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Methane Hydrate Fuel (merged)

Discussions of conventional and alternative energy production technologies.

Re: Japan cracks methane hydrates

Unread postby Buddy_J » Wed 24 Apr 2013, 19:00:59

ROCKMAN wrote: But I also suspect this is as much based on a desperate need as anticipated engineering success.


And from such desperate need is born a source of energy supplies which makes every barrel of oil every produced look lilliputian. And for fun unlocks the ability to melt every cubic meter of free ice on the planet as well.

Just flippin wonderful.

The cost/benefit you provided Rock related to 700 mcf/d is irrelevant. It is there, the size of these things border on the unimaginable (even in a country where the zeros contained in the TRILLIONS of dollars we waste are mind boggling), and humans being humans, once it is possible, we'll do it. That 700 mcf/d is 700,000 scf/d, you need 10,000 scf to make a barrel of synthetic crude, so we're talking about 70 bbl/day for someone demanding the liquid form of the energy. More than Drake started with, and from a larger resource base.

Just flippin wonderful.
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Re: Japan cracks methane hydrates

Unread postby ROCKMAN » Wed 24 Apr 2013, 22:20:23

Buddy – “…and humans being humans, once it is possible…”. And that’s the point that I perhaps didn’t make clear enough. There’s nothing in that report that indicates to me it’s possible. Spending probably many tens if not hundreds of $millions to produce a few $thousands of NG before the system broke down tells me they are decades, maybe many decades (if ever) before anyone needs worry about all that new AGW source making it to the consumers.

Fortunately the world has plenty of coal to make up for the hydrates Japan won't be producing for a long time.
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Re: Japan cracks methane hydrates

Unread postby Graeme » Fri 03 May 2013, 19:52:14

Think methane hydrates are the next big thing? Think again.

The right way to understand the potential of unconventional fuels like methane hydrates and tight oil is to closely examine their production rates and their prices. If these fuels can be produced at large scales and profitable prices, they very well might influence geopolitics and economics in the ways that Charles C. Mann speculates. If they cannot, then it truly doesn’t matter how much of those resources may exist underground and in the ocean floor.


Resources in the ground are one thing, but extraction is another matter entirely. And while production of fuels like methane hydrates may be technically possible, that does not mean that they will be affordable, or that their production will be scalable. Natural gas may be a “bridge” fuel, but only if we actually build a renewably powered world at the other end of that bridge. We have ample evidence that renewables are on their way to outpricing fossil fuels for grid power within a decade, while the prospects for methane hydrates and tight oil remain shrouded in speculation and wishful thinking. If there’s a boat that Mann is missing, its name is Renewables.


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Re: Japan cracks methane hydrates

Unread postby Buddy_J » Sat 04 May 2013, 09:42:39

Once upon a time there was this guy named Drake who found some oil and used a bathtub to catch it while his buddies put it into buckets and pails and a few barrels and used some donkeys to move it around. There is your insignificant flowrate.

Look how that turned out.

What he had done was unlocked a resource trillions of barrels in size and of high value, so we turned that little flowrate into a bigger one until we are where we are today.

The exact same path, for the exact same reasons, can be followed by hydrates. The short sighted need to stop confusing what is, with what can be. Read a history book and learn something about human behavior. Then apply that knowledge and stop pretending that just because something is the way it is today, it has anything to do with what humans will do with it tomorrow.
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Re: Japan cracks methane hydrates

Unread postby SeaGypsy » Sat 04 May 2013, 10:04:31

History shows that human behaviour replicates yeast in a sugar bowl, which never ends well.
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Re: Japan cracks methane hydrates

Unread postby Buddy_J » Sat 04 May 2013, 16:27:49

SeaGypsy wrote:History shows that human behaviour replicates yeast in a sugar bowl, which never ends well.


I don't think anyone is disputing that. Perhaps the dispute is more about the size of the sugar bowl? In 150 years the exploitation and exploration for resources has gone from this:

Image


to this:

Image

Notice the evolution in size, and undoubtedly capabilities. And while most of the world may be composed of never-do-wells, America at least was built on a different premise, and just as human behavior in general is predictable, so are what happens when opportunity arises.

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Re: gas hydrates ?

Unread postby Graeme » Tue 30 Jul 2013, 18:29:16

Oil Companies Are Preparing to Tackle Methane Hydrate, Assuming It Doesn't Melt First

Deep under the Arctic's frosty seas lies a massive energy prize: billions of tons of methane hydrates. Climate scientists have long discussed the incredible climate-warming potential those deposits of frozen natural gas have if they ever melt, and a recent report from a trio of researchers says the climate costs of melting methane hydrate could rival the size of the entire global economy. But while debate continues over those claims, it's becoming ever clearer that oil companies will attempt to extract those hard-to-reach deposits.


That decade timetable is tight, but Japan's not alone. According to a big report in the Wall Street Journal, India and China are also heavily interested in exploiting methane hydrates to help feed their huge energy demands. (Those energy needs have also fueled Chinese and Indian interest in alternative energy sources like thorium.) Currently, costs remain high—the Journal pegs methane hydrate extraction at somewhere between $30 and $60 per million BTUs, while in the US natural gas is $4 per million BTUs—but experiments are ongoing in Asia and North America.

In fact, oil giant ConocoPhillips has already run a successful test in Alaska with the US Energy Department, which utilized a mixture of carbon dioxide and nitrogen injection to release methane hydrates from a well.

It may end up being in the Siberian Arctic that methane hydrates could prove most tantalizing to oil companies. Drilling in the Arctic is incredibly expensive, but that's changing. As fossil fuels get harder to find and as the Arctic melts, the cost-benefit ratio of drilling in the Arctic has become more attractive for oil giants like Russia's Rosneft.

And with Rosneft recently locking down the billions in funding it needed to start drilling the Siberian fields it's spent years acquiring, a methane hydrate boom may not be far off.

While it's still not clear if methane hydrate extraction will ever be cost-effective enough to be worthwhile, especially in the middle of a natural gas boom, the amount of interest over reserves worldwide suggest that someone will crack the puzzle.


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Re: Methane Hydrate Fuel (merged)

Unread postby Tanada » Tue 30 Jul 2013, 21:50:31

The Russians claimed to have been quite successful in producing natural gas trapped beneath a methane hydrate cap, they believed that much of the gas actually produced had to come from extraction pressure drops causing the bottom of the hydrate layer to dissolve. Hydrates are only stable above critical pressure and below a critical temperature, if they get too warm or decompress they break up into methane gas and water.
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Re: Methane Hydrate Fuel (merged)

Unread postby ROCKMAN » Wed 31 Jul 2013, 14:48:43

Tanada - That could make sense although the conditions might be relatively rare. It sounds as though the hydrates are forming a seal onto of a viable reservoir rock. Essentially just as all reservoirs must have a seal containing them. Dropping the reservoir pressure would cause the lower portion of the seal to "melt" and charge the reservoir rock. The only down side is that this is being down at a rather shallow depth and thus he NG would be at a rather lower pressure and thus not an impressive flow rate. One risk that’s difficult to qualify would be developing a "melted" channel vertically in the hydrate causing a surface rupture. Might cause some sort of catastrophic release of the entire hydrate body. Could put a lot of methane into the atmosphere
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Re: Methane Hydrate Fuel (merged)

Unread postby Tanada » Wed 31 Jul 2013, 22:54:37

ROCKMAN wrote:Tanada - That could make sense although the conditions might be relatively rare. It sounds as though the hydrates are forming a seal onto of a viable reservoir rock. Essentially just as all reservoirs must have a seal containing them. Dropping the reservoir pressure would cause the lower portion of the seal to "melt" and charge the reservoir rock. The only down side is that this is being down at a rather shallow depth and thus he NG would be at a rather lower pressure and thus not an impressive flow rate. One risk that’s difficult to qualify would be developing a "melted" channel vertically in the hydrate causing a surface rupture. Might cause some sort of catastrophic release of the entire hydrate body. Could put a lot of methane into the atmosphere

[SARCASM] Oh come on ROCKMAN how can you be so chicken about such a wonderful energy source that is so safe the USSR spent twenty years developing ways to harvest it in Siberia? Pay No Attention To The Man Behind The Curtain!{/SARCASM]

Seriously, I have read about the trial runs several different times from different sources over the years and as you point out degradation of the hydrates can be a very serious issue. I think the only realistic ways to deal with it would be to have a cooling jacket in the well casing insulated on the inside to not freeze up the supply being extracted. You would have to use something like freon as your liquid phase to keep the outside of the casing as far below freezing as possible to keep the hydrates stable as long as possible. Sooner or later the cap is going to weaken if you are dropping the pressure below it and the bottom is eroding into water and free methane.
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Re: Methane Hydrate Fuel (merged)

Unread postby ROCKMAN » Thu 01 Aug 2013, 09:38:48

Tanada - Sounds like a possible approach. They may also get a bit of help from Mother Earth with respect to keeping the producing well bore cold. Often when we produce a NG well the expansion of the NG as its pressure is lowered at the surface actually produces freezing temperatures. We have "heater-treaters" we use in the production package that takes some of the NG and burns it to heat the flow lines. Otherwise those lines will actually freeze and stop the flow.

Here' s way more info on the subject then anyone in the right mind should want to learn about: search "hrcak.srce.hr/file/87636"
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Re: Methane Hydrate Fuel (merged)

Unread postby Subjectivist » Tue 25 Mar 2014, 11:33:19

Just stumbled across an article from January about methane clathrate mining off the South Carolina coast.

Mitchell Colgan isn't so sure. Colgan is a College of Charleston geology professor who formerly worked in exploration research for Shell Oil Co.
"The problem you face is how much money you pay for that lease," he said. Shell Oil paid more than a half billion dollars for a lease off Alaska more than two decades ago, but that was in an area rich with beds that also could be claimed by Russia. Those hydrates are much closer to shore than those off South Carolina.

Also, oil companies would be more attracted to abundant methane hydrate beds in locations like Alaska or the Gulf of Mexico, where some of the recovery infrastructure and equipment already is in place, Colgan said. Off South Carolina, you would be starting from scratch, to go after a supply not expected to be nearly as plentiful as other locations.

"There would be good reasons for Japan to try to get it," Colgan said, but even with the recent success there, the companies still haven't solved the problem of how to get at enough of the gas safely enough to make it cost-beneficial.

"If you solve that problem, then you go where it's closer to shore," he said. On the Blake Plateau, "all the hydrates are on the slope, a tremendously unstable area."

But Charter insists "it's not paranoid at all" to think (oil companies) are interested. In the Gulf of Mexico, companies for years avoided drilling deep ocean oil wells because of the methane hydrate beds, the depth and distance from shore, and danger. Now they are drilling in areas like Deepwater Horizon.

"The bottom line is methane hydrates aren't ready for prime time," he said, but the technology and need might be only 10, 12, 15 years away. In other words, the Blake beds might be harvestable within the time span of the life of the lease.


'Dirty little secret'


Very little is known about the environmental concerns of going after methane hydrate, Charter said. What is known is that "as currently conducted, it's extremely dangerous."
The extraction process differs from fracking, the problematic and controversial gas extraction now underway onshore. But it's similar in that hydraulic fracturing injects fluid underground at great pressure, while methane hydrates already are under pressure.

Fracking is not particularly efficient, injecting huge volumes of water and potentially polluting groundwater supplies. A "dirty little secret" about fracking is that it burns off about 50 percent of the natural gas that could be recovered, Charter said.

In South Carolina, the methane hydrates pot is actively being boiled by federal and state legislators pushing bills to promote offshore exploration and drilling, citing the potential revenue. But state waters end 3 miles off the coast; the beds, of course, are a lot farther out. Federal rules specify that royalties in those regions are paid to the federal government, not the states.

State legislators "think that somehow or another somewhere they will be able to rewrite federal law to reap some royalties. That's a pipe dream. Residents are being sold a bill of goods, a red herring, to open the coast (to drilling) and not consider the value of a clean coast to an economy dependent on it," Charter said.

In South Carolina, Colgan said, talking up oil and gas is "a political game that's being played that people are being cute about. There isn't any oil. There isn't any natural gas in our environment."

As for the methane hydrates offshore, "It's almost impossible to get, and if you could get it, you wouldn't get it here. Farther north the ice is closer to the surface," Colgan said.


More at the link http://www.postandcourier.com/article/2 ... /140109725
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THE Methane Hydrate Recovery Thread

Unread postby ennui2 » Sun 24 Jan 2016, 18:18:09

To try to steer the discussion in a more academic direction, I will start this thread on the topic of commercial methane hydrate mining.

Here is the WIKI entry on commercial extraction

I would expect to see some news flow by this year as the Japanese site is trying to scale up. Interest may not be as keen due to low oil prices, but the Fukushima disaster must be causing Japan to look for different sources of energy, so we'll see.
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Re: THE Methane Hydrate Recovery Thread

Unread postby Shaved Monkey » Sun 24 Jan 2016, 18:31:37

Doesnt sound like a sustainable long term plan to future prosperity
Japan's 'frozen gas' is worthless if we take climate change seriously
Like all nations extending the fossil fuel frontier, Japan is adding to the mountain of fossil fuels we cannot responsibly burn

"Even the most conservative estimates conclude that about 1,000 times more methane is trapped in hydrates than is consumed annually worldwide to meet energy needs."

Only a small proportion of this resource is exploitable: even so, that small proportion could greatly augment the volume of fossil fuel reserves we cannot afford to burn.
If governments intended to curb greenhouse gas emissions, there would be no point in developing this new source of fuel.
Their attempts to exploit it reinforce the perception that they have no intention of preventing climate breakdown.





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Re: THE Methane Hydrate Recovery Thread

Unread postby ennui2 » Sun 24 Jan 2016, 20:50:40

I would agree that it's dangerous to burn it all. The thread is more intended to track whether we're gearing up to burn it anyway.
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Re: THE Methane Hydrate Recovery Thread

Unread postby GHung » Mon 25 Jan 2016, 00:19:14

As long as the Japanese expect to power stuff like this, they're screwed.

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Re: THE Methane Hydrate Recovery Thread

Unread postby onlooker » Mon 25 Jan 2016, 06:46:15

All I can say about this is it seems way too risky because you can created earthquake like conditions or an explosion which can fire off the Clathrate gun and that spells doomsday.
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Re: THE Methane Hydrate Recovery Thread

Unread postby Tanada » Mon 25 Jan 2016, 10:32:20

ennui2 wrote:To try to steer the discussion in a more academic direction, I will start this thread on the topic of commercial methane hydrate mining.

Here is the WIKI entry on commercial extraction

I would expect to see some news flow by this year as the Japanese site is trying to scale up. Interest may not be as keen due to low oil prices, but the Fukushima disaster must be causing Japan to look for different sources of energy, so we'll see.


Back when the USSR was still around they had one field producing in IIRC Siberia. They drilled down through the clathrate layer that was acting like cap rock on the underlying methane source material and pumped out the free gas below, then as the pressure dropped from the extraction the clathrate started breaking down as well. I seem to recall they had to stop after a year or so because the cap was getting too thin and they were afraid it would rupture if they kept going.
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Re: THE Methane Hydrate Recovery Thread

Unread postby curlyq3 » Mon 25 Jan 2016, 13:46:04

The Japanese mining methane hydrate ... maybe a subsidiary of TEPCO ? ... what possibly could go wrong ? (sarc off)
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