Oil and gas resource plays: new frontiers with enormous potential
Greg LeveilleThe APPEA Journal 49(2) 579-579 https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ08052
Published: 2009
Abstract
After 150 years of exploration and production onshore North America, most of the conventional, high-quality resources worth finding have been found. This has not, however, diminished explorations and production (E&P) investment activity since enormous volumes of hydrocarbons locked within oil and gas resource plays remain to be extracted. Individual resource plays—which include coal seam methane, shales, tight sandstones and tight carbonates—can contain several tens of trillions of cubic feet of gas equivalent (TCFGE), with the total prize likely to exceed 1,000 TCFGE. While individual well recoveries are modest (because these deposits often underlie areas of many hundreds of square miles) play-scale production rates and value creation can compete favorably with conventional E&P projects given appropriate fiscal terms and development costs.
keywords: Resource plays, shale, tight sandstone, tight carbonate, coal, North America, US, United States, Australia, coal seam methane, coal bed methane, LNG, new frontiers, ConocoPhillips, Leveille, APPEA
Greg Leveille is ConocoPhillips’ general manager of the United States Lower 48 Exploration, business development and land. He began his career with Conoco in 1984 in Lafayette, Louisiana, and has since lived and worked in New Orleans; London; Aberdeen, Scotland; Houston; Anchorage; and Farmington, New Mexico. During the first decade of his career he held various exploration, development and operations geology assignments, working both in the United States and Europe. Beginning in 1995 he held leadership positions in strategic planning and portfolio management, asset management, project management, upstream technology, business management and operations before moving to his current role in March 2006. greg.p.leveille@conocophillips.com |