非常规/复杂油藏

蒙尼失踪:未报告的湿气扭曲加拿大主要页岩油区图片

Enverus 声称,由于报告存在重大缺陷,公共数据中找不到数亿桶凝析油。

不列颠哥伦比亚省天然气液化厂 北蒙特尼页岩地层 阿拉斯加高速公路
加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省的一个天然气液体储存场。
资料来源:盖蒂图片社。

监管指南中的一个怪癖可能是加拿大最大页岩气区块价值被严重低估的原因。

Enverus 表示,该公司在最近的一份报告中得出结论,过去 20 年从蒙特尼页岩开采的井口凝析油中,有多达 40%(相当于超过 3 亿桶)在公开报告的数据中基本上缺失。

这家能源分析公司指出,阿尔伯塔省和不列颠哥伦比亚省共享蒙特尼河的监管指令。在某些情况下,这些规则允许运营商将凝结水输出报告为“等效”体积。

这个问题主要发生在蒙特尼地区富含凝析油的地区,运营商在这些地区将凝析油与干燥气体重新混合,然后通过管道将两种产品输送到处理设施。换句话说,问题不在于页岩油生产商错误地计算了湿气产量。

Enverus Intelligence Research 高级副总裁特雷弗·里克斯 (Trevor Rix) 解释说:“运营商按照省级监管机构的规定申报数量,误导性报告不会影响他们在销售天然气和井口液体时获得的价格。”

恩弗鲁斯认为,最大的问题是,为该行业的大部分增长提供资金的银行和外部股权投资者通常无法获得私人统计数据,以显示井口真正出现的情况。

“他们正在关注加拿大一些最重要的富含液体的非常规油气田,并发现与他们可能有机会投资的其他油气田相比,干燥天然气看起来并不经济”,这使得加拿大的机会空间看起来如此劣等,”里克斯说。

Enverus 表示,由于依赖于石油物理数据、流体特性和完井情况的专有模型,它能够纠正加拿大行业的流体产量。

Enverus 认为,在使用该模型时,蒙特尼不仅比几乎所有其他加拿大油气田拥有优越的经济效益,而且还优于美国的许多油气田,包括以天然气为主的马塞勒斯页岩和海恩斯维尔页岩。

“在 Montney 的一些最活跃的区域,使用我们的模型添加液体已将 20:1 半周期盈亏平衡天然气价格从 3.20 美元/Mscf 左右修正为 2.15 美元/Mscf 范围内的某个位置,这给出了关于这个问题对这些领域的隐含盈利能力的影响程度的想法,”里克斯说。

他补充说,整个蒙尼河井口液体漏报的程度各不相同。

在一些极端情况下,有些地区的公开数据中缺少五分之四的液体。Enverus 还报告称,在高端领域,有些油田每 1.0 MMscf 干燥气体生产超过 100 桶油田凝析油,但公开数据显示液体产量为零。

原文链接/jpt
Unconventional/complex reservoirs

Missing in the Montney: Unreported Wet Gas Skews Picture of Canada’s Premier Shale Play

Enverus claims hundreds of millions of barrels of gas condensates are nowhere to be found in public data due to a major reporting gap.

British Columbia Natural Gas Liquids Plant North Montney shale formation Alaska Highway
A natural gas liquids storage site in British Columbia, Canada.
Source: Getty Images.

A quirk in regulatory guidelines may be to blame for a significant undervaluing of Canada’s largest shale gas play.

This is according to Enverus which concluded in a recent report that as much as 40% of the wellhead condensates—equal to more than 300 million bbl—extracted from the Montney Shale over the past 20 years are essentially missing from publicly reported data.

The energy analytics firm points to regulatory directives in both Alberta and British Columbia which share the Montney. Under certain circumstances, those rules allow operators to report condensate output as “gas equivalent” volumes.

The issue chiefly applies to the condensate-rich areas within the Montney where operators recombine condensate with dry gas prior to moving both products via pipeline to a processing facility. In other words, the problem is not that shale producers are miscalculating wet-gas output.

“Operators are stating volumes as prescribed by provincial regulators, and the misleading reporting does not affect the prices that they obtain in marketing both gas and wellhead liquids," explained Trevor Rix, a senior vice president at Enverus Intelligence Research.

The big problem according to Enverus is that the banks and outside equity investors that finance much of the industry’s growth don’t usually have access to the private tallies that show what’s really coming up the wellhead.

“They are looking at some of Canada's most significant unconventional liquids-rich plays and are seeing dry gas that doesn’t look as economic compared with other plays that they might have an opportunity to invest in—it makes the Canadian opportunity space look inferior,” said Rix.

Enverus said it is able to correct for fluids production in the Canadian sector thanks to a proprietary model which relies on petrophysical data, fluid properties, and well completions.

In using the model, Enverus believes the Montney holds superior economics over not just almost all other Canadian plays but many of those in the US too, including the gas-dominated Marcellus Shale and Haynesville Shale.

“In some of the most active areas of the Montney, the addition of the liquids with our model has corrected the 20:1 half-cycle breakeven gas price from around USD $3.20/Mscf to somewhere in the range of $2.15/Mscf which gives an idea as to the magnitude of impact that this problem has on the implied profitability of these areas,” said Rix.

He added that the degree to which wellhead liquids are underreported varies across the Montney.

In some of the extreme cases, there are areas where four out of five barrels of liquids are missing from the publicly available data. Enverus also reports that on the high end there are fields producing more than 100 bbl of field condensate per 1.0 MMscf of dry gas and yet the public data show there to be zero liquids production.