Title: Energy from Gas Hydrates: Opportunities and Challenges
1Energy from Gas Hydrates Opportunities and
Challenges
- John Grace,
- Chair, Council of Canadian Academies Panel on Gas
Hydrates - and Professor, University of British Columbia
- 18th Convocation of the International Council of
the Academies of Engineering and Technological
Sciences - Calgary, July 14, 2009
2What and Where are Gas Hydrates? And How Large is
the Resource?
- Ice-like structures formed by water and natural
gas at low temperatures and high pressures - Gas hydrates exist in abundance worldwide,
especially under oceans. - Some estimates suggest that the amount of carbon
stored in hydrate form may exceed the total in
conventional fossil fuels coal, oil and natural
gas.
3Worldwide Exploration Activities(Modified from
Kvenvolden and Rogers, 2005)
4Council of Canadian Academies (CCA)
- The CCA was founded in 2006
- Canadian Academy of Engineering is one of the
three Constituent Academies, together with the
Royal Society of Canada and the Canadian Academy
of Health Sciences. - Peter Nicholson will talk about the Council in
detail at lunch tomorrow. - CCA undertakes expert panel assessments of
matters relevant to public interest.
5The Question
In September 2006, Natural Resources Canada asked
the Council of Canadian Academies to assemble an
expert panel to address the question
What are the challenges for an acceptable
operational extraction of gas hydrates in
Canada?
6Subsidiary Questions
- 1. What share of the total Canadian reserves can
be profitably extracted? - 2. What are the Science Technology needs for
the safe use of this energy source? - 3. What are the environmental considerations
related to the use and the non-use of this
resource?
7Expert Panel on Gas Hydrates
Expertise in engineering, geophysics, geology,
chemistry, biology, political science, economics,
safety and social impacts. 9 academics, 2
government, and 2 industry representatives. 9
from Canada, 4 from the U.S.
8Context for this Study
- Falling supply of conventional natural gas in N.
America. - Economic factors will play a major role, but are
very uncertain e.g. role of LNG, future gas
prices. - Global concerns re climate change.
- Extensive RD on various alternative energies.
- Canada wishes to exercise sovereign rights in the
North. - Canada has energy super-power aspirations.
- Industry has so far shown little interest in
investing. - There are many unknowns about gas hydrate as a
future energy source. - Nascent public interest in the popular media.
9 The Canadian Resource
- GH exists off the three coasts, as well as under
permafrost in the Far North. - Exact amounts are large, but impossible to
quantify. - The Mackenzie Delta region alone was estimated
in 2005 to contain 1013 m3 (350 Tcf). Compare
NEB total conventional natural gas 1.4 x 1013 m3
(500 Tcf). - Mapping all of Canadas resources basin-by-basin
is impractical. - Intensive field studies, combined with spot
coring and drilling, are required.
10Regional Areas of Gas Hydrate in Canada (modified
from Majorowicz Osadetz, 2001)
11Producing Natural Gas from Gas Hydrate
- Depressurization appears to be the most feasible
production option. - Mallik tests provide evidence that flows can be
sustained, at least over short periods, with
conventional oilfield technologies, adapted for
Arctic conditions. - Production of gas from GH will be more costly
than from conventional gas. - Gas hydrates in marine and sub permafrost sand
are most readily recovered.
12Schematic of Gas Hydrate Producibility (easiest
at top of pyramid) (modified from Boswell and
Collett, 2006)
13Infrastructure and Economic Issues
- Production is unlikely to proceed unless and
until the Mackenzie Valley pipeline or other
similar facilities are in place to bring gas to
southern markets. - Cost of developing offshore and Arctic resources
is so large that the involvement of major energy
companies would be essential to exploit Gas
Hydrates. - Based on Canadas National Energy Board
projected gas prices, gas hydrate could be
produced profitably by 2030 if the pipeline were
in place.
14Safety Considerations
- Much of the information on safety issues related
to encountering gas hydrate while drilling is
proprietary, residing with commercial companies. -
- Based on available information, safety issues
related to producing gas from hydrate appear to
be similar to those when producing conventional
natural gas. - But, since there has been no commercial
production from gas hydrate, safety issues cannot
be assessed definitively.
15Environmental Considerations
- Leakage of methane during production should be
controlled by discontinuing depressurization. - Water produced due to hydrate dissociation will
be relatively pure. - Significant seafloor destabilization due to gas
hydrate production is not a meaningful risk. - Methane from gas hydrate and its product CO2 are
Greenhouse Gases, although methane combustion
yields less GHG than oil and coal. - Research is needed on the long-term possibility
of replacing methane-hydrate by CO2-hydrate.
16Environmental Considerations continued
- Dilemma regarding greenhouse gases
- Exploiting gas hydrate would result in more CO2
in the atmosphere. - Global warming will eventually cause massive
release of gas hydrate as CH4, a much more
harmful greenhouse gas. - There is no conceivable practical way that a
substantial fraction of the worlds, or Canadas
gas hydrate could be recovered.
17Jurisdictional Issues
- Only the East Coast has a framework for
federal-provincial resource development. - The West and North would have to develop a
similar framework. - Federal and British Columbia moratoria on the
west coast on oil gas exploration would need to
be lifted for GH to be developed. - Northern development will depend heavily on
- whether the Mackenzie pipeline proceeds
- Arctic sovereignty claims.
18Community and Social Issues
- Past resource development projects in Canada hold
lessons for any future hydrate exploitation. - Social and cultural issues appear to be similar
to those related to conventional natural gas
development in remote fragile regions. - Proper consultation and community involvement
well in advance are essential for major gas
hydrate projects.
19Three Broad Approaches for Gas Hydrate Development
- Research Only
- Research and Limited Development
- Major Targeted Research and Development
20Actions Which Could Be Taken
- Geo-studies to better delineate the resource.
- More demonstration projects.
- Participation in international programs.
- More RD on related environmental issues.
- More RD on gas hydrate extraction technology.
- Evaluate incremental costs of including gas
hydrate when extracting conventional natural gas. - Work with provinces and territories to remove
jurisdictional and legal barriers. - Build government-industry partnerships.
21Question 1 What share of total Canadian
reserves can be profitably extracted?
- Resources exist off the west, north and east
coasts and under Arctic permafrost. - It is impossible to estimate these resources
accurately. - Most readily exploitable resources are associated
with sand below permafrost, or to extend life of
off-shore wells extracting conventional natural
gas. - Profitability depends on many factors including
future energy prices, development of alternative
technologies, and the pace at which global
climate change issues are addressed. - Commercial development is highly unlikely in the
next two decades.
22Question 2 Science technology needs for the
safe use of gas hydrates?
- Extraction and usage technology can be adapted
from existing gas technology. No insuperable
technical problems are seen. - Subject to confirmation from long-term production
tests, there do not appear to be significant
safety issues beyond those already addressed in
onshore and offshore conventional natural gas
production.
23 Question 3 Environmental considerations
related to use and non-use of the resource?
- Once produced, gas from gas hydrate is identical
to conventional natural gas, and its use would
lead to greenhouse gas emissions. - In the medium term, it could displace some oil
and coal, which release more CO2 per unit of
energy. - Marine gas hydrate is not expected to be released
due to global warming in this century, but gas
hydrate under permafrost may dissociate in
specific locations. Any potential exploitation
would have negligible impact on release of gas
from gas hydrate.
24Other Key Conclusions
- Future GH exploitation will depend on decisions
on how best to mitigate climate change. - Industry must be engaged if gas hydrates are to
be developed. Uncertainties of commercial
development would require government-industry
partnerships, as for the oil-sands decades ago. - Commercial production would likely begin in
association with frontier conventional natural
gas fields.
25Full Report
- The full report is available on the website
- www.scienceadvice.ca
Thank you!