Resource Assessment
Overview
Resource Assessment Methodology
Estimating Undiscovered Technically Recoverable Resources
The available
methods of estimating oil and natural gas resources for an area are many and
differ significantly. The MMS has two primary methods:
(1)
number and size assessment and
(2)
subjective methods.
Number
and size assessment models require information on the number and size of
accumulations discovered in a region. Consequently, discovery process models
provide reliable results only in mature areas with a significant number of
discoveries. The subjective methods rely less on historical records of
exploration efforts and discovery records and more on descriptive geologic
characteristics of a province, basin, or play. The quantities of
undiscovered oil and natural gas are then estimated by quantifying
volumetric reservoir variables and estimating the number of accumulations
expected to exist. In both methods, a thorough analysis of the subjective
probabilities (risks) of occurrence of variables leading to the formation,
migration, trapping, and preservation of hydrocarbons at a play, basin, or
province level is critical.
The
main steps of the general methodology utilized by the MMS for assessing oil
and natural gas resources on the OCS are listed below. These steps comprise
the basis of the software package utilized by MMS with the acronym GRASP,
i.e. Geologic Resource Assessment Program.
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Compile play data
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Generate pool size distribution from probabilistic distributions of
volumetric reservoir parameters.
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Generate a number of pools distributions.
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Determine individual oil, natural gas, and mixed pool sizes by rank.
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Establish individual pool size rank conditional to discovery data.
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Generate play potential resources distribution. |
In
recognition of the differences in the extent of data and information
available among the OCS areas (attributable mostly to the degree of past
exploration and development activities), some variances in the use of GRASP
modules and procedures were incorporated. The frontier and conceptual plays,
in which available data are sparse and good analogs are not identified, are
analyzed through the subjective method using GRASP
(See
Chart 1)
(26.24 KB PDF).
In this method, individual distributions of input variables are subjectively
prepared and, through GRASP, ranked pool size distributions are generated.
Most plays in the Alaska OCS and the Pacific OCS were analyzed this way. In
the case of frontier plays for which the assessors feel confident that an
analog exists, such as in the Atlantic OCS, the analyst can generate a pool
size distribution from the statistical parameters of the appropriately
scaled ranked pool size distribution of the analog plays and can estimate
the play resources using GRASP.
For
established plays, such as those in the Gulf of Mexico and in southern
California where significant amounts of pool data are available from
discovered fields, a pool size distribution curve for a play can be
generated from the distribution of discovered pools.
(See
Chart 2)
(49.15 KB PDF).
The
estimates of undiscovered oil and natural gas resources attributed to
basins, provinces, regions, or other areas are derived by statistically
aggregating the play-level resource distributions of the plays of that area.
Estimating Undiscovered Economically Recoverable
Resources
Generally, the number of pools and their sizes for each trial from the
geologic modules are the basic geologic inputs into the economic module of
GRASP. The costs of exploration, development, and transportation, as well as
tariffs based upon logical exploration, development, production, and
transportation scenarios, were estimated for each OCS play, or other
operational subarea where activities, costs, or other circumstances
warranted. The latest version of the model will be adjusting the costs of
exploration and development activities to the projected increases of oil and
gas prices. The adjustment factors at each oil and gas price point on the
price supply curves are applied to a base set of costs for the following
categories exploration wells, delineation wells, development wells, subsea
wells, platforms, production equipment, oil and gas pipelines, and operating
costs.
Estimates of economically recoverable resources are then derived for a
specific price by (1) subjecting the distributions to multiple computer
iterations simulating the development of the hydrocarbon accumulations
associated with the areas; and (2) determining a discounted-cash-flow
analysis for the area’s resources using specified economic parameters. The
resources that would exceed the economic hurdles are then totaled and become
one data point on the price-supply curve. The process is repeated for
numerous prices, and a continuous distribution curve is then generated.
The
Gulf of Mexico, Atlantic, and the Pacific contain stacked plays (i.e., plays
overlie other plays at different depths). In determining the economic
viability of such plays, assessors needed to consider the concurrent
exploration, development, and production of possible pools in these plays.
Otherwise, the estimates would be overly conservative. The current estimates
of undiscovered economically recoverable OCS oil and natural gas resources
were developed using the following parameters.
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Fixed oil and gas prices (no real price changes) |
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Discount rate -after tax rate of return |
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Percent royalty rate |
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Percent tax rate |
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Percent inflation rate |
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Cost of exploration, |
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Cost of development |
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Cost of transportation including tariffs |
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Development scheduling scenarios |
Results of the Assessment
For results of the assessment refer to
2006 Resources
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