Stories tagged with "Kern River"
Comments on Scientific American's "Squeezing more oil from the ground"
Posted by Luis de Sousa on October 19, 2009 - 10:30am in The Oil Drum: Europe
Topic: Geology/Exploration
Tags: colin campbell, jean laherrère, kern river, leonardo maugeri, scientific american [list all tags]
This article, put together by Jean Laherrère and edited by Colin Campbell, is a critical review of the recent article by Leonardo Maugeri published by Scientific American.
A decade ago, Scientific American published the seminal article by these two luminaries of the Peak Oil awareness movement, that relaunched the debate on M. King Hubbert's finds, Scientific American appears now as a completely different publication. Now, however, scientific content doesn't seem to be a requisite for its articles. Among other eerie details, Leonardo Maugeri goes as far as citing "Common Wisdom" to present erroneous facts.
Kern River Production Estimates versus What is Economic
Posted by Gail the Actuary on February 12, 2009 - 6:41pm
Topic: Supply/Production
Tags: depletion, jean laherrère, kern river, original [list all tags]
I wrote a post a few days ago about my visit to Chevron's Kern River Heavy Oil facility.
This morning, I received an e-mail from Jean Laherrère of ASPO-France with some graphs of historical production and forecasts that he had prepared for Kern River. The e-mail gave permission to post these graphs, if I "found them of value". I thought a separate short post on the subject might be worthwhile, since most readers are no longer looking back at late comments on my original post.
When I compare Laherrère's forecast with what I learned in my visit, it seems to me that the production forecasts developed using linearization are not tied in well with what is actually economic. Unless one makes careful adjustment for economics, it seems to me that this approach could significantly over-state the amount of oil that will ultimately be produced.
A Visit to Chevron's Kern River Heavy Oil Facility
Posted by Gail the Actuary on February 10, 2009 - 11:06am
Topic: Supply/Production
Tags: american petroleum institute, chevron, heavy oil, kern river, original [list all tags]
Recently, I visited Chevron's Kern River Heavy Oil field, near Bakersfield California, as a guest of the American Petroleum Institute. Kern River is an extremely old field, discovered in 1899. The oil flows a bit on its own (API=13), but really needs to be heated to be easily extracted or to be shipped by pipeline. After more than a hundred years of pumping, most of the available oil has been extracted--a total of a little over 2 billion barrels has been extracted. The additional amount that can be extracted will depend on the price of oil and how well Chevron can minimize costs.
The site produces about 80,000 barrels a day from 8,000 producing wells, meaning that on average, each well produces about 10 barrels of oil a day. In order to make money with this type of operation, Chevron must be very efficient in everything it does--reusing equipment whenever possible, using the best techniques possible to find the remaining pockets of oil, and prioritizing the workload of the employees, based on which activities are most likely to produce a profit, and which activities are not cost effective.
In the recent past, production has been declining at 2% or 3% a year. Chevron's goal in the near future is to hold the decline rate to 1% per year. No one knows how much additional oil can profitably be produced, but rough guesses were in the 200 to 500 million barrel range. This range equates to 10% to 25% of the oil produced to date as possibly being economically available for extraction.
In this post, I will tell you a little about what I learned on my trip, and also offer some thoughts on whether heavy oil is likely to be a panacea for peak oil.


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