Blacksmith wrote:Son, you sound like a broken record. How many times are you going to post the same graph?
Until you understand the relationship between the Barnett Shale and the Utica Shale.
Blacksmith wrote:Son, you sound like a broken record. How many times are you going to post the same graph?
Blacksmith wrote:TOC (Total Organic Content):
Barnett 1% to 12% average 4.5% to 5.2% again depending on source
Utica 1.5% to 3% or up to 2% depending on the source.
Utica Shale
The Ordovician-age Utica Shale is an organic-rich and thermally- mature black to grey-black shale that overlies the Trenton Lime-stone. The Utica Shale outcrops along the west and south-southeast sides of the Adirondack Mountains but is deeply buried across most of the State. The Utica Shale is considered to be the source rock for lower Devonian through Cambrian oil and gas production. Across much of the State, the Utica Shale is approximately 300 feet thick, thinning to the west and north. Estimated total organic carbon content ranges from 1.5 to 3.0 percent in eastern New York and from 2 to 15 percent in northern New York, Ontario and Quebec.
Significant gas shows have been encountered while drilling through the Utica Shale. NYSERDA is funding detailed geological studies of Utica Shale reservoir properties and resource potential to develop an exploration model that would promote production testing using modern completion technology.
Blacksmith wrote:Maturity:
Barnett 0.6% to 1.6% Ro
Utica 1.3 to 2% Ro
Maturity:
Utica: 1.3 - 2.0
Barnett: 1.0 - 2.2
rider wrote:auscanman wrote:I wish that this find actually was as big as reported. At least then Quebec would stop siphonining off money from Ontario and Alberta for the promotion of their welfare province and separatist agenda. I'm pretty sure that a newly resource wealthy Quebec would be extremely reluctant to give back to the rest of Canada some of the vast amount of money it's taken, and would in all likelihood finally vote for secession with this financial incentive in place.
You are a Moron.
auscanman wrote:rider wrote:auscanman wrote:I wish that this find actually was as big as reported. At least then Quebec would stop siphonining off money from Ontario and Alberta for the promotion of their welfare province and separatist agenda. I'm pretty sure that a newly resource wealthy Quebec would be extremely reluctant to give back to the rest of Canada some of the vast amount of money it's taken, and would in all likelihood finally vote for secession with this financial incentive in place.
You are a Moron.
Care to point out what it is that I stated you believe to be incorrect, or is hurling insults the best you can do?
rider wrote:auscanman wrote:rider wrote:auscanman wrote:I wish that this find actually was as big as reported. At least then Quebec would stop siphonining off money from Ontario and Alberta for the promotion of their welfare province and separatist agenda. I'm pretty sure that a newly resource wealthy Quebec would be extremely reluctant to give back to the rest of Canada some of the vast amount of money it's taken, and would in all likelihood finally vote for secession with this financial incentive in place.
You are a Moron.
Care to point out what it is that I stated you believe to be incorrect, or is hurling insults the best you can do?
What you think of Qc is way off topic here and doesn't interest too many souls either I am sure. Now enough with you and your off topic rambling.
auscanman wrote:rider wrote:auscanman wrote:rider wrote:auscanman wrote:I wish that this find actually was as big as reported. At least then Quebec would stop siphonining off money from Ontario and Alberta for the promotion of their welfare province and separatist agenda. I'm pretty sure that a newly resource wealthy Quebec would be extremely reluctant to give back to the rest of Canada some of the vast amount of money it's taken, and would in all likelihood finally vote for secession with this financial incentive in place.
You are a Moron.
Care to point out what it is that I stated you believe to be incorrect, or is hurling insults the best you can do?
What you think of Qc is way off topic here and doesn't interest too many souls either I am sure. Now enough with you and your off topic rambling.
My post is relevant if you actually do believe the premise of this thread (which I don't).
[...]
The big buzz came in April, when Forest Oil of Denver announced an estimate of 4 trillion cubic feet of natural gas on claims held with its partners in the Yamaska region on the south shore of the St. Lawrence.
And that's just a small piece of the puzzle.
Some estimates, Laliberte says, have put the natural gas potential of the St. Lawrence basin at between 35 trillion and 160 trillion cubic feet, which would constitute a world-class deposit if it were ever proved.
[...]
[...]
The Lorraine shale sits on top of the Utica and can be up to 6,500 feet thick. The Utica shale ranges between 300 and 1,000 feet. Early indications show that both the Lorraine and Utica rocks are thick, porous and appear brittle and over pressured, all of which are conducive to artificial fracture stimulation.
[...]
• Talisman estimates 120 bcf/section on Lorraine shales vs 93 bcf/section on Utica (30% higher)
• This is however only based on around 1/10 of the total height of the Lorraine reservoir (the remaining part of Lorraine has not been analysed)
• In an upside scenario, Lorraine could hold more than 1,000 bcf/section (1 TCF) or 10x as much as we have based our valuation on.
Blacksmith wrote:Let us compare the Barnett in Texas and the Utica in Quebec.
The kerogen in the Barnett produces oil and gas, while Utica kerogen produces gas and coal, or has no potential
[...]
The horizontal test wells were successfully cased and fracture stimulated in four stages. Flow rates from these wells were in excess of the original vertical wells with initial rates of up to 4 mmcf/d. On longer term testing, the frac fluid flow-back was incomplete due to the unavailability of coiled tubing to assist in unloading the wells. In spite of frac fluid production, sustained flow rates as reported by the Operator ranged between 100 mcf/d and 800 mcf/d.
[...]
The potential of the Utica shale in the Lowlands was first quantified by an EnCana presentation for an industry conference in 2007. The report highlighted the Utica as viable resource play target covering over 1 million acres with 163 Tcf of discovered resource or approximately 88 Bcf per square mile. Subsequent technical work by both Forest and Talisman provides further support with similar resource estimates of approximately 93 Bcf per square mile. Based on data published by Talisman, the shallower Lorraine is expected to host similar gas in place with a discovered resource estimated at 50-190 Bcf per square mile.
May 15, 2009 11:05:00 AM MST
Questerre foresees low finding and development costs in Utica shale
CALGARY _ Questerre Energy Corp. (TSX:QEC) said Friday its Utica shale play in the St. Lawrence lowlands of Quebec may have finding and development costs of less than $1 per thousand cubic feet of natural gas.
"We had a major breakthrough this quarter in Quebec," Questerre chief utive officer Michael Binnion declared.
"The three well tests from a single Utica zone over our acreage have largely addressed our remaining technical concerns about this play. It has validated our belief that the Utica shale will be commercialized with horizontal wells."
Binnion stated that "with further engineering work, we are more confident in the potential for stacked shale plays that could, if successful, ultimately reduce F&D costs to under $1.00 an mcf."
[...]
"... we are more confident in the potential ... that could, if successful, ultimately..."
Large gas resource seen in Quebec's Utica shale
Sep 1, 2009
By OGJ editors
HOUSTON, Sept. 1 -- Consulting engineers estimated a prospective resource of 4.28 tcf of natural gas in place in the Ordovician Utica shale in the deep fairway of Quebec’s St. Lawrence Lowlands.
The estimate of 150 bcf/sq mile is 66% higher than earlier industry figures, said Questerre Energy Corp., Calgary. The range of the resource is 2.2 - 8 tcf.
The estimates relate only to company lands that have geology validated by successful wells, Questerre said.
“The evaluation is focused on the acreage between the two main geological features, the Yamaska growth fault and Logan’s Line, where Questerre holds approximately 833,000 gross acres in the deep fairway,” the company said.
The assessment does not include the shallower Ordovician Lorraine interval but did include results from the recently completed, Talisman Energy Inc.-operated Edouard-1 exploratory well
009-08-30 23:15:00
QEC Announces St. Edouard #1 Tests Over 2 mmcf/d
Questerre Energy Corporation is pleased to report on the Utica test results from the St. Edouard #1 well in the St. Lawrence Lowlands, Quebec.
The primary zone of interest within the middle Utica was fracture stimulated in late July. Over a 10-day test, the well flowed at initial rates of 2.6 mmcf/d with an average rate of over 700 mcf/d on a one-inch choke. The well is currently shut-in for buildup to gather additional pressure data.
[...]
Gerben wrote:Wow. That sounds good.
Quebec shale gas find could redraw Canada's energy map
Nathan VanderKlippe
Published on Tuesday, Feb. 23, 2010 7:57PM EST
Seventy-five kilometres southwest of Quebec City, in the farm country that lines the St. Lawrence River, natural gas is surging from the ground.
In a province so distant from the petroleum industry that it does not yet have its own system for distributing oil and gas leases, the sight of a producing natural gas well is as unusual as it is important. Thousands of kilometres from the traditional heart of Canada's energy industry, this well could represent a significant redrawing of Canada's energy map.
When it was first brought on stream in late January, it produced 12 million cubic feet of gas a day, a gusher by gas well standards, and a huge boost to Calgary-based Questerre Energy Corp., which has partnered in Quebec with the much bigger Talisman Energy Inc.
[...]
Return to Geopolitics & Global Economics
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 43 guests