The Beetaloo Basin in Northern Territory, Australia, could be the next sweet spot for unconventional and conventional hydrocarbon production. The basin’s attributes: It’s a multimillion-acre site in a politically and economically stable country, with existing pipeline access, currently estimated recoverable resources of 19 billion barrels of oil and 64 trillion cubic feet of gas at depths between 5,000 and 8,500 feet, and energy-hungry neighbors.
Falcon Oil & Gas Ltd. of Denver, the sole operator of more than 7 million acres under license in the remote basin, is in the process of proving that the Kyalla and Velkerri shales are Southern Hemisphere rivals to Marcellus, Haynesville and Barnett shales. The high total-organic-content shales, Kyalla (at about 5,000 feet) and Velkerri (at about 8,500 feet), are typically 2,600 feet thick across the basin. The shales are separated by a possible conventional formation, the Moroak sandstone, which is more than 1,000 feet thick and has conventional poros-
ity and low-permeability intervals.
Testing will begin in 2010, after the rainy season, in a previously drilled exploration well, #1 Shenandoah. Falcon geologists are analyzing core samples from mining operations that used to dominate the resource-rich Australian state.
Australia’s energy-hungry neighbors include China, India, Japan and South Korea.
Source: O&G Investor, April 2010
Friday, April 9, 2010
Beetaloo mentioned in O&G Investor Issue April 2010
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