Title: ASPO WORKSHOP UPPSALA
1ASPO WORKSHOPUPPSALA
- Technology and Frontier Areas -
- Can they save the USA?
- Jeremy Gilbert
2Natural Bias
- All of us interpret data differently, according
to our experience, background and perception - A geologist is trained to think differently from
an engineer or an economist
3Basis for my own bias
- Degree in Mathematics
- 20 years of reservoir engineering worldwide with
BP, then many years of general management -
- After working as the companys Chief Petroleum
Engineer I spent the final years of my career in
Alaska
4Evidence
- As every policeman knows, witnesses are likely to
describe the same incident in quite different
ways - Geologists are generally optimists
- Their challenge find oil against the evidence
and despite possible earlier failures - Engineers are naturally cautious
- They must develop the geologists finds, match
investment to expected performance
5New technology as a panacea
- Until a decade or two ago US was source of
virtually all new production technology - To determine how technology can influence
recovery efficiency where better to look than in
the US itself and at a field whose size has meant
that funding for new technology has generally
been available
6Alaska - The Last Frontier
- Not just on auto license plates!
- Few parts of US remain unexplored. Alaska is
generally accepted as the only area where truly
significant volumes of yet-to-find oil may exist - .. but do they?
7The path to Prudhoe
- BP has always been recognized as a worldclass
explorer, beginning with the first Middle East
discovery at MiS in 1908 - BP lost core supply source in Iran in 1951 and
began major exploration in other areas, including
North America - In 1950s industry had begun development of oil
and gas fields in Cook Inlet in SW Alaska
8The last throw of the dice
- BPs geologists had much experience of foothill
oil near Irans Zagros Mountains - In Alaska BP tested Iranian-type anticlines in
foothills of the Brooks Range others followed -
but the results were disappointing - Patience was running out, interest moved north to
new State land on the coastal plain near Colville
River - BP and ARCO-Esso acquired most of the available
leases
9Optimism wins the day just!
- In1968 ARCO-Esso discovered oil in what had been
planned to be their final Prudhoe Bay well - Shortly afterwards, a BP well drilled on much
less costly downflank leases confirms the
ARCO-Esso discovery - A huge lease sale takes place in 1969, raising
almost 1 billion
10Prudhoe Bay
- In the 1969 lease sale, Arco-Esso made the high
bids, winning what proved to be the crest of a
giant structure - BP, with lower bids, acquired what turned out to
be much of the flank area - The structure had a huge gas cap, about 25 tscf,
and so BP had more than half of the oil - In 1969 BP became joint operator of the field
with ARCO
11Operational Extremes
- After its discovery and initial appraisal the
explorers estimated Prudhoe Bay reserves at 15
billion stb - but we know that they are always
optimists! - Development engineers had to deal with huge
problems before we could recover even a single
barrel
12Remote and hostile
- Huge logistical problems of operating in remote
Arctic location - How to travel and work on tundra, deal with
permafrost, live in extreme cold? - Bringing in equipment by land impossible airlift
or summer sea-lift only options - Main problem how to export crude oil?
13Make or break?
- Pipeline to Valdez planned in 1969 800 miles of
48 pipe, 600 river crossings, up to 4700 ft. - Worlds biggest civil engineering project cost
to be 900 million - Construction delayed by environmental and land
ownership problems - Cost of TAPS escalated to over 9 billion
- Project would have been economic disaster had oil
price not quadrupled in 1973-4
14Start-up
- The pipeline was completed in 1977
- Production began in April 1977 at 3 mbd
- Based on the 125 wells drilled, 9 billion stb was
a prudent estimate to SEC - Within 32 months production had reached plateau
level of 1500 mbd
15Second Phase
- By 1982 field had settled down to routine
production, with more than sufficient well
capacity to fill the production system - Studies showed that changes to facilities would
be required to maintain offtake capacity at 1.5
mmbd - BP began to plan remedial actions mostly as
envisaged in Initial Development Plan
16ACTION!!!
- Well flowline diameter increased well pads
manifolded - Produced-water handling and injection facilities
expanded - Low pressure gas separation facilities
- Infill drilling begun to reduce well spacing
- Horizontal wells drilled to reach isolated and
secondary reservoirs - Large scale EOR using Miscible Injectant
17The onset of decline
- In 1989 could no longer maintain plateau rate
- Even closer infill drilling, additional EOR
injection, and flank developments failed to
reverse decline - Gas breakthrough to producing wells resulted in
unexpectedly high gas production - but huge expansions in gas handling capacity in
1991 and 1994 did give short-term respite and
allow production to increase - Steep offtake decline rate has continued - but
some recent respite with cheaper drilling
18A win or a loss?
- Advances in technology maintained plateau offtake
continued longer than anticipated - Over 10.6 billion stb now produced, so engineers
initial estimate (9.6 billion) far exceeded - Current estimate of 13.5 billion stb is short of
explorerers promises - despite initially
unforseeable technology advances - Some of estimated remaining reserves may prove
uneconomic
19Prudhoe Bay - Reported Reserves
20Predicting the future
1988
1977
21What did we learn?
- Reservoir geology found to be more complicated
and depletion processes more complex than
expected - Despite these, the target production plateau
length was exceeded through application of
technologies developed or refined at Prudhoe Bay - Although the engineers reserves estimates were
found to be conservative the new technologies
were not able to deliver the geologists
predictions of recovery
22New Alaskan reserves?
- Alaska appears to be a concentrated habitat with
most of its oil on the North Slope margins and in
or around the super-giant Prudhoe Bay field - Other fields are much smaller than Prudhoe less
than 5 billion stb reserves total - although a
few are large by Lower 48 standards - The North Slope has generally been well evaluated
(59 exploration wells) but there is still a
possibility of oil in ANWR
23So, what about ANWR?
- Environmental concerns exaggerated
-
- Collecting key seismic data and drilling key
wildcats would have negligible impact - Limited publicly available data
24ANWR Reserves Studies
- Several published State/Federal agency studies,
from 1986 to 1998 - Most recent, by USGS, based on all publicly
available data and improved analysis - Study suggests mean technically recoverable oil
of 7.7 b stb - Sounds impressive at first hearing
- BUT!!!
25USGS Optimists All?
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26ANWR an engineers view
- Must discount technically recoverable volume for
- risk of not encountering the oil 0.75
- oil there but in small pools 0.8
- areal restrictions on drilling, facilities 0.9
- Take 24/bbl for ANS crude, to calculate
economically recoverable fro m technical volume
using USGS data - Risked reserves 2.7 b stb aggressive plateau
rate 750 mbd - Plateau could not before achieved before 2020 by
then offtake from other Alaskan fields will
decline almost 700 mbd
27The other frontier - Deepwater
- Amazing technological achievements make deepwater
production feasible - but challenges development and operating skills
to maximum - Costs likely to be many times greater than for
onshore or shallow water - Small accidents, set-backs have huge consequences
28Deepwater geological environment
- Geology very different to that of most onshore
fields and usually very complex - Turbidites, marine avalanches, act as
reservoirs but these often lenticular/entwined - Rich source, below delta front, at upper
boundary of maturity oil often degraded - Larger fields are generally found first
29Operational Constraints
- Floating production equipment brings huge mooring
and riser problems - Platform capacity limits constrain peak offtake
- Pressure maintenance is difficult - as is control
of injected fluids - Economics may rule out development of all but
largest accumulations
30Deepwater reserves
- Demanding economics force adoption of aggressive
recovery factors for development plans to be
approved - Advances in technology likely to be needed to
achieve these aggressive initially estimated
reserves - Hence little potential for reserves growth
31Farewell to reserves growth
- Reserves Growth in giant fields by as much as
70 (Kuparuk), 40 (Forties) has been common
following oil-in-place, recovery factor revisions - In new fields oil-in-place now much better
defined by early 3-D seismic, improved down-hole
logging in initial wells - With modern technology initially expected
recovery factor already close to technical limit
set by reservoir physics little potential for
increase
32Impact of Deepwater
- Three production phases likely
- First already underway
- Second ultradeep water, beyond 3000 m
- Third Mexico
- Production expected to peak around 2010 at about
2.5 million b/d, with sharp decline thereafter
33Deepwater Production Profile
34Overall US Production
35Growing Imports
With conservative assumption of flat demand
36Growing US Dependence on Imports
- 1971 peak for US Lower 48 production
- Alaskas production peaked in 1989, current
fields declines cannot be significantly reduced - Even optimistic ANWR development will have
limited impact on US domestic supply - Deepwater production will peak about 2010 (even
if rates doubled impact on supply deficit is
small) - Hence, imports are bound to rise unless demand
can be cut dramatically
37Cost of imports
With conservative assumption of constant 30/stb
38Conclusions
- The US has been thoroughly explored, new large
fields are unlikely - It has state-of-the-art technology and is using
it to maximize recovery efficiency, reserves
growth in existing fields will be insignificant - Domestic production is inexorably declining
imports are set to rise, even with flat demand - Import costs will soon become insupportable for a
country already heavily in debt - Demand for nonUS oil will increase to the point
where all needs cannot be met - There has to be a solution other than WAR