SPE Economics & Management
Volume 4,
Number 4,
October 2012,
pp. 215-221
Summary
Long-term economic viability of unconventional reservoirs is evaluated from
the profit-maximizing perspective of a producing company. The case of the
liquids-rich production from the Bakken field is considered as a representative
of unconventional resources. A profit-margin optimization model is constructed
for a company to meet the demand it faces from a stock of conventional and
unconventional resources given different sets of exogenously determined prices.
The model is parameterized using the different production decline rates of the
two sources, physical and economic exhaustibility of the resources, and the
ever increasing marginal cost of adding conventional resources into the company
portfolio. The optimal extraction path of oil from the conventional and
unconventional reservoirs is assessed, and the long-term economic consequence
of keeping the unconventional resource in the ground for different oil-price
scenarios is predicted. The model reveals the appropriate composition of a
portfolio of conventional and unconventional resources. In the case of a
high-price scenario, the optimal efficient extraction path is the pursuit of
additional conventional resources before using unconventionals to meet the
demand. For the reference-price scenario, the decline of the conventional
reserves should be substituted with unconventionals from the beginning. The
profitability of the enhanced oil recovery (EOR) applications in unconventional
reservoirs and when they should be implemented are also determined. Contrary to
common expectation, it is shown that the EOR technology is more justifiable in
the case of a lower price forecast.
© 2012. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
17 July 2012
- Meeting paper published:
25 September 2012
- Manuscript approved:
27 September 2012
- Published online:
1 November 2012
- Version of record:
1 November 2012