As the United States becomes a net oil exporter for the first time in 75
years,
the US Department of the Interior has announced the discovery of
the largest continuous oil and gas field ever found. Situated in the
Wolfcamp Shale and overlying Bone Spring Formation in Texas and the
Permian Basin in New Mexico, the new resource is estimated to contain
46.3 billion barrels of oil, 281 trillion cu ft of natural gas, and 20
billion barrels of natural gas liquids worth trillions of dollars.
One
of the problems when it comes to understanding the oil and gas industry
is that the terminology can be misleading. For example, when someone
asks how much oil or gas there is, the answer is almost invariably that
we have enough to last 20 years. That seems straightforward enough and
argues for the phasing out of increasingly scarce fossil fuels, but the
curious thing is that 20 years ago we had 20 years worth of oil and gas,
and the same was true 20 years before that, and will probably be true
in 20 years time.
This
is because what that 20-year figure deals with are reserves or, rather
proven reserves. These are oil and gas fields that have been found with
90 percent certainty and can be recovered given the economic,
technological, and political conditions of today. Because oil and gas
prospecting is incredibly expensive, the oil companies like to find
enough reserves to last a generation and call it good.
But
it isn't as simple as that. Behind the proven reserves are the probable
reserves, which are 50 percent certain, and the possible reserves,
which are 10 percent certain. And there tend to be a lot more of these
than the proven reserves.
Then
there are the resources, which is what the Department of the Interior
is talking about. Resources are large areas where oil and gas are known
to be, but it hasn't been determined if its economically practical to
recover them. Yet.
The
"yet" is the big variable here because as new surveying, drilling, and
recovery technologies like fracking are developed, resources can very
rapidly shift up the ladder to proven reserves in the same way that
wells that were once "dry" when they were three-quarters full are now
productive again.
This
is effectively how the new giant oil and gas field was found. According
to the Department of the Interior, the US Geological Survey (USGS) had
already made assessments of the Permian Basin province, though the
Wolfcamp shale and Bone Spring Formation weren't originally included.
The area is already highly productive in oil and gas, but it was only
with the introduction of new technology and studying their effects on
output that the size and wealth of the resource could be assessed. How
economical it will be to recover the oil and gas there has yet to be
determined.
"In
the 1980s, during my time in the petroleum industry, the Permian and
similar mature basins were not considered viable for producing large new
recoverable resources," says Dr Jim Reilly, USGS Director. "Today,
thanks to advances in technology, the Permian Basin continues to impress
in terms of resource potential. The results of this most recent
assessment and that of the Wolfcamp Formation in the Midland Basin in
2016 are our largest continuous oil and gas assessments ever released.
Knowing where these resources are located and how much exists is crucial
to ensuring both our energy independence and energy dominance."
Of
course, advances in technology have also opened up alternative energy
pathways based on renewable energy. Even if the new oil and gas
resources prove reachable, the case for economic viability could weaken
as the cost of renewables continues to drop – that's without even
factoring in the predicted economic and environmental concerns around climate change.
Source: US Department of the Interior
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