Jun 29

 

ParisTech Review, an online English language magazine, has published the following addition to the French debate on shale gas extraction:

Thoughts on Unconventional Gas Development

“Are we entering a golden age of gas?” The question was posed in the latest IEA report and if the experts are to be believed the response is firmly positive. They have made predictions of a bright future based largely on the emergence of unconventional natural gas. The United States has witnessed a gold rush more commonly associated with the nation’s frontier past, one that is raising some serious concerns for the environment.

In the recently published report, the International Energy Agency (IEA) presented a scenario under which the global use of natural gas could rise 50% by 2035, at which point it would represent one quarter of global energy demand. The resource hungry emerging economies will play a significant role with demand in China expected to reach parity with the entire European Union by 2035 and India’s current demand multiplied four-fold.

What logic underpins these spectacular claims? Sheltered from the general opprobrium leveled at the oil and nuclear industries in the wake of the blowout at Deepwater Horizon and the disaster at Fukushima, natural gas has emerged as the energy sector’s unlikely poster child. Cleaner and more flexible than other hydrocarbons natural gas possesses a number of advantages that other technologies are finding hard to match.

Global natural gas resources are vast and widely distributed. In recent estimates the IEA has predicted supplies sufficient for the next 250 years at current levels of production. Across five continents the potential is there and in a statement made by Nobuo Tanaka, Executive Director at the IEA during the presentation of the aforementioned report he indicated that recent developments have shifted more attention to the increased role natural gas could play in the global energy mix. Indeed, he stated the potential for, “the global gas market to become more diversified, and therefore improve energy security.”

Unconventional gas, a key role in the expansion

Only a few years ago it was rare to hear such optimistic claims and it has been the rise of unconventional gas that has completely reshaped the playing field. Reserves have been estimated by the IEA to be at least as widespread as the conventional natural gas that currently accounts for 85% of world production. One of the primary sources is shale gas named for the non-porous rock in which it is found. Another is the so-called “tight gas” produced from reservoirs with low permeability, under extremely high pressure, and grouped in compact pockets throughout rock deposits. Less promising sources are coal bed gas found in seams underground or methane hydrates, buried in the sediment of the world’s oceans.

The existence of these resources buried just beneath the earth’s surface has been known for years but it is only recently that advances in exploration techniques intersected with rising energy prices to force them from the shadows. “The petroleum industry has known about unconventional gas for years but because of the available technology and the market conditions was unable to exploit the resource,” notes Jean-Michel Gauthier, Chair in Energy and Finance at HEC and Senior Partner in charge of Energy and Resources at Deloitte. “In the trade, some were heard to say [the market] would arrive ‘post-nuclear’ …”

Thinking underwent a radical shift over the course of the last decade and “suddenly, we began to witness significant levels of unconventional gas and were made aware of the vast potential represented by structures such as the Barnett Shales in Texas,” explains Gauthier. “Forecasters have completely changed their tune and are now making predictions that unconventional gas will represent at least 45% of production within the next few years.”

Shale gas, rising star

The exploitation of shale gas ignited a genuine revolution in the United States. In a country that only recently witnessed massive investment in terminal infrastructure to receive imports of liquefied natural gas the Americans now find themselves sitting on enormous reserves. Economist Jean-Marie Chevalier of the Centre of Geopolitics of Energy and Raw Materials (CGEMP) at University Paris-Dauphine notes, “The United States was viewed as a massive importer and now finds itself on the verge of becoming an exporter. Gas prices have been cut in half.”

With doubts over the potential of these new resources, large oil multinationals played a negligible role in the initial development of the sector. “Unconventional gas has arrived by way of small American firms,” admits Gauthier. He mentions that the North American petroleum industry presents a stark contrast to the European market and is populated by a multitude of small independent operators, particularly in Canada. “They are in many ways the ‘cowboys’ of the exploration, of which they are the masters, putting new techniques to the test.”

As possibilities have become clearer, there has been a rush of activity as other actors attempt to catch up. “Over the last two or three years shale gas has become a major component in the strategy of large multinationals,” confirms Gauthier. “The recent wave of mergers and acquisitions, the large transactions on the Oil & Gas market, are for the most part related to unconventional gas. Look at ExxonMobil on XTO or Total on Synenco and UTS Energy. Large groups are either signing joint ventures with small operators or buying them. Most of the current investment in unconventional gas is coming from large multinationals.”

At the moment, the United States is the only country to have made significant strides in the development of the new resources but other countries with promising conditions are making up ground. In Asia, China is in the process of approving a first wave of permits for exploration, and Indonesia has plans to do the same by 2012. In Europe, Poland is leading the way due to its promising geological characteristics and has already granted 86 permits.

And yet shale gas has seen its image somewhat soiled in recent months by a foul smelling odor that colors otherwise enviable qualities. The reason: a whiff of danger surrounding the practice of hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking”, a key technology at the heart of the entire process of exploration and exploitation.

The controversy surrounding hydraulic fracturing

Conventional natural gas deposits are found in pockets of porous and permeable rock and can be extracted through a simple vertical well. Shale gas, like tight gas, requires a different approach as gas containing cavities are scattered throughout the rock and are not interconnected.

“If you just dig a hole you won’t get anything,” states Hedi Sellami, Director of Research in the Geosciences Department at Mines ParisTech and a specialist in underground mining techniques. Sizable quantities of trapped gas must be released through drains that are drilled horizontally to form pathways over which the gas can flow into the well. Yet this is only part of the picture, in order to really ‘suck up’ the natural gas hydraulic fracturing needs to be used. Fluids are pumped into the shale under high pressure to create fissures. “Cracks need to be created and the fractures must remain open,” specifies Sellami. “The composition of the material injected, the ‘propellant’, plays a key role, relying on mixtures composed largely of water and sand.” These techniques are what make the whole process possible.

Hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling have been deployed on a much smaller scale in the exploration and production of conventional gas deposits, primarily as a means to “push” wells nearing the end of their productive life. For use exploiting shale gas “the difference in relation to conventional gas is that a much larger number of wells are required.” This is done to multiply points of contact with the reservoir, explains Jean-Louis Durville, a member of the French corps of engineers responsible for bridges, water resources, and forests, and co-author of a report ordered by the French ecology ministry on the subject.  France could indeed possess significant reserves and to draw inspiration might want to cast a glance east. In Poland, “wells have sprung up very two, three, or four kilometers.”

Recently, the repeated process of well digging and hydraulic fracturing has been accused of causing significant and unpredictable consequences to the subterranean world, particularly in respect to underground aquifers. Criticism was heard from specialist corners as early as the mid-2000s but the rapid diffusion of the documentary Gasland , release in 2010, served as the fuse for the firestorm that followed. The film depicts areas where the industry has already matured and where residents are crying out about the rapid degradation of their health following the implantation wells. A number of the subjects of the film possess carefully guarded samples of brownish water as evidence of their claims. In one spectacular scene a homeowner demonstrates his ability to ignite the water that flows from the household tap and the image is emblematic of the film’s overall tone.

The film received the Special Jury Prize in the documentary category at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival and created a media sensation over the way energy concerns, in their heady rush to exploit the new resource, neglected the implementation of sufficient environmental safeguards.

A poor understanding of environmental consequences

American activists have raised an outcry over a number of incidents but have yet to provide any definitive evidence for their claims. Under the Bush administration, the American authorities initially made an assessment that the environmental consequences of hydraulic fracturing would have a negligible impact on groundwater supplies. A loophole in the 2005 Energy Bill exempts drillers from Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) guidelines such as the Safe Drinking Water Act. The agency has since reconsidered its position and was directed to launch a far reaching investigation in 2010 to determine if there are any shortcomings in the current policy.

In the meantime, public wariness in the face of the new technology has grown more animated, particularly in France where an initial offering of exploration licenses had only just been approved. The government has since ordered a moratorium on all permits for exploration until further review.

Some observers have expressed regrets over the level of public outrage and its arrival before the extent of reserves has even been determined. Jean-Marie Chevalier reflects this disappointment and has orchestrated a debate on the subject for the newspaper Le Monde. “I believe we should first make an estimate of the potential,” he explains. “As an economist, I’m very sensitive to the fact that right under our feet there could be a cheap and abundant source of gas, as well as opportunities for job creation.”

“In the United States the lack of any real controls along with the rapid pace of [well digging] has led to incidents that are clearly linked to gas exploration,” Durville states. “And yet, it could also be said that in relation to the level of activity the number of incidents has in fact been negligible.” The specialist advised a cautious approach until the release of results from the American study but would also like to underline that, “the causes are not always linked to hydraulic fracturing and can often be traced to problems cementing the well.”

An opinion that is shared by Hedi Sellami, who emphasizes the depth at which hydraulic fracturing takes place: “in the well architecture [for shale gas extraction], a vertical hole is drilled as with any other type of well, and this is what passes through any superficial aquifers. Once a depth of about two kilometers is reached a fork is created, a horizontal well […], then fracturing. Fractures commonly extend some ten meters, sometimes more. It’s difficult to imagine how reserves buried so deeply underground could have an impact on superficial aquifers. On the other hand, problems with cement and well casings have been known to arise in the vertical shaft, and gas can escape.” This problem, while it remains rare, becomes more probable when thousands of wells are being installed as has been the case in the United States.

Other dangers exist in addition to the problems with fissures. Hydraulic fracturing requires incredible amounts of water and chemicals to be blasted into the rock in order to optimize the process. For all wells the risk “that weighs most heavily is for contamination of ground water supplies through poorly sealed wells or accidents at the surface,” explains Jean-Louis Durville. “The number of big rigs required to service a well, for example, is staggering. We could easily imagine a tanker carrying dangerous chemicals overturning or pipe leakage during routine transfers.”

Continuing research within a structured regulatory framework

Today, with a lack of any competing technology to hydraulic fracturing for the exploitation of shale gas resources, natural gas companies have been compelled to develop their capability for so-called “clean exploration”. “In the face of increasing environmental and media pressure, companies have made the decision to invest in R&D as a way to improve their practices ,though given the stakes involved many have remained rather quiet on the subject,” explains Jean-Louis Durville. A number of possibilities exist, particularly through restricting the number of chemicals involved or reducing water dependence through recycling programs.

A more extensive investigation into the mechanism of fracturing could lead to greater control of the technology, and could be achieved through techniques like seismic monitoring. “Through an analysis of acoustic emissions during fracturing we arrive at a more nuanced understanding of where the fissures are located,” Hedi Slimani explains. “The technology is advancing rapidly and promises a range of improvements, allowing treatments to be targeted accurately and ensuring they affect only the desired zones.”

In the opinion of Jean-Louis Durville, the American experience has clearly demonstrated the need for a robust regulatory framework. He continues, “if regulation is weak, we shouldn’t be surprised if problems arise.”

In the report he authored along with three other specialists, Durville has suggested a research phase based on strictly regulated exploratory work and recommends “waiting for results from this initial research phase, before allowing any further use of the most controversial technique, hydraulic fracturing, restricting its use solely to what is necessary for scientific purposes.”

Source: ParisTech Review

 

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Jun 29

 

The Energy Information Administration has issued a rare statement in response to a New York Times piece earlier this week on shale gas and its long-term viability as an energy source.  Not only that, the EIA has been joined by many industry heads who point to the fact the Times article does not attribute quotes or anonymous emails to any reliable sources and the research they quoted, flies in the face of the long-term research and exploration by the companies involved in horizontal drilling.

CNN’s Money division details the latest in the – now very public – debate:

NEW YORK (CNNMoney)  – Big energy company executives and government researchers are firing back at a recent New York Times story suggesting the recent boom in natural gas production from shale rock is unsustainable and perhaps fraudulent.

“You really have to wonder why the New York Times is campaigning against cleaner-burning, domestically produced natural gas,” ExxonMobil Vice President Ken Cohen wrote in a blogpost Monday. “If the writer had bothered to call us, we would have told him that ExxonMobil’s investment approach is disciplined and based on a long-term view of global market conditions.”

Exxon through its $41 billion purchase of XTO Energy last year, is now North America’s largest shale gas producer.

A spokeswoman for the Times noted that Exxon was barely mentioned in the story, and that the article contained several quotes from others in the industry defending natural gas production rates.

The multi-part story, run in the Times Sunday and Monday, cited numerous, anonymous emails from government staffers, industry consultants and energy company executives questioning whether natural gas production from shale rock is really living up to the hype or is instead just another bubble.

The emails, which the Times posted online with the names redacted, say the wells may be running dry much faster than anticipated and could actually lose money.

The story suggests that the industry may be aware of this, and could be concealing it to boost their stock price. Emails quoted in the piece refer to the shale gas companies as “Ponzi schemes” and say they are having an “Enron moment.”

The story further accuses the government’s Energy Information Administration of relying too heavily on industry data to make its projections. Many of the emails the paper cites are from EIA staffers.

Monday night EIA struck back, issuing a rare statement, saying the agency’s views on shale gas were “different in significant respects from those outlined in the June 27 article.”

EIA posted the letter it sent to the Times in response to questions from the paper online, noting that shale gas production has risen from 4% of all U.S. gas production to 23% in just 5 years.

“It is clear the data shows that shale gas has become a significant source of domestic natural gas supply,” Michael Schaal, EIA’s director of petroleum, natural gas and biofuels analysis, wrote in the letter.

A letter from the chief executive of Chesapeake Energy, another big shale gas company, took a similar tone.

“It is absurd to conclude that shale gas wells are underperforming while America is awash in natural gas,” said CEO Aubrey McClendon. “The Times story was obviously motivated by an anti-natural gas agenda.”

The letter goes on to say that the company’s production numbers and estimates are verified by various third-party organizations, and any recent production declines are more the result of low natural gas prices.

Shale gas production has taken off in the last few years as new technology has allowed the industry to unlock vast quantities of the domestic fuel. Some say the country now has 100 years worth of natural gas.

When used to generate electricity, natural gas burns about twice as cleanly as coal.

The boom has caused a surge in investment, both in the towns where it’s located and in the stock price of the companies that produce it.

But it’s not without controversy. To produce the gas, the shale rock needs to be cracked by a process called hydraulic fracturing. Known as “fracking” for short, it involves injecting vast amounts of water, sand and some chemicals deep into the ground.

There have been spills of this fracking fluid before it’s injected into wells which have contaminated local streams. There are also concerns about the disposal of the fluid and other tainted water that comes up with the gas, as well as fears that the natural gas itself may be seeping into drinking water wells as a result of the drilling process.

Many are calling for tighter regulations on the industry, and the Environmental Protection Agency is studying the procedure.

 

Source:  CNN Money

 

 

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Apr 28

Poland has 5.29 trillion cubic meters of recoverable shale gas, the largest reserves in Europe, according to the United States Energy Information Administration (EIA).

The estimate is one of the most optimistic forecasts so far. Previously, the Wood Mackenzie company estimated Polish shale gas resources at 1.4 trillion cubic meters and Advanced Resources International at 3 trillion cubic meters.

Polish experts have so far largely stopped short of predicting a shale gas bonanza, but agree the gas is there. They add that even if only 10 percent of the amount specified in the most cautious estimates can be extracted, that would mark a breakthrough for the Polish energy market.

The Energy Information Administration lists Poland among countries where shale gas production will be of key importance to the national energy mix. It adds that Poland has extra motivation to invest in shale gas because it is dependent on natural gas imports and has a well-developed network of gas pipelines, which will facilitate deliveries of natural gas to recipients.

Poland was in 10th place on a EIA list of 32 countries with the world’s largest shale gas resources. Poland’s current demand for natural gas is 14 billion cubic meters a year.

According to the Polskie Górnictwo Naftowe i Gazownictwo (PGNiG) oil and gas extraction corporation, shale gas production could begin in Poland in three years. The company has conducted successful test drills near Wejherowo in Pomerania province and is examining samples obtained in the test.

Foreign companies which have been searching for shale gas in Poland are a little more cautious in their predictions and believe that production on a larger scale will not be possible until five years from now.

Holders of licenses to extract shale gas in Poland include American corporations Chevron and ExxonMobil. The BNK Petroleum and Lane Energy companies have carried out their first drills.

The United States tops the world statistics in terms of shale gas production. According to the Energy Information Administration study, last year the United States produced 137 billion cubic meters of shale gas, 50 percent up on 2009. The Energy Information Administration forecasts that by 2035, shale gas will account for almost 50 percent of annual natural gas production in the United States. Last year, it accounted for 23 percent.

Source: The Warsaw Voice

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Feb 08

Oil prices may have stormed back into the headlines by crossing the ominous $100 a barrel threshold in recent weeks. But while this has happening the world’s largest oil and gas companies have been banging the drum for an altogether less newsworthy fuel–natural gas.

ExxonMobil, Royal Dutch Shell and now BG Group have been arguing that significant changes are afoot in the unglamorous world of natural gas that could have a big impact on patterns of energy consumption, carbon dioxide emissions and the balance of power in volatile energy markets.

The big driver of this shift is supply. Energy companies have done a remarkable job in recent years of finding vast quantities of natural gas, possibly adding more than a hundred years of supply of the fuel.

A boom in production of natural gas trapped in shale rock has already transformed the fortunes of the U.S. Just a few years ago, North America was grimly looking at the prospect of growing dependence on foreign gas. Now it’s sitting on so much of the stuff that people are seriously discussing export projects.

In other parts of the world, notably Australia and southeast Africa, new projects are starting and new discoveries being made that will be feeding growing Asian markets by the middle of this decade.

There is disagreement over the impact this will have. The International Energy Agency, which represents the interests of major energy consumers, says there will be a global gas glut lasting until 2020, leading to low prices for much of the decade.

But (not surprisingly) Shell, ExxonMobil and BG Group, all big producers of natural gas, disagree. Rather than swamping the market, they say the extra supply will stimulate greater use of gas either because it is cheaper, more secure or less carbon intensive than other energy sources.

Shell is the biggest promoter of the green credentials of natural gas.

“The quickest and cheapest way to cut CO2 emissions from the global power sector is to grow the presence of natural gas,” said Shell’s exploration chief Malcolm Brinded in a speech late last year. This is because natural gas produces less than half the emissions of coal for the electricity generated.

Brinded added: “Natural gas capacity is also considerably faster and cheaper to install than other new build sources of electricity.”

Shell has argued that the European Union could save half a trillion Euros while still meeting its ambitious target to cut CO2 emissions by 80% by 2050, if only it switched from promoting renewables and nuclear and instead focused on swapping coal for gas.

The sudden abundance of natural gas has also caused a substantial shift in its reputation as a reliable fuel source. Just a few years ago, many governments perceived natural gas as the weapon Russia would use to take over the world. The boom in gas production in a stable, friendly country like the U.S., and the hope it could be repeated elsewhere, has lessened those fears.

In its 2030 energy forecast last month, ExxonMobil predicted a shift toward natural gas by businesses and governments precisely because it is so reliable and affordable.

BG Group, in its long-term strategy update Tuesday, was particularly bullish, predicting gas demand will grow 3% a year between now and 2020.

“The increase in demand by 2020 will be equivalent to more or less the entire current North American gas market,” said BG Chief Executive Frank Chapman. Once you take into account the need to offset the natural decline in production from existing resources, more than two North America’s worth of new gas supply will be needed to meet this demand, he said.

A big part of this growth in natural gas demand could come at the expense of oil, Chapman said. As emerging economies develop, they will stop using expensive, dirty oil to fuel their homes and businesses and substitute it for cheaper natural gas. BG Group estimates that between 2010 and 2020, natural gas consumption could expand by up to 260 billion cubic meters a year at the expense of oil.

A switch of this magnitude could shave 4.4 million barrels a day off projected oil demand growth over the next ten years. To put this into perspective, BP recently estimated that total global liquids demand–oil, biofuels, natural gas liquids–will grow by 16.5 million barrels over the next 20 years. So a shift of this magnitude would surely affect the price of oil.

Unsurprisingly, Chapman saw all this as an opportunity rather than a problem. He reckons $2 trillion of new investment will be needed over the next nine years to meet these forecasts. Who wouldn’t want a piece of that action?

Source: Wall Street Journal

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Feb 16

Oil giants and explorers are jumping into the race to search for shale gas potential in Europe and commit to what analysts at Bloomberg are calling a “buoyant market.”

JPMorgan Chase & Co reported this week that Exxon Mobil has secured land in Europe, acquiring shale plays in Germany and Hungary, and has also applied for permits in Poland. Other companies like ConocoPhillips and Chevron are also exploring options in Poland, while Royal Dutch Shell has garnered contracts in Sweden. Other companies such as Vancouver-based Realm Energy have also made recent announcements of their intent to explore Europe’s shale potential (read “Realm Energy Makes Aggressive Play for European Shale Gas Deposits”).

Mark Greenwood, a Sydney-based analyst with JPMorgan, says the success of the US shale plays is driving companies overseas.

“A land-grab has occurred in Europe over the last two years with majors such as Exxon, Conoco, Chevron and Statoil ASA all participating, not willing to miss out as they did in the U.S.,” he says.

The International Energy Agency said in November the world may have an “acute glut” of gas in the next few years because production of so-called unconventional fuel, which includes shale gas, is set to rise 71 percent between 2007 and 2030.

Over the past three years, the development of technology to exploit shale gas and the boom in US shale success has led to major mergers and acquisitions between oil and gas companies, says Bloomberg.

A report by Wood Mackenzie Consultants Ltd. in the UK said overseas investment by national oil companies doubled from 2008 levels to $26 billion and accounted for 44 percent of spending outside North America.

Another analysis of shale gas done by Allen Brooks of Parks, Paton, Hoepfl & Brown anticipates that this unconventional gas is “likely to present a challenge for the market in 2010.”

SOURCES:
Bloomberg: “Exxon, Chevron ‘Land Grab’ for Europe Shale Gas, JPMorgan says”
Business Week: “Mergers in Oil, Gas Seen ‘Buoyant’ in 2010 by Wood Mackenzie”
Gerson Lehrman Group: “Excellent Analysis of Gas Shales Capabilities; Benefits and Problems for 2010”

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Feb 13

A recent article for PriceOfOil.org suggests current developments in both the oil and natural gas sectors could be heralding the “final chapters of the oil age.”

On the heels of a world economic crisis, the shift from oil to other energy sources is proving to be an entrenched reality across the globe.

Coupled with announcements by oil giants such as BP and industry analysts such as the International Energy Agency that the global demand for oil is on the verge of peaking, other energy resources – like shale gas – are taking over.

A major reason people are abandoning oil is its price. The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) has warned that the slow pace of global economic recovery in 2010 would lead to a subdued improvement in oil demand this year.

Though the global economy suffered over the last year, oil prices remained stagnant while people were forced to cut costs wherever possible, in some cases causing them to look elsewhere for energy sources.
The allure of “cleaner” gas is also drawing people to gasses like shale because it does not emit as much pollutants into the air when consumed nor does it use as much energy, water and resources to extract.

The shift is causing major problems for the oil industry.

This week French oil giant Total said more closures to refineries around the world due to “fuel product overcapacity,” and last month Russian gas mogul Gazprom announced plans to re-evaluate a large Arctic gas extraction project because of the boom in shale gas (read Russian Gas Giant Feeling The Effects of Shale Gas).

SOURCES:
PriceOfOil.org: “Is an oil-less recovery on its way?”
PriceOfOil.org: “Peak Demand Will Happen Before Peak Supply”
Reuters: “An oil-less recovery dims the future for oil”

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Feb 10

The last few months may have been disheartening to the environmental movement — a weak outcome from Copenhagen, broader attention to “climategate” and then the addition of “Himalayagate.

But all this clamor may have some forgetting the better environmental story of late, notes Michael Economides at Energy (Geo)-Politics:

” This is the triumphant second coming of the supply of clean, far less polluting and far lower-emitting natural gas.

The International Energy Agency in Paris last November released its world outlook report http://www.worldenergyoutlook.org/. While some found controversy in the oil forecasts, it was the gas that shocked even the experts: “The long-term global recoverable gas resource base is estimated at more than 850 tcm [trillion cubic meters].” That translates to just over 30,000 trillion cubic feet (Tcf) of gas. That’s more than double the 2008 IEA estimate of 400 tcm.

The difference comes from unconventional gas headed by shale gas, arguably the shiniest recent success in the petroleum industry. Deploying technology that incorporates the latest in drilling and steering long horizontal wells and the spacing and placing of many large hydraulic fracturing treatments, made a mockery of peak gas theories. This is even more dramatic than what the massive offshore oil discoveries in Brazil and the forecasts of Iraqi oil production reaching 11 million barrels per day in ten years have dealt on peak oil alarmism. ”

Source: NewsWatch Energy

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Jan 20

The recent capitalization on the exploration of shale gas in North America has transformed the global gas-market outlook, says the International Energy Agency.

The rapid development and extraction of the unconventional gas in places like Haynesville and Marcellus in the Unites States have kick-started the ambition by some companies to look to Europe for vast, unexplored shale plays.

“Unconventional gas is unquestionably a game-changer in North America with potentially significant implications for the rest of the world,” said Nobuo Tanaka, Executive Director of the International Energy Agency in a November press release.

The International Energy Agency estimates that unconventional gas resources in Europe, including coal-bed methane, could amount to 35 trillion cubic meters, six times higher than the continent’s conventional gas resources.

Some oil companies have already begun capitalizing on Europe’s un-tapped shale plays. Royal Dutch Shell PLC, for example, is expected to finish drilling its first three wells by the end of March hoping to extract what one spokesman called “enough gas to cover Sweden’s gas needs for at least 10 years.”

Other companies, such as Vancouver-based Realm Energy International, have also announced the will aggressively continue the evaluation and the acquisition of high potential shale deposits throughout Europe (read: Realm Energy, Halliburton Driving Shale Play Development Outside North America).

The Oil & Gas Journal reports that countries currently being evaluated by international oil and gas companies include France, Germany, Austria, Poland, Hungary and the UK.

SOURCES:
International Energy Agency: Press Releases
Oil and Gas India: “Shell begins drilling for shale gas in Sweden”
Oil & Gas Journal

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