NATURAL
GAS
RESOURCES OF ARCTIC ALASKA
HOUSEKNECHT, David W., U.S. Geol Survey, 956 National Center, Reston, VA 20175, [email protected] and BIRD, Kenneth J., U.S. Geological Survey, 345 Middlefield Road, MS 969, Menlo Park, CA 94025
The Arctic Alaska petroleum province, extending from the Russia maritime
boundary east to the Canada border and from the Brooks Range north to the Canada
Basin, may contain one of the largest endowments of natural
gas
in North
America. Exploration drilling has focused almost exclusively on
oil
objectives,
so the region remains a virtually unexplored frontier for
gas
resources.
Gas
reserves – The Alaska Department of Natural Resources - Division of
Oil
and
Gas
estimates that nearly 35 TCF (trillion cubic feet) of proved
gas
reserves exist in
oil
fields along the central Arctic coast. Most of these
reserves occur in the Prudhoe Bay
gas
cap (24 TCF) and in the undeveloped Point
Thomson accumulation (8 TCF).
Undiscovered, conventional
gas
resources – The U.S. Geological Survey and
Minerals Management Service estimate a recoverable
gas
resource that totals more
than 200 TCF (sum of mean estimates) for Arctic Alaska. Although a large range
of uncertainty is associated with these estimates, this
gas
endowment ranks
among the largest of all U.S. petroleum provinces.
Continuous (unconventional)
gas
resources – Significant potential exists
for resources of unconventional
gas
in Arctic Alaska. These resources may
include overpressured
gas
in low-permeability rocks beneath the foothills of the
Brooks Range, natural
gas
hydrates beneath the North Slope coastal plain and
shelf area of the Arctic Ocean, and coalbed
gas
beneath the northern Alaska
foothills and coastal plain. These
gas
resources have not been quantitatively
assessed because of limited understanding of their geology and recoverability.
