SPE Economics & Management
Volume 3,
Number 3,
July 2011,
pp. 149-162
Summary
Two important trends affecting the expected growth of global gas markets are
(1) the shift by many industrialized countries from coal-fired electricity
generation to the use of natural gas to generate electricity and (2) the
industrialization of the heavily populated Asian countries of India and China.
This paper surveys discovered gas in stranded conventional gas accumulations
and presents estimates of the cost of developing and producing stranded gas in
selected countries. Stranded gas is natural gas in discovered or identified
fields that is not currently commercially producible for either physical or
economic reasons. Published reserves of gas at the global level do not
distinguish between volumes of gas in producing fields and volumes in
nonproducing fields. Data on stranded gas reported here--that is the volumes,
geographical distribution, and size distributions of stranded gas fields at the
country and regional level--are based on the examination of individual-field
data and represent a significant improvement in information available to
industry and government decision makers. Globally, stranded gas is pervasive,
but large volumes in large accumulations are concentrated in only a few
areas.
The cost component of the paper focuses on stranded conventional gas
accumulations in Africa and South America that have the potential to augment
supplies to Europe. The methods described for the computation of extraction and
transport costs are innovative in that they use information on the sizes and
geographical distribution of the identified stranded gas fields. The costs are
based on industry data specific to the country and geologic basin where the
stranded gas is located. Gas supplies to Europe can be increased significantly
at competitive costs by the development of stranded gas. Net extraction costs
of producing the identified gas depend critically on the natural-gas-liquids
(NGLs) content, the prevailing prices of liquids, the size of the gas
accumulation, and the deposit's location. The diversity of the distribution of
stranded gas is one obstacle to the exercise of market power by the Gas
Exporting Countries Forum (GECF).
© 2011. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
24 July 2010
- Meeting paper published:
9 March 2010
- Revised manuscript received:
16 December 2010
- Manuscript approved:
28 January 2011
- Version of record:
15 July 2011