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Journal of Australian Energy Producers
RESEARCH ARTICLE

THE THYLACINE AND GEOGRAPHE GAS DISCOVERIES, OFFSHORE EASTERN OTWAY BASIN

D.C.B. Cliff, S.C. Tye and R. Taylor

The APPEA Journal 44(1) 441 - 462
Published: 2004

Abstract

The Thylacine and Geographe gas fields were discovered in mid-2001 in the offshore Otway Basin, in permits T/30P and VIC/P43 respectively. Geographe is 55 km south of Port Campbell and Thylacine is a further 15 km offshore, in the depo-centre of the Shipwreck Trough, in water depths of 80 m to 100 m. The Thylacine–1 well intersected a 277 m gas column in Turonian to Santonian aged reservoirs. Geographe–1 intersected a 233 m gas column in a similar sedimentary section. Thylacine–2, 5.7 km west of Thylacine–1, confirmed the field extent, and flowed gas at 28 MMSCFD (0.79 Mm3/D). Critical to the discovery of these fields was the Investigator 3D seismic survey, which covered about 1,000 km2 of the central Shipwreck Trough. The pre-drill chance of success of both structures was high-graded as a result of excellent structural imaging and the conformance of amplitude and AVO anomalies to mapped closures. The interpretation of this survey and the subsequent drilling of the Thylacine and Geographe Fields have dramatically increased the understanding of the structure and stratigraphy of the offshore eastern Otway Basin particularly in relation to the Shipwreck Trough and the Sorell Fault Zone.

Combined dry gas reserves at the proved and probable level stand at 0.85 TCF and condensate reserves at 10.7 MMBBL. The fields are undergoing integrated sub-surface, development and environmental studies with the aim of supplying the nearby southeastern Australian gas markets. The preferred development concept is a small jacket structure at Thylacine, followed by a subsea tie-in of the Geographe Field with onshore processing facilities near Port Campbell.

https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ03017

© CSIRO 2004

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