Rocky Basins Assessment Due

Partial Results Set for Laramie Meeting

Partial results from a federal oil and gas reserve assessment that surveyed domestic unconventional gas reserves will be presented in September at AAPG's Rocky Mountain Section Meeting in Laramie, Wyo.

The U.S. Geologic Survey's new oil and gas assessment was begun in 2000 and is expected to be completed by 2006.

Results on the Piceance Basin will be presented by Chris Schenk, project chief of the USGS National Oil and Gas Assessment Survey, and staff geologist Deborah Higley will present results on the Denver Basin.

"With time, perceptions change about oil and gas and new resources come online so we periodically reassess the reserves," he said.

With this new assessment, the agency decided to conduct the survey slightly differently. "We prioritized the basins in the United States," he said.

Although the country has about 70 geologic provinces, it has usually surveyed the "all 45 that contain oil and gas in the past," he said.

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Partial results from a federal oil and gas reserve assessment that surveyed domestic unconventional gas reserves will be presented in September at AAPG's Rocky Mountain Section Meeting in Laramie, Wyo.

The U.S. Geologic Survey's new oil and gas assessment was begun in 2000 and is expected to be completed by 2006.

Results on the Piceance Basin will be presented by Chris Schenk, project chief of the USGS National Oil and Gas Assessment Survey, and staff geologist Deborah Higley will present results on the Denver Basin.

"With time, perceptions change about oil and gas and new resources come online so we periodically reassess the reserves," he said.

With this new assessment, the agency decided to conduct the survey slightly differently. "We prioritized the basins in the United States," he said.

Although the country has about 70 geologic provinces, it has usually surveyed the "all 45 that contain oil and gas in the past," he said.

But with this new assessment, the agency decided to evaluate only the 25 largest basins.

"The top 25 contain about 90 to 95 percent of the resources anyway, so we just focused on those this time," he said. "That's a major change for us."

Another change is that this survey focuses on unconventional resources, including basin-centered gas, tight gas, shale gas, coalbed methane and gas hydrate.

"We're focusing on the unconventional gas … that's where exploration in the U.S. is headed," he said. "As conventional resources decline, we're looking at the unconventional. There's certainly potential for gas there."

In the 1995 study — the most recent survey — the agency tried to look at unconventional resources but discovered it required a major effort, he said. Since then, the USGS developed a new methodology to assess these unconventional resources.

So far, assessments have been completed on about five basins around the country.

"We're taking a couple years for each one," Schenk commented. "Coming up this summer, we'll do the Greater Green River Basin in Wyoming, the San Juan Basin in New Mexico and Colorado, and the Powder River Basin in Wyoming and Montana."

For the Greater Green River Basin, about 10 people are working on the assessment over a two-year period, he said.

This study also focuses on more geologic analysis than has been done in the past.

"We're giving them more time to do any area, so a lot more geological framework will be published," he said.

After the Arab oil embargo, the USGS was given the task of assessing the country's oil and gas reserves periodically, and major assessments took place in 1975, 1981, 1989 and 1995.

The agency evaluates the onshore and state waters portion of oil and gas reserves.

"We only do onshore and statewide," he said. "It's for oil and gas and for all energy resources."

Meanwhile, the Minerals Management System, part of the U.S. Department of the Interior, has responsibility for assessing oil and gas reserves offshore.

"There is a strict division of duties there," Schenk said.

The results of the assessments always are made available to the public.

"It's our estimate of what's remaining to be discovered," Schenk said.

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