Oil... The renewable resource, page
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Topic started on 2-5-2006 @ 05:00 AM by Grailkeeper
I came across the following article regarding oil fields that are all but dried up, and then start producing even more oil that originally calculated.

I was unaware of the research and conjecture involving this theory and thought I might share.

By the late '80s, the platform's production had slipped to less than 4,000 barrels per day, and was considered pumped out. Done. Suddenly, in 1990, production soared back to 15,000 barrels a day, and the reserves which had been estimated at 60 million barrels in the '70s, were recalculated at 400 million barrels. Interestingly, the measured geological age of the new oil was quantifiably different than the oil pumped in the '70s


www.worldnetdaily.com...


The following is another article based on a single location and pertains more to the island located off the coast of Louisiana called Eugene 330.


www.oralchelation.com...

The article is from the New York Times and was published back in 1999. Although its over 7 years ago, the preceding link I included has reference to further studies involving these occurrences.

From what I have read, its seems to be a plausible explanation for the oil replenishing itself.

If this theory is correct, oil strongholds across the earth would be non-existent.




[edit on 2-5-2006 by Grailkeeper] Brain not functioning properly yet

[edit on 2-5-2006 by Grailkeeper]


reply posted on 10-5-2006 @ 03:08 PM by StellarX
Some resources for the serious investigators

Greasing the Palms of the Oil Barons

New oil being created today?

CONSIDERATIONS ABOUT RECENT PREDICTIONS
OF IMPENDING SHORTAGES OF PETROLEUM EVALUATED FROM THE PERSPECTIVE OF MODERN PETROLEUM SCIENCE.


Fears of dwindling oil supply unfounded.

Oil, Oil, Everywhere . . .

Odd Reservoir Off Louisiana Prods
Oil Experts to Seek a Deeper Meaning


Fuel's Paradise

The Origins of Oil and Petroleum

Thomas Gold

New Ideas in Science

Sustainable oil?

Discovering oil

Oil Reserves Are Increasing

Oil and Gas -"Renewable Resources"?

Petroleum under pressure

------------

in this article, research geochemist Michael Lewan is quoted as one of the most knowledgeable advocates of the opposing theory, that petroleum is a "fossil fuel". Yet even Lewan admits "I don't think anybody has ever doubted that there is an inorganic source of hydrocarbons. The key question is, 'Do they exist in commercial quantities?'"

The AAPG article also mentions a letter published in Nature, April 2002, "Abiogenic formation of alkanes in the Earth's crust as a minor source for global hydrocarbon reservoirs" which discusses evidence that methane gas from the Kidd Creek Mine in Ontario is of abiogenic origin.

The AAPG is organizing a conference in Vienna this July 11-14, 2004, Origin of Petroleum -- Biogenic and/or Abiogenic and Its Significance in Hydrocarbon Exploration and Productions

www.aapg.org...


The call for papers states
"For half a century, scientists from the former Soviet Union (FSU) have recognized that the petroleum produced from fields in the FSU have been generated by abiogenic processes. This is not a new concept, being first reported in 1951. The Russians have used this concept as an exploration strategy and have successfully discovered petroleum fields of which a number of these fields produce either partly and entirely from crystalline basement."

Note that the organizers of the conference include Michel Halbouty, recipient of a "Legendary Geoscientist" award www.agiweb.org... as well as Ernest Mancini of the University of Alabama, and the cornucopian author Peter Odell of Erasmus University. Evidently they are taking the abiogenic theory seriously, at least to the extent of organizing this conference.

www.melbourne.indymedia.org...

--------
Technical resources....

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
www.pnas.org...
www.pnas.org... maxtoshow=&HITS=10&hits=10&RESULTFORMAT=&searchid=1116989848949_817&stored_sear ch=&FIRSTINDEX=0&minscore=5000&journalcode=pnas
www.pnas.org... maxtoshow=&HITS=10&hits=10&RESULTFORMAT=&searchid=1116989848949_817&stored_sear ch=&FIRSTINDEX=0&minscore=5000&journalcode=pnas
www.pnas.org... maxtoshow=&HITS=10&hits=10&RESULTFORMAT=&searchid=1116989848949_817&stored_sear ch=&FIRSTINDEX=0&minscore=5000&journalcode=pnas

The evolution of multicomponent systems at high pressures: VI. The thermodynamic stability of the hydrogen–carbon system: The genesis of hydrocarbons and the origin of petroleum


reply posted on 10-5-2006 @ 03:19 PM by StellarX
Some of the American scientist involved.

J.F. Kenney, Gas Resources Corporation, Houston, TX
V. A. Krayushkin, T. I. Tchebanenko, V. P. Klochko, Ye. S. Dvoryanin
Institute of Geological Sciences, Kiev, Ukraine
gasresources.net...

Thomas Gold, Professor emeritus of astronomy at Cornell University
About the man... www.news.cornell.edu..." target="_blank" class="postlink" rel="nofollow"> www.news.cornell.edu...
The science... people.cornell.edu... based on data from the U.S. Geological Survey.

American Association of Petroleum Geologists www.aapg.org..." target="_blank" class="postlink" rel="nofollow"> www.aapg.org...

Gas Research Institute ....
www.gastechnology.org... g03/GasAMessengerfromSubsurfaceResources.pdf" target="_blank" class="postlink" rel="nofollow"> www.gastechnology.org... g03/GasAMessengerfromSubsurfaceResources.pdf

Geotimes
www.geotimes.org...

Michael C. Lynch, president of Strategic Energy and Economic Research and formerly chief energy economist for DRI-WEFA.
www.energyseer.com...

Jean Whelan, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute, Massachusetts
www.whoi.edu... and www-ocean.tamu.edu... Professor Mahlon Kennicutt II , Chemical Oceanography, Texas A&M University: Department of Oceanography both had some very choice things to say that im still looking for in my mess of a links directory.....

Stellar


reply posted on 5-6-2008 @ 10:14 AM by Anonymous ATS
reply to post by StellarX



Most offshore oil fields have a strong water drive. In a thick oil formation, wells may have partly depleted the reservoir pressure around the wellbore and there probably are main channels of drainage that have occurred. This can be partly due to stratigraphic locations of indivdual wells in a reservoir and may also be influenced by the rate of production that occurred. When fluid withdrawal has diminished to a low rate, the water drive may increase the reservoir pressure again as a function of time. In addition gravity drainage will assist in the re-orientation of oil to the top of the structure and water to the bottom of the structure..

I don't have particular knowledge of the field in question, but do know of individual wells that have watered out and set for several years before a a decision was made to work over the wells to a shallower reservoir and then found out that the existing completion would flow more than a 1000 bbls of oil per day. However, the remaining reserve life was much smaller than the earlier completion.

I also know of fault blocks that had wells within approximately 30 feet of each other and one was at virgin pressure and the other was partially depleted. Sometimes earth movements may fracture a reservoir seal that woud allow oil to flow from one fault block into another one.

I doubt very seriously that there is any appreciable resaturation of old oil field reservoirs occurring. It has been proved time and time again that the best place to look for oil and gas is locations where they have already been found. Very frequently deeper structures may hold accumulations of hydrocarbons that were never penetrated because the shallower reservoirs that have been found were put on production.

mod edit: removed poster's e-mail address

[edit on 6/5/2008 by Gools]
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