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Collett, Timothy S. (2001): Natural-gas hydrates; resource of the twenty-first century?
Leg/Site/Hole:
Related Expeditions:
ODP 146
ODP 164
ODP 146 892
ODP 164 994
ODP 164 997
Identifier:
ID:
2002-066665
Type:
georefid
Creator:
Name:
Collett, Timothy S.
Affiliation:
U. S. Geological Survey, Denver, CO, United States
Role:
author
Identification:
Title:
Natural-gas hydrates; resource of the twenty-first century?
Year:
2001
Source:
In: Downey, Marlan W. (editor), Threet, Jack C. (editor), Morgan, William A. (editor), Petroleum provinces of the twenty-first century
Publisher:
American Association of Petroleum Geologists, Tulsa, OK, United States
Volume:
74
Issue:
Pages:
85-108
Abstract:
Although considerable uncertainty and disagreement prevail concerning the world's gas-hydrate resources, the estimated amount of gas in those gas-hydrate accumulations greatly exceeds the volume of known conventional gas reserves. However, the role that gas hydrates will play in contributing to the world's energy requirements will ultimately depend less on the volume of gas-hydrate resources than on the cost to extract them. Gas hydrates occur in sedimentary deposits under conditions of pressure and temperature present in permafrost regions and beneath the sea in outer continental margins. The combined information from arctic gas-hydrate studies shows that in permafrost regions, gas hydrates may exist at subsurface depths ranging from about 130 m to 2000 m. The presence of gas hydrates in offshore continental margins has been inferred mainly from anomalous seismic reflectors (known as bottom-simulating reflectors) that have been mapped at depths below the seafloor ranging from approximately 100 m to 1100 m. Current estimates of the amount of gas in the world's marine and permafrost gas-hydrate accumulations are in rough accord at about 20,000 trillion m (super 3) . Gas hydrate as an energy commodity is often grouped with other unconventional hydrocarbon resources. In most cases, the evolution of a nonproducible unconventional resource to a producible energy resource has relied on significant capital investment and technology development. To evaluate the energy-resource potential of gas hydrates will also require the support of sustained research and development programs. Despite the fact that relatively little is known about the ultimate resource potential of gas hydrates, it is certain that they are a vast storehouse of natural gas, and significant technical challenges will need to be met before this enormous resource can be considered an economically producible reserve.
Language:
English
Genre:
Serial
Rights:
URL:
Coverage:
Geographic coordinates:
North:44.4032
West:-125.0709
East: -75.3245
South:31.4708
Keywords:
Economic geology, geology of energy sources; Atlantic Ocean; Blake Plateau; East Pacific; enhanced recovery; gas hydrates; global; Leg 146; Leg 164; natural gas; new energy sources; North Atlantic; North Pacific; Northeast Pacific; Northwest Atlantic; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 892; ODP Site 994; ODP Site 997; offshore; Pacific Ocean; permafrost; petroleum; petroleum exploration; potential deposits; production; West Atlantic;
.
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