Adapting PRMS To Unconventional Resources - Presentation
Adapting PRMS To Unconventional Resources - Presentation
Adapting PRMS To Unconventional Resources - Presentation
A DISCUSSION
PROVED RESERVES The quantities of crude oil, natural gas and natural gas liquids which geological and engineering data demonstrate with reasonable certainty to be recoverable in the future from known oil and gas reservoirs under existing economic and operating conditions. They represent strictly technical judgments, and are not knowingly influenced by attitudes of conservatism or optimism.
COMMERCIALITY RESERVES CATEGORIZATION IS BASED ON UNCERTAINTY OF RECOVERY PRICES AND COSTS BASED ON FORECAST CONDITIONS RECOGNITION OF UNCONVENTIONAL RESOURCES AND RESERVES EXPANDED SECTION ON ANALOGS GUIDANCE ON BOOKING (REFERENCE) POINT
Provided Guidelines
For these petroleum accumulations that are not significantly affected by hydrodynamic influences, reliance on continuous water contacts and pressure gradient analysis to interpret the extent of recoverable petroleum may not be possible. Thus, there typically is a need for increased sampling density to define uncertainty of in-place volumes, variations in quality of reservoir and hydrocarbons, and their detailed spatial distribution to support detailed design of specialized mining or in-situ extraction programs.
Provided Guidelines
It is intended that the resources definitions, together with the classification system, will be appropriate for all types of petroleum accumulations regardless of their in-place characteristics, extraction method applied, or degree of processing required
Provided Guidelines
Similar to improved recovery projects applied to conventional reservoirs, successful pilots or operating projects in the subject reservoir or successful projects in analogous reservoirs may be required to establish a distribution of recovery efficiencies for nonconventional accumulations. Such pilot projects may evaluate both extraction efficiency and the efficiency of unconventional processing facilities to derive sales products prior to custody transfer.
The problem with an oil and gas estimate is that the only thing we know about it with certainty is that it is WRONG
And as is very evident, it is difficult to obtain a confident estimate upon the unconventional resources going by the current tools that we use.
Estimates of in-place unconventional oil and gas surpass the total amount of conventional oil, gas and coal combined present today on the planet. There are vast possibilities of newer arenas of energy development once we pass the barrier of underproductivity from unconventional resources.