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Abstract

AAPG Bulletin, V. 86, No. 11 (November 2002), P. 1971-1992.

Copyright ©2002. The American Association of Petroleum Geologists. All rights reserved.

Energy resource potential of natural Previous HitgasNext Hit Previous HithydratesNext Hit

Timothy S. Collett1

1U.S. Geological Survey, Denver Federal Center, Box 25046, MS-939, Denver, Colorado, 80225; email: [email protected]

AUTHORS

Timothy S. Collett is a research geologist in the Geologic Division of the U.S. Geological Survey. He has been project chief of the North Slope of Alaska Previous HitGasNext Hit Hydrate Project since 1985. Before joining the U.S. Geological Survey in 1983, he was an instructor in the Petroleum Engineering Department at the University of Alaska. Collett holds a B.S. degree in geology from Michigan State University, an M.S. degree in geology from the University of Alaska, and a Ph.D. from the Colorado School of Mines.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This contribution was partially funded by the U.S. Department of Energy under Interagency Agreement No. DE-AI21-92MC29214.

ABSTRACT

The discovery of large Previous HitgasNext Hit hydrate accumulations in terrestrial per mafrost regions of the Arctic and beneath the sea along the outer continental margins of the world's oceans has heightened interest in Previous HitgasNext Hit Previous HithydratesNext Hit as a possible energy resource. However, significant to potentially insurmountable technical issues must be resolved be fore Previous HitgasNext Hit Previous HithydratesNext Hit can be considered a viable option for affordable supplies of natural Previous HitgasNext Hit.

The combined information from Arctic Previous HitgasNext Hit hydrate studies shows that, in permafrost regions, Previous HitgasNext Hit Previous HithydratesNext Hit may exist at subsurface depths ranging from about 130 to 2000 m. The presence of Previous HitgasNext Hit Previous HithydratesNext Hit in offshore continental margins has been inferred mainly from anomalous seismic reflectors, known as bottom-simulating reflectors, that have been mapped at depths below the sea floor ranging from about 100 to 1100 m. Current estimates of the amount of Previous HitgasNext Hit in the world's marine and permafrost Previous HitgasNext Hit hydrate accumulations are in rough accord at about 20,000 trillion m3.

Disagreements over fundamental issues such as the volume of Previous HitgasNext Hit stored within delineated Previous HitgasNext Hit hydrate accumulations and the concentration of Previous HitgasNext Hit Previous HithydratesNext Hit within hydrate-bearing strata have demonstrated that we know little about Previous HitgasNext Hit Previous HithydratesNext Hit. Recently, however, several countries, including Japan, India, and the United States, have launched ambitious national projects to further examine the resource potential of Previous HitgasNext Hit Previous HithydratesNext Hit. These projects may help answer key questions dealing with the properties of Previous HitgasNext Hit hydrate reservoirs, the design of production systems, and, most important, the costs and economics of Previous HitgasTop hydrate production.

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