Mammoth Texas oil discovery biggest ever in USA
Geologists
say a new survey shows an oilfield in west Texas dwarfs others found so
far in the United States, according to the US Geological Survey.
The
Midland Basin of the Wolfcamp Shale area in the Permian Basin is now
estimated to have 20 billion barrels of oil and 1.6 billion barrels of
natural gas, according to a new assessment by the USGS.
That makes it three times larger than the assessment of the oil in the mammoth Bakken formation in North Dakota.
The
estimate would make the oilfield, which encompasses the cities of
Lubbock and Midland -- 118 miles apart -- the largest "continuous oil"
discovery United States, according to the USGS.
"This oil has been known there for a
long time -- our task is to estimate what we think the volume of
recoverable oil is," assessment team member Chris Schenk told CNN-affiliate KWES Wednesday.
The
term "continuous oil" refers to unconventional formations like shale,
in which the oil exists throughout the formation and not in discrete
pools. The USGS estimates how much oil is considered to be undiscovered
but technically recoverable.
"Even
in areas that have produced billions of barrels of oil, there is still
the potential to find billions more," Walter Guidroz, coordinator for
the USGS Energy Resources Program said in a statement. "Changes in
technology and industry practices can have significant effects on what
resources are technically recoverable, and that's why we continue to
perform resource assessments throughout the United States and the
world."
Oil has been produced in the Wolfcamp
area since the 1980s by traditional vertical wells -- but now companies
are using horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing to tap the
continuous oil reserve. More than 3,000 horizontal wells are currently
operating, according to the USGS.
Morris Burns, a former president of the Permian Basin Petroleum Association, told KWES the low price of oil -- currently around $46 a barrel -- means the oil will sit underground for the foreseeable future.
"We
are picking up a few rigs every now and then but we won't see it really
take off until we (get) that price in the $60 to $65 range," Burns told
the station.
"When we talk about
that many millions of barrels of oil in the ground, that doesn't mean
we can recover it all. We recover in the neighborhood of 50 to 60
percent," Burns said.
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