NEW
OIL AND GAS FINDS IN
THREE
significant new oil and gas regions have been identified off
A
combination of new technology and the high price of oil has prompted the
commonwealth's Geoscience Australia survey body to push technical limits and
explore frontier areas in deep water, turning up startling new resource
potential.
One of
the regions, the South Australian end of the
But
extracting any oil and gas from this area will mean overcoming significant
challenges, including heavy seas and wells deeper than any in operation around
the nation.
In
addition to the Bight, Geoscience Australia has uncovered strong indications of
petroleum in basins near the Lord Howe Rise, 800km east of Brisbane, and on the
Wallaby Plateau, 500km off the West Australian coast and next to the existing
North West Shelf gas zone.
All
three areas are at the deepwater edge of
Geoscience
With
extra funding for frontier exploration, Geoscience
The
new evidence has emerged at a time of dwindling oil production in
Despite its gas exports,
On
Thursday, Barack Obama opened massive new areas to offshore oil and gas
exploration as part of a strategy to reduce
Resources Minister Martin Ferguson will this month unveil Goescience
Mr
Ferguson will outline the results of seismic, magnetic, gravity and bathymetric
surveys, and dredging of the seabed, completed in February last year.
The
dredging has uncovered rocks that suggest the existence of "depocentres" -
places where petroleum is often produced.
Before
Geoscience
Mr
Ferguson is expected to announce next month the release of more exploration
blocks in frontier areas, including the unexplored
Significant discoveries would have the potential to create new energy hubs, such
as the vast North West Shelf operation in
Geoscience
"The
discovery of world-class potential source rocks has definitely improved
perceptions of prospectivity in the basin," Ms Totterdell said.
By
delivering these "source rocks on a platter", as one expert put it, Geoscience
Ms
Totterdell said the Bight had been regarded as "too hard" by many oil companies,
and the rough seas and location of the basin made exploration work in the area
"challenging".
In
2003, Woodside Petroleum, the nation's biggest independent oil and gas company,
drilled the Gnarlyknots well to a depth of 4000m in the seabed, at a cost of
$55m, but it had to abandon the project due to 10m swells. But Ms Totterdell's
team was undeterred. They believed the bitumen rocks that washed up on beaches
along the coast gave strong indications there was petroleum offshore.
Under
The
rocks were dredged from a 5km-wide canyon that enabled geologists to uncover
samples that lie thousands of metres below the seabed in the centre of the
basin, about 200km to the east. It is in the centre where the exploration blocks
have been offered.
National oil production has declined from a peak of 35 billion barrels a year
early last decade to about 20 billion at present.
But
significant gas discoveries continue to be made. Since Woodside's discovery of
the Pluto field off northern
Under
the Howard government, then resources minister Ian Macfarlane secured more
resources for Geoscience
The
tax incentive and Geoscience
A
spokesman for Mr Ferguson said Geoscience