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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Bulletin
Abstract
DOI: 10.1306/0828171607817072
Paleozoic
shale
gas
resources in the Sichuan Basin, China
shale
gas
resources in the Sichuan Basin, China
Christopher J. Potter1
1US Geological Survey, c/o Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Rutgers University, 610 Taylor Road, Piscataway, New Jersey 08854; [email protected]
ABSTRACT
The Sichuan Basin, China, is commonly considered to contain the world’s most abundant
shale
gas
resources. Although its Paleozoic marine shales share many basic characteristics with successful United States
gas
shales, numerous geologic uncertainties exist, and Sichuan Basin
shale
gas
production is nascent.
Gas
retention was likely compromised by the age of the
shale
reservoirs, multiple uplifts and orogenies, and migration pathways along unconformities. High thermal maturities raise questions about
gas
storage potential in lower Paleozoic shales. Given these uncertainties, a new look at Sichuan Basin
shale
gas
resources is advantageous. As part of a systematic effort to quantitatively assess continuous oil and
gas
resources in priority basins worldwide, the US Geological Survey (USGS) completed an assessment of Paleozoic
shale
gas
in the Sichuan Basin in 2015. Three organic-rich marine Paleozoic
shale
intervals meet the USGS geologic criteria for quantitative assessment of
shale
gas
resources: the lower Cambrian Qiongzhusi Formation, the uppermost Ordovician Wufeng through lowermost Silurian Longmaxi Formations (currently producing
shale
gas
), and the upper Permian Longtan and Dalong Formations. This study defined geologically based assessment units and calculated probabilistic distributions of technically recoverable
shale
gas
resources using the USGS well productivity–based method. For six assessment units evaluated in 2015, the USGS estimated a mean value of 23.9 tcf (677 billion cubic meters) of undiscovered, technically recoverable
shale
gas
. This result is considerably lower than volumes calculated in previous
shale
gas
assessments of the Sichuan Basin, highlighting a need for caution in this geologically challenging setting.
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