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Journal of Australian Energy Producers
RESEARCH ARTICLE

THE JANSZ GAS FIELD, CARNARVON BASIN, AUSTRALIA

C.C. Jenkins, D.M. Maughan, J.H. Acton, A. Duckett, B.E. Korn and R.P. Teakle

The APPEA Journal 43(1) 303 - 324
Published: 2003

Abstract

The Jansz gas field is located in permit WA-268-P, 70 km northwest of the Gorgon gas field in the Carnarvon Basin. The Jansz–1 discovery well was drilled in April 2000 and intersected 29 m of net gas pay in an Oxfordian age shallow marine sandstone reservoir. The well drilled a stratigraphic trap on the western limb of the Kangaroo Syncline.

The Io–1 well was drilled in January 2001 in the adjacent permit WA-267-P (18 km from Jansz–1) and intersected the same Oxfordian sandstone reservoir penetrated by Jansz–1, with a total of 44 m of net gas pay. The Tithonian and the Upper Triassic Brigadier Sandstone gas reservoirs at Geryon–1 (1999) and Callirhoe–1 (2001) in WA-267-P are in pressure communication with the Oxfordian gas reservoir at Jansz–1 and Io–1. Consequently, the three different age reservoirs comprise a single gas pool, with a common gas/water contact.

The Jansz gas field has been delineated by four wells and 2D seismic. The gas sandstones have a prominent amplitude versus offset response, which defines the field limits. The Jansz gas field is confirmed by drilling to be an areally extensive (2,000 km2) gas accumulation with a gross column height of 400 m and an estimated 20 TCF (566 G.m3) recoverable sales gas, which represents 40% of the discovered gas resources in the deepwater Carnarvon Basin. The size of the Jansz gas field and its remoteness from existing pipeline gas markets suggests that an export LNG project will be the basis for its development.

https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ02016

© CSIRO 2003

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