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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Special Volumes
Abstract
Province
Chapter 2
Exploration History of the Black Sea
Province
Jeremy Benton
Petroconsultants (U.K.) Ltd.
London, United Kingdom
ABSTRACT
Province
has an exploration history that dates back
more than a century. One of the oldest discoveries, Priozernoye, was made in 1886 on the
basis of seeps in the easternmost part of the Crimean Peninsula, within the Indolo-Kuban
foreland
basin
of the Caucasus
Province
. For many years, due to the aftermath of World War
I, exploratory drilling was intermittent. In 1939, the Supsa oil field was discovered in
the Rioni
Basin
of Georgia; the
prospect
had originally been drilled in 1886, but the flow
rates were noncommercial. More systematic exploration was undertaken by newly formed state
companies after World War II. The introduction of geophysical techniques led to the
identification of thick sedimentary sequences in areas such as the Moesian Platform,
previously considered of marginal prospectivity. A gas blowout in 1951 marked the
discovery of Tyulenovo, which was to prove to be Bulgaria's largest field. Its coastal
location and extension offshore first demonstrated the potential of the Black Sea. Further
encouragement was provided in the mid-1950s by the Kamchiya gas discovery and the opening
up of the Romanian sector of the Moesian Platform. The gas/condensate
play
of the Black
Sea-Crimea
Basin
was established in the 1960s, at the time offshore exploration began.
Surveying was first undertaken offshore Bulgaria (with Soviet assistance), and by the
early 1970s most countries were actively surveying the Black Sea. Drilling began offshore
in the 1970s when Westates drilled two dry new-field wildcats in the far west of Turkish
waters. The first offshore discovery was Golitsyna in 1975, on the Odessa Shelf, and when
brought onstream in 1983 it became the first producing gas field in the Black Sea.
Drilling off Romania began in 1976 (the same year that the Turkish state company TPAO made
a subcommercial gas discovery with Akcakoca 1) and led to the discovery of the Lebada Est.
in 1981; oil production started in 1987. The breakup of the Soviet Union and the
revolutions of Eastern Europe mark a new phase of exploration, with foreign companies
taking a leading role. As yet, no deepwater wildcats have been drilled, and the limited
exploration on the western Black Sea shelf has resulted in 14 discoveries (3 oil and 11
gas) and aggregate reserve additions estimated at 630 MMBOE.
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