Reserve Growth Overrated?
At the urging of a petroleum engineer at the PeakOil.com board, I took a look at the Attanasi & Root approach to predicting reserve growth. I grabbed the oil field data from the journal below and OCR'd into something I could analyze (raw data here).
"Attanasi, E.D., and Root, D.H., 1994, The enigma of oil and gas field growth: American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin, v. 78, no. 3, p. 321-332."
If I plot the raw data as a scatter plot which shows only fractional increases per year since the year of discovery it looks like the chart below. Note that this plot does not visualize the "multiplier" approach which A&R choose to do; IMO they do this rather unwisely, because it accentuates bad early estimates. The "fractional" approach provides an accepted statistical way to look at this kind of data which avoids amplifying regions with poor statistics.
I also put in a 20-point moving average filter to guide the eye (not weighted by size of field). Notice that in the sweet spot right in the middle of the chart, where we get the best statistics, the "reserve growth" fluctuates around 1% per year. You can see some growth for fields for fields older than ~80 years, but those have have worse sampling statistics than the rest. The latest data also exhibits poor sampling statistics.
Basically this approach demonstrates how you extrapolate assumed stationary data correctly.
Now, I ask the question how 1% reserve growth of mature fields will effectively compensate the 5% to 20% depletion rate per year routinely estimated for many fields?
1 Comments:
You say:
"Now, I ask the question how 1% reserve growth of mature fields will effectively compensate the 5% to 20% depletion rate per year routinely estimated for many fields?"
Good question, I was hoping you would answer it, but you leave it as an exercise for your students. One would need access to the data showing year-end reserve changes on a field-by-field basis, for the whole country. Do you know where to find that data? If these data are not available, can you point us to summarised data, which can show, roughly, statistics supporting your claim for your "5% to 20% depletion rate per year routinely estimated for many fields?".
Just curious, but are you left handed?
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