
Gas or methane hydrates are ice-like
crystalline structures of water that form 'cages' that trap low
molecular weight gas molecules, especially methane. Stable under a
variety of temperatures and pressures, hydrates have been noted in many
of the areas of the outer continental shelf including the Blake
Escarpment in the Atlantic Ocean, Green Canyon in the Gulf of Mexico,
and Prudhoe Bay of the Alaskan North Slope. Early research focused on the
potential for hydrate areas to have unstable sediments that could be
hazardous to drilling operations. Research to study deepwater benthos
in the mid 1980’s discovered clams and worms that lived in
chemosynthetic communities associated with gas and hydrothermal vents.
An MMS review "Oceanic
Gas Hydrate Research and Activities Review"
outlines the major issues surrounding gas hydrates and the role that MMS
may play in research activities. The major issues can be divided into
three categories: 1) Safety Hazards, 2) Energy
Resource, and 3) Environmental." MMS is currently involved with
studying hydrates from each of these perspectives to fulfill the
responsibilities of the OCS Lands Act to develop marine energy and
mineral resources in an environmentally sound manner.

The Center for Marine Resources and Environmental Technology (CMRET) at
the University of Mississippi established the
Gulf of
Mexico Hydrates Research Consortium
in 2001 to study gas hydrate mounds and active gaseous hydrocarbon vents
in the Gulf of Mexico. Soon after, the Consortium began designing and
constructing a permanent hydrates observatory in Mississippi Canyon
Block MC-118, the only such facility in the world. It includes acoustic
sensors that monitor seismicity and ambient noise, and geochemical and
microbiological sensors to study fluid venting, hydrate formation and
dissociation, and other environmental changes at the site. The
observatory is jointly funded by MMS, DOE, and NOAA.


The MMS has funded several studies through the
Technology Assessment and Research Program
including participation to address the safety concerns for exploration
and production. One joint industry project,
Gulf of Mexico Gas Hydrates Joint Industry Project (JIP) Characterizing
Natural Gas Hydrates in the Deep Water Gulf of Mexico, is collecting
core samples from locations of known or suspected gas hydrates to
develop technology and data to assist in the characterization of
naturally occurring gas hydrates in the deep water Gulf of Mexico with
the intent to provide for increased safety of operations.
The Center for
Marine Resources and Environmental Technology (CMRET) at the University
of Mississippi established the
Gulf of Mexico Hydrates Research Consortium
in 2001 to study gas hydrate mounds and active gaseous hydrocarbon vents
in the Gulf of Mexico. The Consortium is composed of gas hydrate experts
from most of the major Gulf Coast universities along with oceanographic
institutes including Woods Hole and Scripps. One of the main purposes of
the program is to better understand the relationships between gas
hydrates and episodes of sediment instability that may pose a threat to
the petroleum industry’s infrastructure and safety of operations.

The MMS is in the
process of completing the first comprehensive assessment of gas hydrate
on the OCS since a 1995 assessment published by USGS. The
gas hydrate resource potential for all
areas of the OCS is under evaluation with preliminary results for the
Gulf of Mexico available.

Large
chemosynthetic animals were unknown to science until 1977, when they
were first discovered at hydrothermal vents in the Pacific Ocean. Two
groups of researchers made the first discoveries of these creatures in
the central Gulf of Mexico in November 1984. One group was part of the
Northern Gulf of Mexico Continental Slope Study, funded by MMS from 1983
to 1988. While this
research initially seemed unrelated to gas hydrates, subsequent research
to learn more about these benthic creatures in 1997 discovered a new
species of polychaete worm, known as "ice worms," that actually live on
the outcrops of frozen methane hydrates that occur in deepwater areas of
the Gulf of Mexico.
Since the discovery,
many more
chemosynthetic communities have been discovered in the Gulf
of Mexico through MMS funded studies. The MMS ensures their protection
by requiring that industry avoid their locations.