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| Talks, Abstracts and Slides | ![]() |
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By Andrew C. Newson, Moose Oils Ltd. -- download talk (pdf file) |
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By Andrew C. Newson, Moose Oils Ltd. (The Leading Edge, January 2001) |
(Recipient of the 1999-2000 CSPG Link Award. This is award for the best technical paper given to the Canadian Association of Petroleum Geologists at one of the Society's Technical Luncheon meetings.) The Calgary exploration industry is faced with the major challenge of finding new gas reserves and developing them in a cost effective and sustainable manner to meet growing consumer demand. Natural gas consumption in North America is expected to climb from the current 25 Tcf a year to 30 Tcf a year by 2010. With the current gas reserves in North America at 250 Tcf*, the implication is that all the gas consumed after 2010 will have to be discovered and brought on production in the next 10 years. At present the reserve replacement is declining at 7% a year in Canada and 17% a year in North America. One of the focus areas for the exploration industry to find large gas reserves is the Foothills the gas prone area of the Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin dominated by overthrust tectonics. This describes a style of deformation where the rocks have been horizontally compressed or shortened into fold and fault dominated structures where low angle thrust faults are common. It is the predominant style in an area of 100,000 square miles in Western Canada that lies between the 49th parallel in the south and the Arctic Ocean in the north. It covers parts of Alberta, British Columbia, Yukon and the western Northwest Territories. The southern half of the Foothills has 40 Tcf of gas, of which 23 Tcf is marketable reserves. A total of 13 Tcf of gas have been produced from this area in the last 50 years. The Foothills provides the oil and gas exploration industry of Western Canada with a unique opportunity for several reasons. First, nowhere in the world is a complex tectonic domain with the potential for such large reserves so well documented in terms of geological, geophysical and engineering data. Second, the Foothills area lies adjacent to a very active area of conventional exploration and development. Third, the exploration industry in Western Canada is technically and financially sophisticated. Last, but by no means least, the southern half of the Foothills is already tied into the North American gas market. One of the challenges for exploration and development in the Foothills lies in the amount of data that needs to be processed and interpreted to explore for and develop the natural gas reserves of the area. In this talk we explore the past and present development of the Foothills in light of three key elements: structural style, stratigraphic framework and history of exploration. The resulting model will provide a useful tool with which to understand the present activity and the future potential of the Foothills. The Foothills Fields fall into five general categories. The first four play types are dominantly controlled by structure. The last play type is stratigraphic in nature:
Driven by $4.00 gas, there has been a paradigm shift in the Western Canadian gas industry over the last six months. There is now intense pressure to find quick ways to shorten the exploration cycles in the Foothills. While technology is helping to achieve this goal there is still a significant lead-time required to develop these projects. Without a good technical understanding of Foothills, the exploration industry in Western Canada is in danger of missing an opportunity to develop these reserves in a cost effective and sustainable way. * National Petroleum Council, North American Gas Study, February. 1999. Excludes Mexico and Alaska. (The reserve figures are raw reserves unless otherwise stated and are based on the AEUB, BC Ministry of Energy and Mines and NEB figures for 1997.) |
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