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The APPEA Journal The APPEA Journal Society
Journal of Australian Energy Producers
RESEARCH ARTICLE (Non peer reviewed)

The Deep Australian Water Resource Information System (DAWRIS) and the petroleum

Stephen Hostetler A and Tom Loutit B

Tom Loutit presented this extended abstract to the 49th APPEA Conference on Monday, 1 June 2009 in Darwin.

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A FrogTech Level 1, 2 King St Canberra ACT 2600 Australia

B FrogTech

The APPEA Journal 49(2) 599-599 https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ08072
Published: 2009

Abstract

The total sustainable yield of groundwater in Australia is not known even though many regions of Australia rely on groundwater for urban and rural water supply. Knowledge of deep groundwater resources is particularly poor, with little known about reservoirs below about 100 metres depth. The resource industries often discover and produce large volumes of groundwater that is subsequently evaporated, reinjected, cleaned and discharged into the ocean or streams, or supplied to urban and rural users. In addition, geothermal power and carbon capture and storage projects are also reliant on understanding groundwater processes at depth. Despite this need, Australia as a nation does not have an information system that provides data and interpretation on all groundwater reservoirs from the basement to the surface.

The Deep Australian Water Resource Information System (DAWRIS) is designed to integrate existing groundwater knowledge with previously under-utilised datasets (such as basin analysis, petroleum wells, seismic sections and geophysics) to place deep groundwater within existing government water frameworks. In addition, DAWRIS will also use technologies developed and applied within the petroleum industry to assess groundwater resources.

The challenge for DAWRIS is to build a consistent tectonostratigraphic framework (geofabric) in which to place observations on reservoir properties, groundwater sustainability and water quality. The geofabric will then act as a basis in which to predict these properties away from control points.

The petroleum industry will be able to use DAWRIS to predict the volume and quality of groundwater co-production, plan remediation and reuse strategies, and to help shape Australia’s water agenda.

keywords: Unconventional groundwater, petroleum industry techniques, geofabric, multiple-use, aquifers, reservoirs, conceptual model

Stephen Hostetler has over 15 years experience in the acquisition and interpretation of groundwater data for the sustainable management of water resources. His expertise includes groundwater, isotopic chemistry and analysis of large datasets as well as 3D GIS mapping and understanding groundwater movement.

shostetler@frogtech.com.au

Tom is managing director of FrOG Tech Pty Ltd and has been working in the petroleum sector for the past 20 years. Tom has recently started to focus on fluids other than petroleum, such as groundwater and geothermal systems. He is currently the president of the Petroleum Exploration Society of Australia (PESA).

tloutit@frogtech.com.au