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Methane Hydrates as Potential Energy ResourceProject Report- Natural Gas TPG 4140
Niloofar Aslankhani khameneh
Samira Bahmani
Waqas Mushtaq
TrondheimNovember 2012
Norwegian University of Science and Technology,
Department of Petroleum and Applied Geophysics
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Summary
Methane hydrate science has advanced steadily over the past decade. The commercial scale
production of natural gas from methane hydrate deposits is growing more viable at each step. For
this reason, experimental modeling, and field based studies are underway to advance the
understanding of this future potential resource.
When water and gas are combined under low temperatures and high pressures, the result would
be a frozen lattice like substance called methane hydrate. The huge amounts of these hydrates
underlie our oceans and polar permafrost.
Their wide distribution throughout the world makes them more substantial for future energy
resource. Some deposits are close to the ocean floor and at water depths as shallow as 150 m.
These deposits can be 300 to 600 m thick and cover large horizontal areas. By some estimates,
the energy locked up in methane hydrate deposits is more than twice the global reserves of all
conventional gas, oil, and coal deposits combined.
A number of methods have been applied to extract methane from the hydrates. But there are also
some environmental global concerns related to their production. These economic and
environmental issues that relate to gas hydrates are being resolved. Research studies are going onto find the most efficient and cost effective method for recovery of methane from hydrates. So,
they are being considered as potential energy resource for future.
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Table of Contents
Summary ................................................................................................................................................... II
Abbreviations ............................................................................................................................................ V
1. Introduction ...................................................................................................................................... 1
2. Early studies of methane hydrate ......................................................................................................... 2
3. Methane hydrate reservoirs ................................................................................................................. 3
3.1 Arctic hydrates ................................................................................................................................ 3
3.2 Marine hydrates .............................................................................................................................. 4
4. Methane hydrate formation and stability zone .................................................................................... 5
5. Methods for the extraction of methane from methane hydrate ......................................................... 8
5.1 Thermal injection ............................................................................................................................ 9
5.2 Depressurization ........................................................................................................................... 10
5.3 Inhibitor injection .......................................................................................................................... 11
6. Methane Hydrates as Potential Source .............................................................................................. 14
6.1 Methane hydrate pyramid ............................................................................................................. 14
6.2 Wide geographical distribution..................................................................................................... 15
6.3 Their occurrence at shallow depths .............................................................................................. 16
6.4 Higher energy potential and energy demands ............................................................................. 17
6.5 Environment friendly .................................................................................................................... 17
7. Challenges ........................................................................................................................................... 19
7.1 Global climate changes ................................................................................................................. 19
7.2 Energy Resources .......................................................................................................................... 20
7.3 Sedimentary instability and failure ............................................................................................... 22
8. Economic aspects ................................................................................................................................ 23
9. Discussion ........................................................................................................................................... 24
10. Conclusion ........................................................................................................................................ 25
11. References ........................................................................................................................................ 26
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List of Figures
Figure 1: Distribution of methane hydrate reservoirs around the world ...................................................................... 3
Figure 2: The arctic showing continental shelf, permafrost, sea floor methane hydrate, and 2011 arctic sea ice
minimum (from NSIDC) ......................................................................................................................................... 4
Figure 3: Sites where natural gas hydrate has been recovered or is inferred ............................................................... 4
Figure 4: Methane hydrate crystalline structure ........................................................................................................... 5
Figure 5: methane hydrate film formed on the free gas-water surface(Makogon, 1960) ............................................ 5
Figure 6: Hydrate phase diagram(Kristian Sandengen, Statoil, October 2012) ............................................................. 6
Figure 7: Stability zone of methane hydrates ................................................................................................................ 6
Figure 8: Methane hydrate ............................................................................................................................................ 7
Figure 9: Ice-like solid which burns ................................................................................................................................ 7
Figure 10: Gas production by thermal stimulation(heat injection) process .................................................................. 9
Figure 11: Gas production by depressurization process .............................................................................................. 10
Figure 12: Gas production by chemical inhibitor injection process............................................................................. 12
Figure 13: A schematic figure of a well ................................................................................................................ 13
Figure 14: Injection of into the well (the blue stream) ......................................................................................... 13
Figure 15: the release of methane through the pipes (the red stream) ...................................................................... 13
Figure 16: the methane hydrate resource pyramid.(The Energy lab,2011) ................................................................ 14
Figure 17: location of sampled and inferred gas hydrate occurrences worldwide.(The Energy Lab, 2011) ............... 16
Figure 18: distribution of organic carbon on earth(excluding dispersed carbon in rocks and sediments) ................. 17
Figure 19: increasing demand of gas in future(Patrick Hendriks, Gassco, October 31, 2012)) ................................... 18
Figure 20: location of Mallik well in Canada.(The Energy Lab, 2011) .......................................................................... 21
Figure 21: Natural Gas flare at Mallik site.(The Energy Lab, 2011) ............................................................................. 21
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Abbreviations
LTPM:Late Paleocene Thermal Maximum
GHSZ: Gas Hydrate Stability Zone
BSR:Bottom Simulating Reflector
GHD:Gas Hydrate Dissociation
BTU:British Thermal Unit
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Introduction
This report is a part of our course Natural Gas. The scope of this course is to make the students
realize the importance, production and issues related to natural gas. Discovery of methanehydrates over past decades is assumed to be the biggest achievement. Scientists and researchers
are making their efforts to produce these hydrates commercially and making them economically
feasible. Reliance on energy resources and decreasing amount of other fossil fuels urge scientists
and researchers to look for new resources. Energy resources are dwindling day by day due to
massive use in our daily life. As the amount of available petroleum decreases, the need for
alternate technologies to produce liquid fuels that could potentially help protracts the liquid fuels
and alleviate the future effects of the shortage of transportation fuels.
Natural gas is considered as one of the main energy resources in the world. It is mainly consist of
methane (CH4), which is normally found with the mixture of other gases like carbon dioxide,
nitrogen, sulfur dioxide and many others. Extracting methane from the gas hydrates has taken the
attention of many researchers and energy experts over the past decade. Their wide distribution
and shallow depth availability made them more striking and imperative.
Gas hydrates are complex mixture of methane and water in the form of ice. They are usually
found in the areas with high pressure and low temperature. In Methane hydrates, molecules of
natural gas are trapped in an ice like cage of water molecules represents a potentially vast
methane resource for the world. Recent discoveries of methane hydrate in arctic and deep water
marine environments have highlighted the need for a better understanding of this substance as a
natural storehouse of carbon and a potential energy resource.
Numerous ways of extracting methane from hydrates are in use. Scientists came up with the
success in many cases and they have very optimistic approach to prove them as potential
resource. The issues related to exploitation of these hydrates cannot be neglected. So, research
works are underway to resolve them. Extensive research and development in this field is being
done by many countries which show the significance of these hydrates.
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2. Early Studies of Methane Hydrate
The very first scientific research into the nature of methane hydrate goes back to the early 1800s,
when scientists first created synthetic hydrate in a physical chemistry laboratory. For decades
after that, hydrate was created and tested in laboratory experiments and at that time it was not
expected to be encountered in the natural world.
However in the 1930s, hydrate was observed forming in natural gas pipelines, in some cases
blocking the flow of gas. This brought about a new phase of scientific work, focused on
developing techniques to inhibit gas hydrate formation in pipelines. But methane hydrate was
first discovered in the natural world in the 1960s, in subsurface sediments of the Messoyahka gas
field of the Western Siberian basin. Then in the 1970s, hydrate was observed in well samples
from the North Slope of Alaska, and in seafloor sediments collected from the bottom of the
Black Sea. These initial findings were followed by a major hydrate discovery in the early 1980s,
when the Deep Sea Drilling Program recovered hydrate bearing cores, including a 1 meter
sample of nearly pure hydrate, from sediments off the coast of Guatemala. (The energy lab,
2011)
These discoveries led to the realization that methane hydrate was not just a laboratory curiosity
or industrial nuisance. Methane hydrate began to be viewed as a potentially widespread, naturalreservoir of methane.
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3. Methane Hydrate Reservoirs
There are two different reservoirs for gas hydrate which are categorized as Arctic and marine
hydrates. This means that gas hydrates can be found both within and under permafrost in arctic
regions and also within a few hundred meters of the seafloor on continental slopes and in deep
sees and lakes. The figure 1 is showing the methane hydrate distribution throughout the world.
Such a wide spread make these hydrates more appealing and to be considered as potential
resource.
Figure 1: Distribution of methane hydrate reservoirs around the world
3.1 Arctic Hydrates
The arctic hydrates have the potential to become economically permanent sources of natural gas.
The best documented Alaska accumulations are in the Prudhoe Bay- Kuparuk river area, which
contains about 30 trillion standard cubic feet of natural gas, about twice the volume of
conventional gas found in the Prudhoe Bay field (Ayhan Demirbas, 2010). Other reservoirs exist
elsewhere on the north slope of Alaska, in northern Canada and in Siberia. Some important arctic
hydrate accumulations have good porosity and good gas saturation, and are predominantly found
in coarse sands that have high intrinsic permeability.
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Figure 2: The arctic showing continental shelf, permafrost, sea floor methane hydrate,and 2011 arctic sea ice minimum (from NSIDC)
3.2 Marine Hydrates
Subsea gas hydrates have been thought to contain the excellent hydrates to be found in the
geosphere. Moreover, they are to be found much closer to markets than are arctic hydrates.
Promising accumulations have been thought to exist off the east, west and Gulf coasts of the US,
as well as offshore Japan, India, China and other important energy consuming nations. (Ayhan
Demirbas, 2010). Also the Gulf of Mexico with its abundant gas seeps in deep water is probably
the most promising marine gas hydrate province in US waters.
Figure 3: Sites where natural gas hydrate has been recovered or is inferred
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4. Methane Hydrate Formation and Stability Zone
Gas hydrates are formed from mixtures of water and light natural gases such as methane, carbon
dioxide, ethane, propane and butane. Since, methane hydrates are made up of methane which is
the dominant component among other hydrocarbon gases in the sediments. Methane is a
colorless, odorless and combustible gas which is produced by bacterial decomposition of plants
and animal matters. Figure 4 is showing that gas hydrates are ice-like crystalline solids
comprised of hydrogen bonded water lattice with entrapped guest molecules of gas.
Figure 4: Methane hydrate crystalline structure Figure 5: methane hydrate film formed on the free gas-water
surface(Makogon, 1960)
There is actually no chemical bond involved between the water molecules and the gas molecules
other than Van der waals forces. The important point here is that, the presence of guest
molecules inside the ice crystals makes the structure of the entire lattice more stable (Rayner-
Canham, 2006). In fact the presence of guest molecules stabilizes the structure enough to have
the effect of raising the melting point of the ice to several degrees above 0 C.
According to the U.S. Geological Survey, the organic carbon content of methane hydrates
worldwide is estimated at 104 Giga tons, roughly twice the amount contained in all fossil fuels
combined. Generally methane hydrates are formed under specific conditions of low temperature
(around 5c) and high pressure (27.6 bars and correspondent to the depth of more than 500
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meters). They should be accumulated with organic remains, from which bacteria have generated
methane. These sediment rapidly collect and protect the remains from oxidation.
The stability curve in figure 6 shows that methane hydrate is stable at almost 0.1 MPa or 1 bar if
temperatures are low enough and that it is stable far above the melting point of water ice if
pressures are high enough. And more specific information on the stability zone can be seen in
figure 7, where the horizontal axis shows temperature, increasing from left to right, and the
vertical axis shows depth of burial, increasing from top to bottom.
Due to increase in fluid pressure with depth below the surface of the earth or the ocean, depth
serves as a proxy for fluid pressure in hydrate phase diagrams. The curved line between the blue
and yellow areas is the methane hydrate phase boundary. To the right of this phase envelop,
temperatures are too high, and pressures are too low for methane hydrate to form, so methane
can only be present as a gas. Below this boundary, solid methane hydrate is able to form and
remain stable, because temperatures are sufficiently low, and fluid pressures are sufficiently high
to maintain the solid phase.(The energy lab, 2011).
Figure 6: Hydrate phase diagram(Kristian Sandengen, Statoil, October 2012)Figure 7: Stability zone of methane hydrates
Moreover gas hydrate has a very high energy yield. One cubic meter of methane extracted from
hydrate expands into 164 cubic meter of regular natural gas. If you take a piece of methane
hydrate and touch a lighted match to it, the sample will burn with a reddish flame. And if that is
the case, it could be used to heat homes, fuel cars and generally power energy hungry nations
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such as Japan, the United States, India and China. Recent data suggest that just 1 percent of
earth's methane hydrate deposits could yield enough natural gas to meet America's energy needs
for 170,000 years. (Alex Stone,2004).
Figure 8: Methane hydrateFigure 9: Ice-like solid which burns
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5. Methods for the Extraction of Methane from Methane Hydrate
Methane clathrate beds are very extensive, and there may be large volumes of proven trapped gas
reserves in them. A major problem is that the hydrate density of any particular location is usually
not high (Ruppel, 2007). While the direct gathering of solid methane hydrates would be
impractical because of low unit per volume concentrations. Several techniques might be
requiring for the extraction of methane from hydrate beds. Until now most of the extraction
techniques of methane from methane hydrate have been limited to the laboratory tests and
experiments. But with the research budget growing on the development of different methods,
methane hydrate has proven as an important part of potential source of energy for the future.
Most natural gas is produced from conventional gas accumulations by drilling a well into the
reservoir rock, casing the well with pipe, perforating the pipe to allow the gas to flow into the
wellbore, placing a string of tubing inside the casing and then extracting the gas up the tubing.
Natural gas flows from the reservoir rock into the well and up the tubing as long as the pressure
at the bottom of the well is lower than the pressure in the reservoir. In some cases, natural gas
flows freely up the tubing without the aid of a pumping system, because of high pressure in the
reservoir. Production of methane from hydrate deposits in sandstone or sandy reservoirs can be
approached in a similar manner. As pressure in the well bore is reduced, free water in the
formation moves toward the well, causing a region of reduced pressure to spread through the
formation. Reduced pressure causes the hydrate to dissociate and release methane. Further
removal of water and gas causes more reduction in pressure and dissociation then finally
methane production.
There are numerous methods for extracting methane and as it has been mentioned earlier they all
rely on creating a slow controlled dissociation process. They involve the alteration of the thermo-
dynamic conditions in the hydrate stability zone, which will thus increase the temperature and
reduce the pressure. The application of this process will cause the icy crystals to melt or
otherwise change form and release the entrapped natural gas molecules. But before all these, any
possible extraction site will have to be extensively well studied, and extraction techniques would
have to be proven safe, efficient, cost effective, and environmentally friendly. Once these criteria
are met, there are three foremost methods by which hydrate gases may be collected.
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5.1 Thermal Injection
Heat will be introduced into the hydrate formation to raise the temperature and promote
dissociation. It can be done by injecting the relatively hot water or steam into a subsea gas
hydrate layer which would partially melt the hydrate beds in ocean sediments or in permafrost
regions. The gas will then flow to the bore hole where it can be ascend through the pipe up to the
surface. This process has a favorable net energy balance as the heat energy required for
dissociation is about 6% of the energy contained in free gas (Ayhan Demirbas, 2010). An
advantage of this method is that it is simple and would be conceivably easy to do. However, the
major disadvantage is that heating the fluids to pump underground would be costly and might not
reach deeper hydrate sediments (Ruppel, 2007). Also the endothermic nature of gas hydrate
dissociation acts as a challenge to thermal stimulation, the cooling associated with dissociation(and, in some cases, gas expansion) will partially offset artificial warming of the formation. It
means that more heat must be introduced to drive continued dissociation and prevent formation
of new gas hydrate.
There are following four simple steps which are involved in methane hydrate dissociation
process by hot water injection;
1. Displacement of free methane gas due to water injection
2. Additional methane hydrate formation at downstream zone because of migration of
dissociated gas and water
3. Actual methane hydrate dissociation
4. Completion of dissociation
Figure 10: Gas production by thermal stimulation(heat injection) process
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5.2 Depressurization
The second method involves depressurization of hydrates in sediment beds. In this process the
hydrates are exposed to a low pressure environment where they are unstable and dissociate to
methane and water. This would be done by drilling deep into clathrate beds where methane can
exist in the free gas stage before being converted to hydrates. The heat energy for the process
comes from the earthsinterior.
Depressurization could be the easiest way to collect hydrate gases as the process would be self-
driving. But it has the disadvantage of being more unpredictable than any other methods. As the
dissociation of clathrate crystals is very endothermic having an enthalpy of dissociation value of
+55KJ/mol at 273K (Ruppel, 2007).This method will most likely be the first production method
tested outside the laboratory. It has also been successful to economically produce gas from gas
hydrates. (COLLETT, 2004).
Figure 11: Gas production by depressurization process
This process is carried out under following assumptions: (Ayhan Demirbas, 2010)
Hydrate dissociation occurs as soon as the reservoir pressure drops below the dissociation
pressure for the hydrate at the reservoir pressure.
The gas flows immediately to the free-gas zone.
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Hydrate decomposition is proportional to depressurization rate, and follows a first order
kinetic model.
Rock and water expansion during gas production are negligible.
The model neglects heat transfer between reservoir and surroundings.
The reservoir is produced from a single well located at the center.
Under depressurization, the model behaves as a closed system with no boundaries. This method
does not need huge amount of energy expenditure and can be used to drive dissociation of a
significant volume of gas hydrate relatively rapid. In comparison with the thermal extraction
method, the depressurization technique has no heat consumption or losses and is thus highly
feasible. It is the first choice out of all the extraction techniques because it is economical, simple
and easy without auxiliary equipment, and suitable for natural gas hydrate development on a
large scale.
5.3 Inhibitor injection
Certain organics for example alcohols, methanol or ethylene glycol and ionic (seawater or brine)
compounds act as inhibitors. When these compounds injected to the hydrate layer, they
dissociate them by altering the chemical composition of the local pore water to no longer
favorable for hydrate stability. These chemicals would lower the freezing point of neighboring
water, free trapped gases and the gases would again be collected by the same well head.
The advantage of using this method is that the dissociation rates theoretically could be controlled
by adjusting amounts of inhibitor fluids. These inhibitors would also prevent hydrates from
clogging pipelines and well heads during collection (Rupple, 2007).
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Figure 12: Gas production by chemical inhibitor injection process
An interesting application of the inhibitor injection process is that CO2 could possibly be used as
dissociation element. could be used in conjunction with natural gas for sequestering carbon
dioxide out of atmospheric circulation because can replace methane in clathrates (Ruppel,
2007). For example the US Department of Energy has recently completed a successful test on a
methane hydrate well located on AlaskasNorth slope. Carbon dioxide and nitrogen are injected
into the hydrates to release the methane. The pressure was then lowered so that methane gas
could be extracted. Nitrogen was added to the concept as it was thought that it would produce a
gas saturation by which the could travel and affect exchange without converting directly to
- hydrate. However that has other impacts as well, including partial pressure effects that
dissociate near-well-bore hydrate.
As it can be seen in figures 11 through 13, methane could potentially be extracted from gas
hydrates without co-production of significant volumes of water. Furthermore, the injected CO2
would be sequestered as gas hydrate within the pressure-temperature stability field for CO2hydrate.
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Figure 13: A schematic figure of a well
Figure 14: Injection of into the well (the blue stream) Figure 15: the release of methane through thepipes (the red stream)
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6. Methane Hydrates as Potential Source
The increasing demand for energy resources has made methane hydrates very important. But
their commercial production has been a question for researchers for decades. The advancement
in technology has proved that these hydrates can be produced on commercial scale. These
untapped reservoirs of energy are considered to meet energy needs for next thousand years
(TheEnergy Lab, 2011). The massive amount of gas hydrates under the ocean and beneath arctic
permafrost represents an estimate of more than 50 percent of all carbonaceous fuel reserves on
earth. Hence, gas hydrates provide an energy supply assurance for the 21st century. Countries
that have traditionally relied on oil and gas imports for their energy needs, will become self-
sufficient because of the vast gas hydrate reserves contained in their nearby continental slopes.
Within the next ten years, Japan will commercially exploit gas hydrates from its surrounding
offshore basins (Ayhan Demirbas, 2010). Likewise, North Americans need not to worry about
energy supply as gas hydrates will fill in the gaps left by conventional exploration. Technologies
are being evolved to make gas hydrate exploitation feasible and economically viable in a variety
of deep water and permafrost settings.
6.1 Methane Hydrate Pyramid
The following pyramid is showing the large deposits of hydrates along with therecoverable amounts of these hydrates, which is pretty optimistic.
Figure 16: the methane hydrate resource pyramid.(The Energy lab,2011)
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According to this pyramid, the estimated amount of hydrates in arctic sands is in 100s Tcf.
Similarly, in marine sands they are estimated in 10000s Tcf. The amount of these recoverable
reserves is increasing with depth. So, the deeper we go, the more hydrates we find. It is also
observed that methane hydrate reservoir can, in principle, hold about six times as much methane
as free gas in the same space. However, the methane hydrate enrichment factor decreases with
depth such that, at the base of a deep reservoir, the methane hydrate holds little more methane in
a given space than free gas does. It limits the potential of deep reservoirs.
However there are two important prospects about the methane hydrates.
Source of energy for the future
Hazards such as climate change
We have to see both factors in comparison whether these hydrates will overcome the hazardous
challenges and prove a source of energy for future. Though there is a lot of research study going
on for the development of methane hydrates, there are four main factors which support the fact
that methane hydrates should be considered as a potential energy source.
6.2 Wide Geographical Distribution
Researchers and scientists believe that global abundance and distribution of methane hydrates
suggest that they may become energy resources for the future. With increasing energy demand
and depleting energy resources, gas hydrates may serve as a potentially important resource of
future energy requirements. They are distributed widely throughout the world. So, the countries,
relying on import resources can have them in their nearby location.
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Figure 17: location of sampled and inferred gas hydrate occurrences worldwide.(The Energy Lab, 2011)
6.3 Their Occurrence at Shallow Depths
The conditions suitable for the occurrence of gas hydrate exist in a few hundred meters of the
rapidly accumulating continental margins. Theoretically, gas hydrate occurrence up to 250 m is
possible when thermogenic gases are involved. In the Gulf of Mexico, gas hydrate occurrence
has been reported up to about 440 m (D. Depreiter, 2005). Here we have gas hydrates at a water
depth up to nearly 350 m. The uppermost limit for methane hydrate occurrence is about 500 m
(D. Depreiter, 2005).
An estimate of the quantity of gas hydrate in the Mercator mud volcano was calculated based on
the seismic data and a gas hydrate volume percentage of 5 percent. Volume percentage estimates
for Ginsburg mud volcano were 4 to 19 percent and at the Hydrate Ridge conclude gas hydrates
contents up to 26 volume percent at the summit of the ridge and an average of about 3 to 6
volume percent in the upper tens of meters of sediments in the GHSZ (D. Depreiter, 2005).
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6.4 Higher Energy Potential and Energy Demands
Methane hydrates are considered to contain higher energy potential as compared to other
unconventional energy resources like coal beds, tight sands, block shales, deep aquifers and
conventional natural gas resources.
Figure 18: distribution of organic carbon on earth(excluding dispersed carbon in rocks and sediments)
6.5 Environment Friendly
Methane gas is the only environment friendly among all fossil fuels. The ratio of emission of
carbon dioxide is way less than all other fossil fuels like oil and coal. The combustion of
methane with air is much cleaner than the combustion of all other fossil fuels.
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Figure 19: increasing demand of gas in future(Patrick Hendriks, Gassco, October 31, 2012))
The figure above shows that the dependency on energy resources in future. Here, graph
illustrates that; the amount of carbon dioxide in atmosphere will be way lesser if we use methane
as energy resource.
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7. Challenges
7.1 Global Climate Changes
The dependency on energy resources especially on fossil fuels is causing the climate changes
rapidly. The increasing amount of carbon dioxide in atmosphere is the basis for green house
effect which ultimate cause global warming. Methane is also a greenhouse gas which is more
efficient than carbon dioxide.
It is believed that global warming will lead to the destabilization of gas hydrates in the oceans
and in permafrost areas at shallow depths. These areas will then release large volumes of
methane in the atmosphere over a relatively short period of time. When this methane will be
combined with carbon dioxide in atmosphere, the additional greenhouse effect will be produced.
This will give a boost in increase of global warming which leads to more disastrous
consequences for this world. Additional factors such as the shutdown of the hermohaline
circulation1, warming up of the world oceans, and the further disastrous release of gas hydrates
from unstable slope settings, would feed into it (Beauchamp, 2004). This will shift the world
climate into an alternate state, marked by very warm and inhospitable conditions on land.
The researchers believe that the rock record provides few examples in which global warming
events likely coupled with massive and apparently rapid release of methane from gas hydrates.One of these is the Late Paleocene Thermal Maximum (LPTM), which recorded a large shift in
global temperatures over a period of probably less than a few thousand years (Beauchamp,
2004). Mass balance considerations have suggested a rapid influx of large volume of isotopically
light carbon into the worlds oceans. It is believed that the LTPM was caused, or at least
accompanied, by a massive release of gas hydrate methane in the environment. The influx of
greenhouse efficient methane into the atmosphere would have contributed to a positive feedback
mechanism, which presumably led to a more than 10 C increase in many parts of the world as
shown by oxygen isotopes of fossils and carbonate sediments. The release of methane hydrate
gas was over millions of years.
1Theterm thermohaline circulation (THC)[1]refers to a part of the large-scale ocean circulation that is driven by globaldensity
gradients created by surface heat and freshwaterfluxes.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermohaline_circulationhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermohaline_circulation#cite_note-1http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermohaline_circulation#cite_note-1http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermohaline_circulation#cite_note-1http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Density_gradienthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Density_gradienthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluxhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluxhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Density_gradienthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Density_gradienthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermohaline_circulation#cite_note-1http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermohaline_circulation -
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In response to this issue, researchers propose that methane seepages on the modern sea floor are
always associated with some levels of microbial oxidation. Methane becomes the energy source
to a variety of bacterial fauna that can develop rapidly, and produce both organic films and
antigenic carbonates that incorporate depleted carbon. The biogenic oxidation of methane also
generates CO2as by-product. The CO2released in the water column either escapes to the
atmosphere, and thus contributes to greenhouse warming, or is utilized by the phytoplankton
before reaching the surface. Hence, a synchronous record of depleted carbonates and organic
matter in the sediments does not necessarily designate a significant release of methane. A release
of methane from gas hydrates is just as likely to generate a microbial bloom in the ocean as
global warming in the atmosphere. For methane to be a warming agent it has to bypass normal
fermentation processes, and therefore has to be released very rapidly and in huge amount as well.
Neither a slow, progressive release of large volumes of methane, nor rapid releases of small
volumes of methane are likely to lead too much global warming.
7.2 Energy Resources
Identification and estimation of any energy resource has always been a challenge. The worldwide
estimates of methane hydrates are suspicious. They do not guarantee that these hydrates will
provide energy supply assurance for the future. These estimates are based on the cumulative
knowledge of the architecture and petroleum system of a given basin. The gas hydrate system is
a subset of the broader petroleum system. To understand this system, one should understand that
whether hydrates have formed, whether they are concentrated enough to be exploited, and
whether they are recoverable in any sort of way. A simple knowledge of the vertical and lateral
extent of the GHSZ is insufficient. A well-defined BSR does not guarantee huge reserves
(Beauchamp, 2004). It only means that a free gas hydrate interface has developed. Likewise the
presence of one large field in an area does not guarantee the occurrences of others. Producing gas
hydrates from different porous rocks is also questionable.
All these were valuable few years ago. But recent advancement in technology has explained
most of them experimentally. There are a few experimental cases which successfully
demonstrate that these hydrates are potential source of energy. One example is Messoyakha field
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in west Siberian basin. There scientists shifted the thermodynamic phase boundary between solid
hydrates and gaseous methane using inhibitors, such as methanol or glycol. Producing methane
from gas hydrates using methanol or glycol injections has been attempted in the vast
Messoyakha field, with positive results (Beauchamp, 2004).
Second development is at Mallik field in Canada. Thermal injection was performed in a genuine,
yet short-lived, production test at Mallik in 2002. Numerical models have shown this technique
has some potential under certain conditions. Scientists came up with great results and prospects.
A couple of years ago, Japanese and Canadian researchers returned to the Mallik site to conduct
a longer duration production test in a hydrate bearing interval near the bottom of the methane
hydrate stability zone. A six day pressure drawdown test resulted in sustained, stable gas flow
from hydrate. The success of this production test was a major step towards verifying the
productivity of methane from hydrates (TheEnergy Lab, 2011) (Beauchamp, 2004).
Figure 20: location of Mallik well in Canada.(The Energy Lab,
2011)
Figure 21: Natural Gas flare at Mallik site.(The Energy Lab,
2011)
Now we can believe that the estimates of gas hydrates are no longer suspicious as they were inprevious years. The amount of natural gas stored in natural gas hydrates is estimated at about
20000 trillion m3, a figure nearly two order of magnitudes larger than recoverable conventional
gas resources. Hence, gas hydrates provide an energy supply assurance for the 21st century.
Countries that have traditionally relied on oil and gas imports for their energy needs will become
self-sufficient because of the vast gas hydrate reserves contained in their nearby continental
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slopes. Technology will quickly evolve to make gas hydrate exploitation feasible and
economically viable in a variety of deep water and permafrost settings.
7.3 Sedimentary Instability and Failure
It is believed that if we start producing methane hydrates in large amount, we may face
catastrophic results. Dissociation of these hydrates may cause sedimentary instability which is
devastating for coastal environments and human infrastructures. This deep sea erosion may lead
to drastic results in the form of land sliding, tsunamis and canyons.
The facts from the history show that sedimentary destabilizations has caused these catastrophic
changes centuries ago (Beauchamp, 2004). So, there is a possibility of devastation by producing
these hydrates.
Researchers suggest two solutions to minimize and also avoid these risks. As this process
usually happens in overpressure zones so, we can produce hydrates by maintaining pressure
through injection of some other gas, like CO2. The other solution is to keep hydrate production
beyond the risk limit. Careful studies of rock mechanics and amount of recoverable reserves can
be helpful.
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8. Economic Aspects
Regardless of huge estimates of potential hydrates, commercial interest in exploring them has not
been developed yet. Several countries including Canada, India, Japan and USA have launched
their ambitious programs for exploring them. India has not explored them yet but BSRs indicate
enormous amount of hydrates. On the other hand, Japan has started a major program to drill in
Nankai Trough as well as in Mackenzie River delta of Canadian Arctic (G.P. Glasby, 2003).
The economics of producing GHDs are not well understood because there are too many
unknowns. In addition, each GHD will be different, so different technologies may have to be
employed. Experience with the Messoyakha field provides an invaluable source of information
and shows that the cost required to produce the GHD is only about 15% to 20% higher than for a
conventional gas field in the same area.
Commercial development of an offshore GHD will be more expensive than a conventional
offshore field. But expenditures for drilling GHDs are considerably lower than for drilling gas
deposits, because GHDs will be shallower. Better formation evaluation will be needed to better
define the GHD and to improve the economics of GHD development. The most important
question is the creation of highly effective technologies for the in-situ conversion of gas from the
solid hydrate state into the free gaseous state directly in the reservoir.
Methane has 80 percent heat content of the crude oil. A barrel of methane contains 4.62 million
BTU of heat energy compared to the barrel of crude oil that produces 5.85 million BTU of heat
energy (Andrew Lonero, 2009). Therefore, extracting methane from hydrates could be making
economically viable if the gas is priced between $4 and $6 per thousand cubic feet, using the
same existing equipment (Ruppel, 2007).
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9. Discussion
Gas hydrate may be considered a future energy source not because the global volume of hydrate
bound gas is large, but because some individual gas hydrate accumulations may containsignificant and concentrated resources that may be profitably recovered in the future. Methane
hydrates are more evenly distributed on the planet than any other sources of hydrocarbons. The
energy concentrated in natural gas hydrates can serve as an unconventional energy source which
is very important to maintain the growing energy needs for several decades.
Producing natural gas from methane hydrate will require that we find economical methods for
safely extracting the methane, while minimizing environmental impacts. Some progress has been
made in this area, but much remains to be understood. But, even with the existing technologies,
the production of methane hydrates will soon be accessible to many countries. However further
research and development will be necessary before it can be developed economically.
However there is one complication in extraction of methane from methane hydrates. As it has
been mentioned earlier, the extraction process requires the dissociation of methane hydrates, but
hydrate dissociation is an endothermic process. So, a natural consequence of dissociation is
cooling and potential re-freezing of adjacent portions of the reservoir. To be successful, a
methane hydrate production strategy must include sufficient depressurization to cause the
hydrate to dissociate and, in some cases, the addition of localized heating to overcome the
natural tendency of the hydrate in the reservoir to return to its stable, frozen state. And also
methane hydrate wells will be more complex than most gas wells because of a number of
technical challenges, including: maintaining commercial gas flow rates with high water
production rates; operating at low temperatures and low pressures in the wellbore; controlling
formation sand production into the wellbore; and ensuring the structural integrity of the well.
Technologies exist to overcome all of these issues, but the use of them will add to overall
development costs for producing natural gas from hydrate. However with all these challenges
future development would need to use techniques that minimize the release of methane to the
atmosphere. And development activities in both arctic and marine settings would need to be
carried out in ways that maximize protection of these environments.
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10. Conclusion
Methane clathrates are valuable minerals that can be found in marine sediment beds on
continental shelves. They are widely spread throughout the world. Gas hydrates are crystallinestructures formed by the mixture of natural gas and water under specific conditions of low
temperature and high pressure. They have drawn so much attention in past decade because they
are new clean energy resources which have not been explored yet.
In order to get the most out of these hydrates, numerous methods for their extraction have been
developed which can be used to commercially produce them. The development of these methods
has helped us to overcome hazards and challenges related to environmental issues, economic
recovery and commercial production problems. For those countries who have not been blessed
with traditional gas reserves, methane hydrates can be potential lifeline for their economy.
Currently we are in transition stage of methane hydrate development. This transition is more of a
scientific theory than practical extraction of methane hydrates. The hazardous issues may limit
their production. But successful production at Mallik and Messoyakha fields shows a remarkable
development in this area.
The role of companies and countries in investing both time and significant amount of money,
determines their seriousness for extracting methane hydrates. The energy companies and
research institutes are trying to develop new and safe ways to adapt these hydrates as future
energy resource.
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