
*
By
Andrew Newson1
Search and Discovery Article #10060 (2004)
*Adapted from “extended abstract” for presentation at the AAPG Annual Meeting, Salt Lake City, Utah, May 11-14, 2003.
1Moose Oils Ltd, Calgary, Alberta, Canada (www.mooseoils.com; [email protected])
The Foothills of the Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin (WCSB) has a long
history of natural gas production for the Canadian and American markets. As a
supplier to the North American gas market, the Foothills will continue to
play
an important role over the next 10 years due to the steady upward pressure on
natural gas prices resulting from increased demand and decreased supply. This
firming in price, coupled with the existence of an established infrastructure in
the Foothills, will allow the economical development of many of the remaining
natural gas prospects.
The current reserves of natural gas for all of North America that are tied into the natural gas market are 250 TCF. Based on the 2000 figures from the National Petroleum Council, the consumption of this product is currently 25 TCF per year for Canada and the United States. This figure is expected to increase to 30 TCF per year by the year 2010. However, the discovery rate for new gas to replace the continual consumption is decreasing each year. Using numbers published annually by the Alberta Energy and Utilities Board (AEUB), the British Columbia Ministry of Economic Development (BCMED), and the Federal National Energy Board (NEB), it appears that there is annual shortfall in Canada of 7% between produced marketable reserves and booked marketable reserves of natural gas. Taking the North American market as a whole, this figure could be as high as 10%. The steady increase in natural gas prices is providing an incentive to explore for new natural gas reserves and efficiently deplete already proven reserves in the Foothills of the WCSB.
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The Foothills is part of the WCSB that lies within the fold and thrust belt of the Canadian Rocky Mountains (Figure 1). The area is situated on the eastern side and directly adjacent to the Canadian Rocky Mountains. It covers 40,000 square miles of land that runs from the northwest to southeast through four of Canada’s territories and provinces. The northwesternmost point lies just north of the Northwest Territories border at the town of Fort Liard. The Foothills is also in part of the adjacent Yukon Territory and then runs southeast through the provinces of British Columbia and Alberta. It terminates at the American/Canadian border at the town of Waterton. The Foothills has already provided 40 TCF of in-place natural gas reserves and has the potential to provide more. It is tied-in via pipeline to the North American gas gathering system that feeds natural gas to eastern Canada, the eastern seaboard, midwest and northwest parts of the United States, and California.
The northwestern and southeastern limits of the Canadian Foothills are
controlled by political boundaries and the extent of the natural gas
gathering system. The width of the belt is defined more on geological
grounds (Figure 2). An area called the Triangle Zone defines the eastern
side of the Foothills. This is a descriptive term for the subsurface
cross-sectional
One of the reasons for the unique nature of the Foothills belt is the
type of geological structures found at the surface and in the
subsurface. The Foothills is part of the larger fold and thrust belt of
the Rocky Mountains, a geological Many of the Foothills fields have reservoir rock that has been fractured naturally. This fracturing leaves a degree of uncertainty in the calculation of marketable gas reserves. This is reflected by the unusually large difference between the marketable and gas-in-place reserve figures seen in certain Foothills pools. A good example of the under evaluation of a fractured Foothills reservoir is seen in the production profile for the Moose Mountain Field, a Foothills natural gas field that has a naturally fractured reservoir. Between 1985 and 2000 the field produced steadily from two pools. No additional wells were tied-in, nor was there any work on the existing wells to access more reserves. The original marketable reserves were given as 130 BCF with the gas-in-place reserves of 250 BCF (AEUB). Over the subsequent years, as the cumulative production increased, the gas-in-place reserves have correspondingly been revised upwards. In 1999 the total production exceeded the original marketable reserves, and the field is still producing 40 MMCF per day. One of the major additions to marketable reserves in the Foothills may well come from an increase in the understanding of naturally fractured reservoirs. If this is true, it may not be unreasonable to add an extra 10 TCF of gas to the marketable reserves of the Foothills belt purely through the more effective development of current in-place reservoirs. The rock formations that produce hydrocarbons in the Foothills are spread throughout the stratigraphic column (Figure 3). The youngest producing formation is the sandstone of the Cardium Formation. The oldest producing formation is the carbonates of the Beaverhill Lake Group. The bulk of the gas produced to date is from the Mississippian-aged rocks, which have produced 26 TCF of the total reserves. The next most prolific producers are the Triassic- and Devonian-aged rocks which have produced 6 TCF each. The Cretaceous has added 2 TCF to the reserves.
The Foothills has been divided into five categories based on
The First Generation plays of the Mississippian-aged reservoir formation
dominated the early Foothills exploration effort from 1914 to 1960.
These plays have contributed 37% of the in-place gas reserves to the
Foothills. They are found in structures formed by single thrust sheets
and generally follow a fault-bend-fold
The Second Generation
Third Generation
Another
The Triangle Zone is a complex interaction of the two
Production from the various
The Foothills has a long history and has proved itself capable of producing large amounts of gas at high rates. Current published data gives the gas-in-place reserves for the Foothills as 40 TCF, of which 19 TCF are considered marketable gas and 13 TCF have already been produced. It currently produces nearly a TCF of raw gas a year. Based on the latest work by the Canadian Gas Potential Committee, using a discovery history process model, it has 27 TCF yet to be discovered in existing plays. The three largest fields left to be discovered in the WCSB will be in the Foothills and each will be greater than 1 TCF in size.
All gas reserve figures are in-place numbers, unless otherwise stated. |
