APS March Meeting 2013
Volume 58, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 18–22, 2013;
Baltimore, Maryland
Session F9: Invited Session: The Impact of Hydraulic Fracturing
8:00 AM–10:24 AM,
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
Room: 308
Sponsoring
Units:
FPS GERA
Chair: Richard Wiener, Research Corporation for Scientific Advancement
Abstract ID: BAPS.2013.MAR.F9.4
Abstract: F9.00004 : The natural gas revolution -- Scale, cost and uncertainty
9:48 AM–10:24 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Francis O'Sullivan
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
Over the past decade, the natural gas industry landscape in North America
has undergone tremendous change. The focus of exploration and production has
shifted from ``conventional'' to ``unconventional'' resources, and in
particular to shale formations. The fact that some shale formations contain
significant volumes of gas-in-place has been known for as long as gas
production has taken place -- these rocks have always been viewed as the
source rock for conventional gas resources. What changed over the past
decade is that it became possible to recover this gas directly from the
source rock at economically attractive production rates. Horizontal drilling
and hydraulic fracturing technologies were key to these developments.
This presentation will describe how the unlocking of shale gas through
horizontal drilling and fracturing has changed perspectives regarding the
scale of the overall recoverable natural gas resource in the United States.
The potential impact of shale gas on the global gas resource will also be
described. The results of volumetric assessments of recoverable shale gas
will be presented and the critical issue of uncertainty surrounding these
estimates will be highlighted. The economics of shale gas relative to
conventional resources in the United States will be described, and this will
be compared with the economics of gas elsewhere in the world. In discussing
the economics of shale gas, the very important issue of intra and inter-play
well-to-well performance variability will be highlighted.
The presentation will also describe some of the major environmental concerns
that surround that shale gas production. The issue of water intensity in
hydraulic fracturing operations will be examined, as will the concerns
regarding surface and subsurface water contamination. The debate regarding
the GHG footprint of hydraulic fracturing operations will be described and
an assessment of ``potential'' and ``actual'' fugitive methane emissions
from hydraulic fracturing operations in the major U.S. shale plays will be
presented.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2013.MAR.F9.4