美国地质调查局估计阿拉斯加北坡天然气水合物储量为 53.8 Tcf

2019 年 9 月 11 日

华盛顿 - 根据美国地质调查局的最新评估,阿拉斯加北坡蕴藏着约 53.8 万亿立方英尺的天然气水合物资源。这一估计是针对天然气水合物地层中未发现的、技术上可采的天然气资源。

“美国地质调查局致力于提供最新的、公开的、经过同行评审的国家能源资源估算,”美国地质调查局能源资源计划协调员沃尔特·吉德罗兹说。“随着更多信息的出现,我们有时需要修改我们的评估,以确保它们反映现有的最佳科学。”

评估区域地图。
评估区域地图。

该评估更新了 2008 年美国地质调查局的评估,该评估估计阿拉斯加北坡天然气水合物中约有 85 万亿立方英尺未发现、技术上可采的天然气资源。该评估是对天然气水合物中技术上可采天然气资源的首次估计。

新发布的 2018 年天然气水合物评估利用了更广泛的 3D 地震测绘、改进的数据收集和更精细的分析。获得更好的地图以及对天然气水合物储层特性的更多了解可以实现更精确的估计。正是这种精细分析使得 2018 年评估中的天然气量估算值比 2008 年评估值更小。

这种评估方法还假设资源可以通过现有的常规技术生产。迄今为止,尚无已知的从天然气水合物形成中商业化生产天然气的情况,并且天然气水合物储层的商业可行性尚不清楚。这一假设基于有限的现场测试和含天然气水合物储层的数值生产模型。没有分析生产这些资源是否有利可图。

2010 年,美国地质调查局在北冰洋海底几英尺、水深约 8,000 英尺处发现了与灰色沉积物混合的白色气体水合物(甲烷冰)块。
2010 年,美国地质调查局在北冰洋海底几英尺、水深约 8,000 英尺处发现了与灰色沉积物混合的白色气体水合物(甲烷冰)块。

天然气水合物是天然存在的冰状固体,其中水分子将气体分子捕获在笼状结构中。它们仅在狭窄的温度和压力范围内稳定,通常存在于海底沉积物和北极陆上永久冻土环境中。

尽管许多气体在自然界中形成水合物,但甲烷水合物是迄今为止最常见的,并且人们认为世界上的天然气水合物蕴藏蕴藏着重要的天然气资源。

“天然气水合物作为能源的研究仍然是一个新兴领域,”该评估的主要作者、美国地质调查局科学家蒂姆·科利特说。“自 20 世纪 80 年代以来,美国地质调查局一直在进行天然气水合物的研究。每次我们进行这些评估时,我们都会纳入更多、更高质量的数据,我们的估计也会变得更加准确。”

美国地质调查局对天然气水合物资源潜力的研究已超过 35 年。美国地质调查局与能源部、土地管理局、海洋能源管理局和阿拉斯加州机构以及国际、工业和学术合作伙伴合作,分析了美国各地和周边地区的天然气水合物形成情况。世界。

沉积物样品中天然气水合物晶体的扫描电子显微镜图像。 刻度为 50 微米 (μm) 或大约 0.002 英寸。
沉积物样品中天然气水合物晶体的扫描电子显微镜图像。刻度为 50 微米 (μm) 或大约 0.002 英寸。

美国地质调查局天然气水合物项目进行多学科实地研究,参加国家和国际深钻探险,并维持一个专注于含水合物沉积物的实验室项目。除了阿拉斯加北坡研究之外,他们还参与并有时管理大型钻探项目,这些项目调查阿拉斯加、印度近海和墨西哥湾的天然气水合物资源潜力。

天然气水合物项目提供了独特的能力和特殊的高压实验室设施,可以在接近自然状态的条件下研究水合物,从而对技术上可采的天然气水合物资源进行首次评估;表征含水合物沉积物的物理性质以限制储层性质;揭示天然气水合物分解与环境变化之间可能存在的协同作用;获取数据以对这些沉积物在美国大西洋、墨西哥湾和波弗特海边缘的分布进行成像。

原文链接/worldoil

USGS estimates 53.8 Tcf of natural gas hydrates in Alaska’s North Slope

September 11, 2019

WASHINGTON - The Alaska North Slope contains an estimated 53.8 trillion cubic feet of natural gas hydrate resources, according to a new assessment by the U.S. Geological Survey.  This estimate is for the undiscovered, technically recoverable natural gas resources stored within gas hydrate formations.

“The USGS is committed to providing the most up-to-date, publicly available, peer-reviewed estimates of the nation’s energy resources,” said Walter Guidroz, program coordinator for the USGS Energy Resources Program.  “As more information becomes available, we sometimes need to revise our assessments to ensure they reflect the best available science.”

Map of the Assessed Area.
Map of the Assessed Area.

This assessment updates a 2008 USGS assessment that estimated about 85 trillion cubic feet of undiscovered, technically recoverable gas resources within gas hydrates on the Alaska North Slope. That assessment was the first-ever estimate of technically recoverable gas resources within gas hydrate.

The newly released 2018 gas hydrates assessment utilized more extensive 3D seismic mapping, improved data collection and more refined analysis. Access to better maps, as well as greater understanding of gas hydrate reservoir properties, allowed for more precise estimates. It is this refined analysis that yielded a smaller gas volume estimate in the 2018 assessment when compared to the 2008 assessment.

This assessment approach also assumes that the resource can be produced by existing conventional technology. To date, there is no known commercial production of natural gas from gas hydrate formation and the commercial viability of gas hydrate reservoirs is not yet known. This assumption is based on both limited field testing and numerical production models of gas hydrate-bearing reservoirs. No analysis was provided as to whether it would be profitable to produce these resources.

In 2010, the U.S. Geological Survey recovered white chunks of gas hydrate (methane ice) mixed with gray sediment a few feet below the seafloor in the Arctic Ocean at a water depth of approximately 8,000 feet.
In 2010, the U.S. Geological Survey recovered white chunks of gas hydrate (methane ice) mixed with gray sediment a few feet below the seafloor in the Arctic Ocean at a water depth of approximately 8,000 feet.

Gas hydrates are naturally occurring, ice-like solids in which water molecules trap gas molecules in a cage-like structure. They are only stable within a narrow range of temperatures and pressures and are usually found in seafloor sediments and in Arctic onshore permafrost environments.

Although many gases form hydrates in nature, methane hydrate is by far the most common, and there are thought to be significant natural gas resources contained in the world’s gas hydrate accumulations.

“The study of gas hydrate as an energy resource is still an emerging field,” said USGS scientist Tim Collett, lead author of the assessment. “The USGS has been conducting research on gas hydrates since the 1980s. Every time we conduct these assessments, we incorporate more and higher quality data, and our estimates become more precise.”

The USGS has studied the resource potential of gas hydrates for more than 35 years. Partnering with agencies like the Department of Energy, the Bureau of Land Management, the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management and Alaska state agencies, as well as international, industry and academic partners, the USGS has analyzed gas hydrate formations throughout the United States and around the world.

Scanning electron microscope image of gas hydrate crystals in a sediment sample. The scale is 50 micrometers (µm) or approximately 0.002 inches.
Scanning electron microscope image of gas hydrate crystals in a sediment sample. The scale is 50 micrometers (µm) or approximately 0.002 inches.

The USGS Gas Hydrates Project conducts multidisciplinary field studies, participates in national and international deep drilling expeditions, and maintains a laboratory program focused on hydrate-bearing sediments. In addition to the Alaska North Slope research, they have been participating in and sometimes managing large-scale drilling projects that investigate the resource potential of gas hydrate in Alaska, offshore India and the Gulf of Mexico.

The Gas Hydrates Project provides unique capabilities and special high-pressure laboratory facilities to study hydrate in conditions close to its natural state, producing the first assessment of technically recoverable gas hydrate resources; characterizing the physical properties of hydrate-bearing sediments to constrain reservoir properties; unraveling the possible synergies between gas hydrate breakdown and environmental change; and acquiring data to image the distribution of these deposits on the U.S. Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico and Beaufort Sea margins.