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So 6 billion of these barrels are Venezuelan heavy oil.OilFinder2 wrote:Size of discovery: 6 billion barrels recoverable
Date: July 29, 2009
Company(s): Repsol and PdVSA
Name: Junin 7 block
Location: Orinocco oil sands, Venezuela
API: heavy oil
Flow rate of test well(s): no information
Estimated production startup date: 2012
LINK
OilFinder2 wrote:Recoverable running total year to date: 4.546 billion barrels minimum to 9.984 billion barrels maximum


More tar sands and heavy oil.OilFinder2 wrote:This next one is interesting. We all know about the Athabasca oil sands, but until I read this today I didn't know there were also oil sands deposits in the Peace River region of Alberta (which is in NW Alberta near the BC border). According to the company website here this area contains an estimated 188 billion barrels.
I have no idea how long they've known about these particular deposits, but they're calling it a discovery, therefore, so shall I.
Size of discovery: 517 million barrels recoverable, out of 1.99 billion barrels OIP.
Date: June 29, 2009
Company(s): Strata Oil
Name: Cadotte
Location: Alberta, Canada
API: Heavy (bitumen)
Flow rate of test well(s): No information
Estimated production startup date: Some in area already in production, this particular project planned to produce 56,000 bpd
LINK
LINK
Recoverable running total year to date: 8.46 billion barrels minimum to 10.826 maximum
OIP running total year to date: 7.505 billion barrels minimum to 9 billion barrels maximum
------------------------------------
Canada Oil Discoveries: Name - Size - Month/Year
Additions to White Rose - 40-90 million barrels - 7/06
Paktoa C-60 - 240 million barrels - 10/07
Cadotte - 517 million barrels - 06/09
OilFinder2 wrote:Recoverable running total year to date: 4.029 billion barrels minimum to 9.467 billion barrels maximum


OilFinder2 wrote:An appraisal well is going to be drilled on this prospect in September. The resource size range is quite large for now so I'll edit this entry when info on the appraisal well is released. For now it's sort-of a placeholder.
Size of discovery: 250 million - 1.4 billion barrels recoverable
Date: July 9, 2009
Company(s): Tullow, Heritage and a few others
Name: Tweneboa
Location: Offshore Ghana
API: "Light hydrocarbons" in upper zone, 26 API oil in lower zone
Flow rate of test well(s): No information
Estimated production startup date: No information
LINK
From the link provided
LINK
Recoverable running total year to date: 2.41 billion barrels minimum to 4.743 billion barrels maximum
OIP running total year to date: 7.505 billion barrels minimum to 9 billion barrels maximum
------------------------------------
Ghana Oil Discoveries: Name - Size - Month/Year
Mahogany (later merged with Jubilee) - 300-600 million barrels - 06/06
Addition to Jubilee/Mahogany - 200 million barrels - 06/07
Addition to Jubilee - 1 billion barrels - 07/08
Tweneboa - 250 million - 1.4 billion barrels - 07/09
The Tweneboa-1 exploration well in the Deep Water Tano block (Tullow 49.95%) was completed in March and encountered 21 m (69 ft) of light hydrocarbon bearing sandstones, a deeper independent 4-m (13-ft) oil zone and an over-pressured zone at total depth. The light hydrocarbon accumulation, with P50 oil and gas potential of 250 MMboe and upside potential of 1.4 Bboe,




OilFinder2 wrote:Thanks JB.
The recoverable number here is based on the stated recovery factor of 50-70%.
Size of discovery: 1.15 - 2.94 billion barrels recoverable, 2.3 - 4.2 billion barrels OIP
Date: May 6, 2009
Company(s): Heritage Oil
Name: Miran West
Location: Kurdistan, Iraq
API: 27, low sulfur
Flow rate of test well(s): 10,000-15,000 b/d/well
Estimated production startup date: End of 2009
LINK
LINK
Recoverable running total year to date: 1.237 billion barrels minimum to 3.065 billion barrels maximum
OIP running total year to date: 5.515 billion barrels minimum to 7.01 billion barrels maximum
------------------------------------
Iraq Oil Discoveries: Name - Size - Month/Year
Tawke 1 - 100 million barrels - 6/06
Miran West - 1.15 - 2.94 billion barrels recoverable - 5/09


I remember when Kashagan was discovered in the Caspian and touted as "black gold" As early as 1998, a Time magazine article pointed out that if the US Energy Department’s estimates of potential Caspian reserves were correct, the region would have to contain “the equivalent of 400 minimum-size giant fields,” or 200 billion barrels of oil. Industry and magazine reports regularly "measured" 30-60 billion. Now we know that the Caspian region in total 9-16 billion. I used to argue with ReserveGrowthRulz(DroolzTonyPrep wrote:No-one needs to prove individual discovery reports wrong. Just wait for data to come out from organisations that are dedicated to this kind of research and see what the totals are. We've already seen that discoveries are no-where near the rosy picture you try to paint. So something is clearly wrong with your catalog though, good on you, you've acknowledged that the 2007 total is way down on what you thought.OilFinder2 wrote:OK, for here on out I offer an open challenge to anyone who thinks this thread is biased, wrong, or whatever: For every discovery I catalog, I challenge you to prove it wrong.
Go ahead, make my day.
) that it is just as reasonable to downgrade initial estimates as to upgrade them. (see Kurwait's admission of reserve growth inflation as an example)
dorlomin wrote:While I am not the sharpest knife in the drawer, I am not a complete idiot either.OilFinder2 wrote:Recoverable running total year to date: 10.546 billion barrels minimum to 15.984 billion barrels maximum
OIP running total year to date: 13.484 billion barrels minimum to 14.984 billion barrels maximum
How precisely does the maximum recoverable exceed the maximum discovered oil in place?
Why is the minimum recoverable volume about 78% of the minimum oil in place? Are you listing recoverable without oil in place?


dorlomin wrote:So the implicit level of accuracy from the words "maximum" and "minimum" is
hokum. There is clearly no discernable confidence interval for these figures, they are derived from widely different methodologies and many of these discoveries may just be press bluster from factions within countries trying to whipp up a bit of investor interest or companies press departments flapping there lips?


dorlomin wrote:So 6 billion of these barrels are Venezuelan heavy oil.
Its not even C&C.
dorlomin wrote:And given that peak oil is about flow rate not total volume....
dorlomin wrote:Corrected it for you mate.


dorlomin wrote:OilFinder2 wrote:An appraisal well is going to be drilled on this prospect in September. The resource size range is quite large for now so I'll edit this entry when info on the appraisal well is released. For now it's sort-of a placeholder.
Size of discovery: 250 million - 1.4 billion barrels recoverable
Date: July 9, 2009
Company(s): Tullow, Heritage and a few others
Name: Tweneboa
Location: Offshore Ghana
API: "Light hydrocarbons" in upper zone, 26 API oil in lower zone
Flow rate of test well(s): No information
Estimated production startup date: No information
LINK
From the link provided
LINK
Recoverable running total year to date: 2.41 billion barrels minimum to 4.743 billion barrels maximum
OIP running total year to date: 7.505 billion barrels minimum to 9 billion barrels maximum
------------------------------------
Ghana Oil Discoveries: Name - Size - Month/Year
Mahogany (later merged with Jubilee) - 300-600 million barrels - 06/06
Addition to Jubilee/Mahogany - 200 million barrels - 06/07
Addition to Jubilee - 1 billion barrels - 07/08
Tweneboa - 250 million - 1.4 billion barrels - 07/09
Well TonyPrep is right!The Tweneboa-1 exploration well in the Deep Water Tano block (Tullow 49.95%) was completed in March and encountered 21 m (69 ft) of light hydrocarbon bearing sandstones, a deeper independent 4-m (13-ft) oil zone and an over-pressured zone at total depth. The light hydrocarbon accumulation, with P50 oil and gas potential of 250 MMboe and upside potential of 1.4 Bboe,
This is gas that is getting counted as oil. How much of this is drillable oil?
API: "Light hydrocarbons" in upper zone, 26 API oil in lower zone


dorlomin wrote:http://www.proactiveinvestors.co.uk/companies/news/7339/heritage-oil-wraps-up-testing-of-miran-west-1-expects-well-to-produce-up-to-10000-bopd-7339.html
Even this one seems to have been a touch dissapointing. But as it is actual OIL, Ill let oilgoogler2 off.



Think, OF2. Graphs like that are important simply to show that, no matter what the flow rate, discovering less oil that is produced has implications that I'm sure don't need spelling out. Flow rate, of course, ultimately determines the rate of production and so is vitally important in determining when peak might be. Surely you realise that? If you don't, then pointing out that different categories of oil have different flow rates probably doesn't make much sense to you.OilFinder2 wrote:If that is true, then how come graphics like this are such a central part of the peak oil litany?dorlomin wrote:And given that peak oil is about flow rate not total volume....

TonyPrep wrote: Flow rate, of course, ultimately determines the rate of production and so is vitally important in determining when peak might be.
TonyPrep wrote:Think, OF2. Graphs like that are important simply to show that, no matter what the flow rate, discovering less oil that is produced . . .
TonyPrep wrote:. . . has implications that I'm sure don't need spelling out. Flow rate, of course, ultimately determines the rate of production and so is vitally important in determining when peak might be. Surely you realise that?
TonyPrep wrote:If you don't, then pointing out that different categories of oil have different flow rates probably doesn't make much sense to you.



Quinny wrote:Please Oily, - What is your overall discovered not in production figure?
Quinny wrote:And how llong will it last at 20 million b/d?



Yup.shortonsense wrote:TonyPrep wrote: Flow rate, of course, ultimately determines the rate of production and so is vitally important in determining when peak might be.
I thought flow rate WAS the rate of production?

Perhaps it never occurred to you that it might be a typo? "that" should have been "than".OilFinder2 wrote:As opposed to less oil that *isn't* produced??TonyPrep wrote:Think, OF2. Graphs like that are important simply to show that, no matter what the flow rate, discovering less oil that is produced . . .
Whatever that was supposed to mean. *shrugs*
Using the corrected typo, I've already given an answer.OilFinder2 wrote:I thought it would have been obvious I was asking dorlomin why he thought such an important part of the peak oil litany should be, as he said, so unimportant.TonyPrep wrote:. . . has implications that I'm sure don't need spelling out. Flow rate, of course, ultimately determines the rate of production and so is vitally important in determining when peak might be. Surely you realise that?
The point is that oil discoveries are lagging production, possibly by a very large margin (if analyses other than yours are looked at, or by a significant margin if only your reports are looked at), and have been for over 20 years; a clear pointer to peak being in sight. In addition, the aspect of flow rate is an important point since if discovered oil is to replace declines in producing fields (as well as provide growth), then a similar flow rate to those fields in decline had better be possible. Even if 30 billion barrels per year was being discovered and if it could be brought online within a few years, a flow rate below what was trying to be replaced would not actually make up for declines.OilFinder2 wrote:Of course different categories of oil have different flow rates. But a lot of the oil shown discovered on the chart back in days of yore was heavy oil, too. So you don't really have any point here.

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