02-06-04 Demand for unconventional oil is expected to reach 10.31 mm barrel
in 2008, up from 8.59 mm barrels in 2003 at an average annual growth rate (AAGR)
of 3.7 %, said Business Communications, Norwalk, Connecticut. Improved exploration and production technology along with additional
investments have led to significant levels of commercial production from
unconventional oil and gas resources that previously were considered too costly
to produce. Technological advances have reduced the cost of producing these resources and
have promoted their development. Demand growth occurred in key US Midwest and
Rocky Mountain areas because refiners expanded their heavy crude processing
capacity. Technological advances such as steam-assisted gravity drainage, vapor
extraction incorporating a solvent such as naphtha, and new cyclic steaming
techniques are helping reach the bulk of Canada's postulated 300 bn barrel of
recoverable-oil in oil sands too deep to be tapped by conventional technology. During the next 5 years, demand for unconventional gas will increase at an
AAGR of 10.7 %. Newer recovery innovations have significantly raised the
recovery rate for unconventional gas reserves. Technological improvements are
facilitating Rocky Mountain production of tight sands gas and coalbed methane.
BCC statistics shows that marketed production in Wyoming, for example, have
increased to 7.1 % of total US output in 2002 from 3.4 % in 1996.
Source: PennWell CorporationDemand for unconventional oil and gas on the increase
Meanwhile, demand for unconventional natural gas is expected to increase from
7.68 tcf in 2003 to 12.78 tcf by 2008. BCC reached those conclusions in a
soon-to-be-released report entitled "Demand for Unconventional Oil and
Natural Gas Resources."
"Unconventional oil includes extra-heavy oil (oil sands), and bitumen,
syncrude, shale oil, and conventional heavy oil. The strong gains in heavy crude
supply can be attributed to a combination of favorable developments," BCC
said.
These US heavy crude refineries process mainly Canadian and Venezuelan heavy oil
because of greater availability and good performance in coking units and asphalt
production, BCC said. Strong commodity pricing also brought a strong influx of
equity capital to the Western Canadian industry.
Gas contained within unconventional deposits generally is stored more uniformly
within reservoirs that can extend over vast areas, rather than trapped within
isolated anticline closures.
"Continued steady economic growth in the industrialized countries of Europe
and North America will also sustain the level of natural gas demand. Resurgence
in the developing countries is critical to demand growth, since economic growth
in these countries is more closely tied to energy," the BCC said.