Is the US the New Swing Producer? The Price Responsiveness of Tight Oil

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard G. Newell ◽  
Brian Prest
2016 ◽  
Vol 56 (2) ◽  
pp. 590
Author(s):  
Behnam Talebi

The Toolebuc Formation in the Eromanga and Carpentaria basins in western Queensland shares many characteristics with successful tight oil plays in the US. A study by the Geological Survey of Queensland has examined key parameters for this formation, including depth, thickness, lithology, mineralogy, maturity (both vitrinite reflectance and Tmax), total organic carbon and mud gas compositions and identified a possible play fairway in the central Eromanga Basin. Mudgas wetness ratios indicate that in areas modelled to be more mature, oil may be present in the Toolebuc Formation. These areas are typically in the central Eromanga Basin where the Toolebuc Formation is deepest, though oil responses have been calculated for wells that are shallower. This is contradicted by the apparent maturity of the formation based on vitrinite reflectance and Tmax measurements. Initial burial history modelling of the six petroleum wells indicates that DIO Hammond–1, SSL Clinton–1, DIO Tanbar North–1 and DIO Marengo–1 are in main oil window (0.7–1.0 %Ro) while DIO Denley–1 and DIO Ingella–1 are in the early oil window (0.55–0.7 %Ro). A single erosional event of 550 m of the Winton Formation has been assumed for this modelling. These wells are the deepest intersections of the Toolebuc Formation where it has been modelled to have higher maturity, and mudgas wetness ratios indicate oil may be present. Further refinement of these models and examination of additional wells is needed to better understand the potential for the Toolebuc Formation to have generated petroleum.


2021 ◽  
Vol 73 (02) ◽  
pp. 32-36
Author(s):  
Pat Davis Szymczak

Despite possessing some of the world’s largest shale-gas resources, China is likely in 2020 to have produced less than half of the 30 Bcm per year in shale gas that the government set as a goal in its latest Five-Year Plan. While such a small volume may make shale production seem inconsequential to China’s overall energy balance, it is clear that when it comes to developing unconventional hydrocarbons, China is playing a long game. With regard to shale alone, a 2013 US Energy Information Administration study noted that China has the world’s second-largest technically recoverable shale-gas resources at an estimated 1,115 Tcf; the US is first with 1,161 Tcf. Even more to the point, China is one of only four countries (including the US, Canada, and Argentina) that produce commercial volumes of both shale gas and of tight oil. But it is the lack of efficient technologies and infrastructure that stand in the way of China besting the US and creating its own “shale revolution.” China’s most attractive reserves occur in remote, mountainous areas where, in some cases, shale resources can lie as deep as 3500 m. In separate papers presented in October during the 2020 SPE Russian Petroleum Technology Conference, the China National Petroleum Company (CNPC) detailed new technologies it is applying to meet some of these challenges. Paper SPE 202066, coauthored by subsidiaries of CNPC, Downhole Service Company and CCDC Petroleum Drilling & Technology Company Ltd., details the application of enhanced-hydraulic- fracturing technology (EHFT) to raise the effective stimulated reservoir volume (SRV) in the Sichuan shale basin. A second paper (SPE 202062), coauthored by CNPC and Halliburton, offers a case study in tight-oil production in Daqing employing an intensive fracture-cluster-completion strategy using a microemulsion flowback technology. The Spice in Sichuan Shale China boasts three shale basins (Sichuan, Tarim, and Yantze), but its principal development focus is in the southwestern province of Sichuan, which holds half of the country’s shale reserves. In developing fields such as Weiyuan, Changning, and Jiaoshiba, producers target the Ordovician Wufeng-Silurian Longmaxi formation. The total proved geological reserves of these three gas fields exceeds 500 Bcm, the authors noted in their paper. To develop infrastructure supporting industrial-scale operations and to introduce and test new technologies to raise shale output, China has established several national pilot demonstration areas. One of those is the Weiyuan national shale demonstration area in south Sichuan, where the authors quote an annual production of 2.5 Bcm. Staged horizontal fracturing is the main technology used at Weiyuan and other Chinese shale fields as producers strive to expand the fracture extension area, increase the reconstruction volume, and improve the productivity of single wells. An analysis of production data from Weiyuan showed, however, that the long-term conductivity of fractures is limited because the length and height of supporting fractures are short. Thus, because of the limited volume of reconstruction, production decreases rapidly and efficiency suffers as pressure declines.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raymond Li ◽  
Chi-Keung Woo ◽  
Asher Tishler ◽  
Jay Zarnikau

2004 ◽  
Vol 32 (1) ◽  
pp. 181-184
Author(s):  
Amy Garrigues

On September 15, 2003, the US. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit held that agreements between pharmaceutical and generic companies not to compete are not per se unlawful if these agreements do not expand the existing exclusionary right of a patent. The Valley DrugCo.v.Geneva Pharmaceuticals decision emphasizes that the nature of a patent gives the patent holder exclusive rights, and if an agreement merely confirms that exclusivity, then it is not per se unlawful. With this holding, the appeals court reversed the decision of the trial court, which held that agreements under which competitors are paid to stay out of the market are per se violations of the antitrust laws. An examination of the Valley Drugtrial and appeals court decisions sheds light on the two sides of an emerging legal debate concerning the validity of pay-not-to-compete agreements, and more broadly, on the appropriate balance between the seemingly competing interests of patent and antitrust laws.


2000 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 107-114 ◽  
Author(s):  
Louis M. Hsu ◽  
Judy Hayman ◽  
Judith Koch ◽  
Debbie Mandell

Summary: In the United States' normative population for the WAIS-R, differences (Ds) between persons' verbal and performance IQs (VIQs and PIQs) tend to increase with an increase in full scale IQs (FSIQs). This suggests that norm-referenced interpretations of Ds should take FSIQs into account. Two new graphs are presented to facilitate this type of interpretation. One of these graphs estimates the mean of absolute values of D (called typical D) at each FSIQ level of the US normative population. The other graph estimates the absolute value of D that is exceeded only 5% of the time (called abnormal D) at each FSIQ level of this population. A graph for the identification of conventional “statistically significant Ds” (also called “reliable Ds”) is also presented. A reliable D is defined in the context of classical true score theory as an absolute D that is unlikely (p < .05) to be exceeded by a person whose true VIQ and PIQ are equal. As conventionally defined reliable Ds do not depend on the FSIQ. The graphs of typical and abnormal Ds are based on quadratic models of the relation of sizes of Ds to FSIQs. These models are generalizations of models described in Hsu (1996) . The new graphical method of identifying Abnormal Ds is compared to the conventional Payne-Jones method of identifying these Ds. Implications of the three juxtaposed graphs for the interpretation of VIQ-PIQ differences are discussed.


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