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Australian Energy Producers Journal Australian Energy Producers Journal Society
Journal of Australian Energy Producers
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Discovering Australia’s future petroleum resources: the strategic geoscience information role of government

Trevor G Powell
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STIR Science Services

The APPEA Journal 48(1) 299-318 https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ07020
Published: 2008

Abstract

Australia’s production of oil is in steady decline. Given the maturity of the oil producing areas, only the discovery of a significant new oil province can arrest the long-term decline in Australian production. Moreover, the increase in demand for clean energy and the location of Australia’s major gas reserves means additional gas resources are also desirable. Many sedimentary basins both onshore and offshore are under-explored and are classed as exploration frontiers. Only Australian national, State and Territory governments, acting jointly or severally in partnership with the private sector, can ensure that the petroleum resource endowment of these frontiers is appropriately explored and developed to the benefit of the nation. As a nation, Australia needs to know the extent of this resource endowment.

A major barrier to the exploration of these frontier basins is the absence of sufficient basic geological information to allow exploration investors to make well-informed decisions. Understanding prospectivity is a primary consideration for explorationists, but such assessments are fundamentally dependent upon an infrastructure of geoscience data, concepts and knowledge which provide the framework of successful exploration. The absence of information means high risk and reduces the possibility of investment in exploration in frontier basins. For exploration frontiers the basic geological information collected by State and national geological surveys is fundamental to informed decision-making by exploration companies.

Australia competes with other nations for global exploration investment. Given the sovereign rights to the resource and the importance of oil and gas to the nation’s economy and security, provision of pre-competitive geoscience information by government is an effective way of attracting exploration investment to Australia. However, the supply of pre-competitive geoscience data—which includes ready access to pre-existing industry data and information—is a strategic enterprise that must be maintained for many years if it is to serve the needs of the nation and the industry through the long lead and cycle times inherent in the exploration and production cycle. Promotion of successful exploration is dependent on the maintenance of a competitive exploration environment that includes the free flow of relevant information in forms that meet the need of all market players. Australia has excellent examples of strategies and case histories where provision and promotion of geoscience information has been effective in attracting significant exploration investment.

Trevor Powell graduated with a BSc and PhD in organic geochemistry from the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England. He is President of the Australian Geoscience Council and Chairman of the Advisory Board for the Integrated Marine Observing System. He was formerly Deputy Chief Executive Officer at Geoscience Australia (GA) where he has also held positions as Chief of Petroleum and Marine Division and Chief of the Onshore Sedimentary and Petroleum Geology. He began his career with BMR (now GA) as a petroleum geochemist. He re-joined BMR in 1983 following 10 years with the Geological Survey Canada where he was Head of the Petroleum Geology Program. His research interests have been mainly in organic and petroleum geochemistry, palaeogeography, petroleum resource assessment and environmental geochemistry. He holds an APPEA Lewis Weeks Gold Medal, a Medal of Merit of the Canadian Society of Petroleum Geologists and is a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering.

tpowell@actewagl.net.au