New Research Programme Aims to Lift Oil & Gas Exploration
3 SEPTEMBER 2015
New Research Programme Aims to Lift Oil
& Gas Exploration Success Rate
GNS Science has been awarded funding for a four-year research programme to improve the chances of finding oil and gas accumulations in New Zealand’s sedimentary basins.
The programme will
develop new workstation-ready data products for the
exploration industry that will provide new knowledge
and
help to reduce the uncertainties involved in petroleum
exploration.
It has won funding of $2.4 million-a-year
for four years in MBIE’s latest contestable funding round,
announced today by
Science and Innovation Minister
Steven Joyce.
The programme's three main themes will be
improving the understanding of the rock formations that
generate petroleum, the relationships
between petroleum
fluids and their ‘source rocks’, and the way petroleum
moves and is trapped in sub-surface structures.
Its aim is to encourage more successful exploration activity in New Zealand’s established and frontier basins.
GNS Science
will lead the research with the support of a consortium that
includes four New Zealand universities, four overseas
universities, and the Institute of Environmental Science
and Research (ESR).
Incorporated into the programme will
be seven New Zealand PhD students who will be working on
particular aspects of the research.
In most cases the
programme will provide them with an annual stipend, plus
fieldwork and laboratory expenses.
To underline the
programme’s end-user credentials, GNS Science has
succeeded in getting ‘co-funding’ of $100,000-a-year
from four large international oil exploration companies
– Anadarko, ExxonMobil, OMV, and Shell - three of which
are already
operating in New Zealand.
The scope of
the work is broad and will include proven basins such as
Taranaki as well as ‘frontier’ areas where there is
no petroleum production at present.
An important
component will be engagement with a broad range of end-users
and stakeholders including community
groups and iwi.
The new programme is titled 'Understanding petroleum
source rocks, fluids, and plumbing systems in New Zealand
basins:
a critical basis for future oil and gas
discoveries.'
Programme Leader Richard Sykes, of GNS
Science, said past ‘modest-sized’ finds such as the Tui
Field in 2003 had dramatically
increased New Zealand’s
Gross Domestic Product.
“And major discoveries such as
Maui in 1969 can be economy-changing. Work by GNS Science in
recent years has been
publicly credited by the
exploration industry with helping to lift and focus
exploration activity in Taranaki Basin,” Mr Sykes said.
The New Zealand government would use outputs from this
research to inform decisions on new acreage for permitting
to
attract new exploration investment in New Zealand.
“Compelling exploration blocks backed by high quality
scientific data will promote more competitive bidding,
higher quality
work programmes, and increase the chances
of new discoveries.”
END