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Increasing Oil Supply

Novel extraction technologies could as much as double accessible world oil.

By Kevin Bullis

Wednesday, May 03, 2006

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The amount of accessible oil worldwide could eventually be increased by roughly 30 percent with the help of new drilling, imaging, and oil extraction technologies, including the use of microbes, say MIT researchers. Theoretically, this number could be even higher; in a best-case scenario, the amount of oil that could be produced would double.

Rapidly heating many rock types causes them to break apart. This process could be the basis for a new, less expensive method of drilling for oil. (Photo courtesy of Jefferson Tester, MIT.)

On average, using current techniques, about two-thirds of the oil in an oil field gets left behind, says Richard Sears, a vice president at Shell International Exploration and Production, Houston, TX. "The fundamental problem is basic physics. It's not like the oil is in big tanks. We produce oil from rock -- sandstone. The oil is actually held in the very small spaces between the grains of sand. The problem is, when you try to move that oil out of the rocks, because of the size of the spaces, you end up with a layer of oil coating the insides of the rocks." About one-third of the oil in fields will always be inaccessible. That leaves one-third that could be recovered with new technologies -- which is equal to the amount that would have already been extracted.

Getting all of this oil out would be extremely ambitious, but Robert van der Hilst, earth, atmospheric, and planetary sciences (EAPS) professor at MIT, says much smaller gains would still be marked improvements. Increasing the percent of oil harvested from worldwide oil fields by even one percentage point would be the equivalent of adding a new oil-producing region as productive as the fields in the entire North Sea, he says.

To a certain extent, getting more oil out of existing fields is a question of economics. Oil, which resides underground in porous rock, can be forced out by injecting water, steam, or carbon dioxide, but these methods bring added costs that limit their use. If oil prices stay consistently high, these methods will be employed more than they are now, Sears says.

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But significantly increasing oil recovery will require new technologies. At the top of the list are better oil field imaging techniques, says Nafi Toksöz, an EAPS professor at MIT. Improved imaging can help oil companies find and tap areas in an oil field that have become surrounded by water, and so cut off from oil wells, he says. It can also improve the effectiveness of existing methods such as using water or steam to extract oil.

As it is now, water pumped into a field, for example, might start to cut a channel through the oil, and so, rather than pushing oil out, would simply enter through an injection well and flow out through an extraction well in the place of oil. Better understanding of the dynamics of an oil field through imaging at regular intervals can help engineers know where best to inject water and steam, and how to control the pressure to prevent channels from forming.

Comments

  • Quantity of resources
    I have always thought that resorces are illimited because they are invented by man and because their use  drives the development of new techniques. In partcular for oil data indicate that its use has increased if not its tonnage certainly its capability to produce more electricity, Mileage of cars, etc. I have written about this argument , with Umberto Colombo, a lon article in "Grande dizionario enciclopedico. Scenari del XXI secolo, UTET, Torino 2005, Capitolo “Risorse e popolazione”, pp 4-29
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (Giuseppe Lanzavecchia)
    05/03/2006
    Posts:1
  • Not just at MIT
    At the University of Southern California Viterbi School of Engineering, an effort to increase productivity of oil resources has been systematically going on for years.

    The School offers a masters degree, the only one of its kind, in smart oilfields technology. Through the School's Distance Education Network (DEN) the course can be (and is) being taken by working engineers in the field. The first MS will be awarded next week to an engineer who did his course work from his job at the Elk Hills oilfield outside Bakersfield, California. See:
    http://den.usc.edu/programs/mspte/index.htm#progdesc


    Also, the School is the home of the Center for Interactive Smart Oil Technologies (CiSoft), funded by Chevron and other industry sources: see:
    http://viterbi.usc.edu/news/news/2005/2005_02_02_cvxusc.htm

    This is an effort that has been going on for years, and is now paying off at the wellhead in new technologies.
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (Eric Mankin)
    05/03/2006
    Posts:1
  • micowaves
    Microwaves should be considered for the drilling head to help thin the oil. Anyone looking into this out there?
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (Emanuel Bocancea)
    05/03/2006
    Posts:1
  • Ivanho's heavy to light process
    This will change the way oil is mined in the future. We already know where billions of barrels of oil is and IVAN now has a preocess to make it light oil with no nat gas used and no light oil to add to make it flow.
    http://www.ivanhoe-energy.com/s/Home.asp
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (TERRY FROST)
    05/03/2006
    Posts:1
  • so what is the new extraction technology
    what i am reading here is better imaging tech, new drilling tech. Besides mentioning microbes in the first paragraph, I´m wondering if a better drill and a better image can really do a better job when handling the "basic physics" problem of extracting the oil from "very small places between the grains of sand", and increase the world oil supply in 50%.
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (Arturo Gelerstein)
    05/04/2006
    Posts:1
    • i am also inclined towards your views...
      sir, i am vidya sagar, b.tech applied petroleum engineering, from UNIVERSITY of PETROLEUM & ENERGY STUDIES,INDIA...
      i am interested in working on some of the upcoming techs.. so if you could mail me some of the emerging technologies i would be obliged .. vidyasagar_bammidi@rediffmail.com
      Rate this comment: 12345
      Guest (vidya)
      06/08/2006
      Posts:1
  • A radical solution is already here !
    A multidisciplinary research effort resulted in the discovery that up to 95% of the remaining oil can be recovered with unusually high profit margins, thus doubling world oil supplies.In three years the first extraction plant is expected to start operations.
    http://www.nexialinstitute.org explains more.
    Microwaves can be useful for small fields, and many other emerging oil technologies will add 10%-30% to supply over the next 20 years,but none offer the BIG solution that The Nexial Institute found. 
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (Larry Stiers)
    05/04/2006
    Posts:1
    • Energy stuff
      I'm having trouble continuing to be excited about getting oil out of the ground at all.  Sonoluminescence, if we do the math, sure looks like fusion from real low energy input, and thermal depolymerization is going to become substantially cheaper than other oil production technologies...if we are just going to continue letting industry insist on controlling where power comes from.  And we haven't even started talking about nanotech impacts on getting energy from one state to another.  There is more to Big Oil than just international politics.
      Rate this comment: 12345
      Guest (D Bly)
      05/05/2006
      Posts:1
      • thermal depolymerization
        The Nexial Scientific Company here in Germany has looked into this and other oil/ Energy related technologies and agrees that we shouldn't depend on just one source or technology. Thermal depolymerization is indeed highly promising, and  the price per barrel thus produced is already below $80.00.
        The main emphasis of www.nexialinstitute.org is however currently petroleum only because that's where our research led to a breakthrough. Producing new oil from old fields for less than $20.00 per barrel,( starting in three years )will remove some of the price pressure and politics and give alternatives time to be optimized and brought online. There is good reason to be optimistic.
        Rate this comment: 12345
        Guest (Larry Stiers)
        05/08/2006
        Posts:1
  • Laser Drilling
    Laser Drilling of the future

    http://www.gasandoil.com/goc/features/fex40407.htm
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (ERICH j. kNIGHT)
    05/09/2006
    Posts:1
  • Last card to play
    So, maybe the oil companies will employ these methods when oil is $150 a barrel. I would worry more about mitigating peak oil and curbing emissions than flogging an nearly dead horse.
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (zac)
    08/07/2006
    Posts:1

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