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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: Exploration and Production
Opportunities in the Soviet Union
By
The Soviet Union is number one in both oil and gas production with about 12 million bbl of oil per day and more than 75 billion cu ft of gas per day. In proved reserves, it ranks sixth for oil and first for gas. Although published numbers for undiscovered reserves are not available, the USSR no doubt ranks first for both oil and gas. Of the 2,800 oil and gas fields in the Soviet Union, 182 are classified as giants (reserves of 100 million bbl or 600 BCF or greater). These facts, together with the present situation in the Middle East and the declining production and reserve base in the U.S., show why we need help from the Soviet Union. But why do the Soviets need our help?
Oil production in the Soviet Union has declined the last
two years. This hurts exports to the West and reduces the
availability of hard currency - at a time when internal
economic
problems
have escalated dramatically. To try to
alleviate some of the economic
problems
, capital has been
diverted from the oil and gas industry to consumer goods,
food and housing. Thus an already bad situation in regard to
oil and gas has become worse. Equipment is in short supply,
and much of it is old and in poor repair. Exploration and
production technology lags behind that of the West. The
funds to correct these
problems
and, ultimately, to increase
production, must come from outside sources. Therefore,
the Soviet Union is willing to work with non-Soviet companies.
The environment is another concern. The Soviets,
along with the rest of the world, have become much more
aware of the environment and are demanding that
problems
caused by oil and gas development be corrected or prevented.
Moreover, the Soviet Union has tremendous oil and
gas resources in hostile environments similar to our North
Slope. Our expertise is needed.
The major oil-producing province in the Soviet Union is the West Siberian basin, which provides more than 60% of the USSR's oil production of 12 million bbl per day. This passive rift basin has a thick sedimentary sequence (15,000 feet or greater in places). The Volga-Urals region, a tensed foreland basin, produces 2.5 million bbl of oil per day. The Peri-Caspian is a modified rift basin which includes the supergiant Tengiz field. Its in-place reserves have been estimated at 25 billion bbl (6-7 billion bbl recoverable). Other oil and gas fields are in the Barents-Kara Sea area, Timan- Pechora and the Sakhalin basin. The Baku area, along the Caspian Sea, has produced oil since 1890. East Siberia is as yet a poorly known area in regard to hydrocarbon potential.
Joint ventures with the Soviet Union are not easy, and
were not even possible until very recently. The first hurdle is
finding the appropriate agency and/or person with the legal
authority to make a deal. The government organization in
the Soviet Union and the fifteen Soviet republics assures a
lot of work along the way toward finalization of a joint
venture. The economic and political changes now taking
place, including the republics' demands for more control,
complicate an already complex situation. Despite these
hurdles, 1,300 joint ventures had been registered with the
Ministry of Finance as of February 1990, but probably a
third or less are operative. At this writing, only a couple of oil
and gas joint ventures are operative, and they involve well
stimulation and
drilling
. However, several announced oil
and gas joint-venture efforts are expected to progress to the
operation stage.
The Soviets need our equipment, technology and
expertise. We need their oil. There are tremendous
problems
to overcome, but the huge opportunities make the
risks worth taking.
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