June 11, 2012

Bigger than Bakken

The Bakken Shale is a huge resource for the USA -- it is estimated to hold 24 Billion barrels of oil. From Forbes:
Meet The Oil Shale Eighty Times Bigger Than The Bakken
Everyone has heard about the Bakken shale, the huge expanse of oil-bearing rock underneath North Dakota and Montana that billionaire Harold Hamm thinks could yield 24 billion barrels of oil in the decades to come. The Bakken is a huge boon, both to the economic health of the northern Plains states, but also to the petroleum balance of the United States. From just 60,000 barrels per day five years ago, the Bakken is now giving up 500,000 bpd, with 210,000 bpd of that coming on in just the past year. Given the availability of enough rigs to drill it and crews to frack it, there�s no reason why the Bakken couldn�t be producing more than 1 million bpd by the end of the decade, a level that could be maintained for halfway through the century.

But as great as the Bakken is, I learned last week about another oil shale play that dwarfs it. It�s called The Bazhenov. It�s in Western Siberia, in Russia. And while the Bakken is big, the Bazhenov � according to a report last week by Sanford Bernstein�s lead international oil analyst Oswald Clint � �covers 2.3 million square kilometers or 570 million acres, which is the size of Texas and the Gulf of Mexico combined.� This is 80 times bigger than the Bakken.

Getting access to the Bazhenov appears to be a key element in both ExxonMobil and Statoil�s big new joint ventures with Kremlin-controlled Rosneft. Exxon�s recent statement says the two companies have agreed �to jointly develop tight oil production technologies in Western Siberia.�

No wonder. The geology of the Bazhenov looks just as good if not better. Its pay zone averages about 100 feet thick, and as Clint points out, the Bazhenov has lots of cracks and fractures that could make its oil flow more readily. The couple of test wells that he cites flowed at an average of 400 barrels per day. That�s in line with the Bakken average.
Peak oil anyone? Very cool news. PDF document on the Bazhenov from the USGS here Anything that makes the Arab nations less relevant is a good thing in my book. Posted by DaveH at June 11, 2012 2:56 PM
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