Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Actualforecast Hydro, wind, and other renewables NGLs Coalbed methane Conventional natural gas Mined and in situ bitumen Conventional heavy oil Conventional.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Actualforecast Hydro, wind, and other renewables NGLs Coalbed methane Conventional natural gas Mined and in situ bitumen Conventional heavy oil Conventional."— Presentation transcript:

1 actualforecast Hydro, wind, and other renewables NGLs Coalbed methane Conventional natural gas Mined and in situ bitumen Conventional heavy oil Conventional L&M oil Coal Figure 1. Total energy production in Alberta

2 Figure 2

3 Figure 3. same as 3.23

4 Figure 4 same as 5.27. Total gas production in Alberta actualforecast

5 Figure 5. Alberta Conventional Crude Oil Production and Price Source: Prices - CAPP Statistical Handbook EUB Prorationing Plan (restricted production) Major Oil Field Discoveries 1947 – Leduc 1948 – Redwater 1949 – Golden Spike 1952 – Bonnie Glen 1953 – Pembina 1957 – Swan Hill 1959 – Judy Creek 1959 – Swan Hill South 1965 - Rainbow Major Events Affecting Price 1973 – Oil Embargo 1979 – Iranian Revolution 1980 – Iran / Iraq War 1986 – OPEC Crumbles 1990 – Gulf War 1998 – Asian Econ. Crisis 2001 – 9 / 11 2003 – Iraq War 1938 - Petroleum and Natural Gas Conservation Board (EUB) created to enforce production standards Export Pipelines 1950 – Interprovincial Pipeline (Enbridge) 1953 – Trans Mountain Pipe Line

6 Figure 6. Alberta mined bitumen and synthetic crude oil production and price Cdn$/cubic metre Great Canadian Oil Sands (Suncor) Startup Syncrude Startup Alberta Oil Sands Project Startup

7 Figure 7. Alberta in situ bitumen production and price Cdn$/cubic metres

8 Figure 8. Historical natural gas production and price Gas prices as a by-product of oil production. Price less than replacement cost Arbitration awards price increase Regulated gas price tied to oil prices. Surplus built up Price deregulation Surplus gas drives down prices PGT expansion Late 1998: Northern Border/TCPL expansion 2000: Alliance Pipeline Hurricanes Katerina and Rita hit U.S. Gulf Coast Foothills Pipe Lines built for gas exports to California and the mid-western U.S. 1956: TransCanada Pipelines built to take Alberta gas to central Canada and the U.S. after debate over its charter in Parliament

9 Figure 9. Sulphur closing inventories in Alberta and price

10 1898 – Expansion of railway network (coal and oil fired steam engines) and growth of population 1952 – Beginning of change to diesel-electric trains 1960 – Steam rail era ends Late1960’s – Beginning of exports to Japan for steel industry 1970’s – increase in coal-fired electric generation 1950’s – Crude oil and natural gas replace coal as energy source of choice Coal remained “King Coal” until huge reservoirs of crude oil and natural gas were discovered Figure 10. Historical coal production and price Australian-Japan contract price for thermal coal ( Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics - ABARE) Late 1990’s – mine closures and reduced coal exports due to depressed coal prices

11 Figure 1.1 OPEC crude basket reference price 2006

12

13 Figure 1.3 Price of WTI at Chicago actualforecast High Low

14 Figure 1.4 Average price of oil at Alberta wellhead actualforecast High Low

15 Figure 1.5 2006 Average monthly reference prices of Alberta crudes Figure 1.5 2006 average monthly reference prices in Alberta

16

17 Figure 1.7 Average price of natural gas at plant gate actualforecast high low

18 Figure 1.8 Alberta Wholesale Electricity Prices actualforecast

19

20 Figure 1.10 Canadian economic indicators

21 Figure 1.11 Alberta real investment actualforecast

22

23

24

25

26

27

28 ATHABASCA COLD LAKE PEACE RIVER 4.3 26.6 47.6 120.9 Figure 2.7. Production of Bitumen in Alberta, 2006 10 3 m 3 /d Mined Bitumen In Situ

29 Figure 2.8. Alberta crude oil and equivalent production

30 Figure 2.9. Alberta crude bitumen production Surface mining In situ actualforecast

31 Figure 2.10. Total in situ bitumen production and producing bitumen wells Production (10 3 m 3 /d)

32 Figure 2.11. Alberta synthetic crude oil production Synthetic Crude Oil Synthetic crude oil actualforecast

33

34

35 Figure 2.14. Alberta oil sands upgrading coke inventory Synthetic Crude Oil Oil Sands Plants – Coke Inventory

36 Figure 2.15. Alberta demand and disposition of crude bitumen and SCO Synthetic Crude Oil Alberta demand (mainly SCO) actualforecast SCO removals from Alberta Nonupgraded bitumen removals from Alberta

37 Figure 3.1. Remaining established reserves of crude oil Heavy Light-medium

38 Figure 3.2. Annual changes in conventional crude oil reserves

39 Figure 3.3. Annual changes to waterflood reserves

40 Figure 3.4. Distribution of oil reserves by size Remaining reserves (10 3 m 3 ) Total number of pools (10 3 m 3 ) Initial reserves (10 3 m 3 )

41 Figure 3.5. Oil pool size by discovery year

42

43 Figure 3.7. Geological distribution of reserves of conventional crude oil

44 2006 Initial established reserves 2730.8 10 6 m 3 2006 Remaining established reserves 250.1 10 6 m 3 Fig. 3.8. Regional distribution of Alberta oil reserves (10 6 m 3 ) 263 21 488 52 1196 78 424 43 182 11 157 40 6 20

45 Figure 3.9. Alberta’s remaining established oil Reserves versus cumulative production

46 Figure 3.10. Growth in initial established reserves of crude oil Ultimate potential (3130) actualforecast Actual as of December 31, 2006

47 Figure 3.11. Alberta successful oil well drilling By modified PSAC area 2005 Wells Drilled = 2172 2006 Wells Drilled = 2146 33 483 522 7 26 458 506 443 3 619 269 257 400 292

48 Total wells = 1956 Figure 3.12. Oil wells placed on production, 2006 by modified PSAC area 254 6 553 392 508 222 21

49 Figure 3.13. Initial operating day rates of oil wells placed on production, 2006 by modified PSAC area m 3 /day/well [bbl/day/well] 17.2 [109] 12.3 [77] 6.3 [39] 11.5 [72] 8.7 [55] 5.0 [32] 7.6 [48]

50 Figure 3.14. Conventional crude oil production by modified PSAC area PSAC 8 PSAC 7 PSAC 5 PSAC 3 PSAC 4 PSAC 2 PSAC 1

51 Figure 3.15. Total crude oil production and producing oil wells

52 Figure 3.16. Crude oil well productivity in 2006

53 Figure 3.17. Total conventional crude oil production by drilled year % of total production from oil wells Pre-1997 2006 2005 2004 2003 2001 2002 2000 1999 1998 1997 11% 45% 7% 5% 3% 5% 4% 2% 4% 6% 7%

54 Figure 3.18. Comparison of crude oil production Texas onshore Louisiana onshore Alberta crude oil

55 Figure 3.19. WTI crude oil price and well activity actualforecast

56 actualforecast Figure 3.20. Alberta daily production of crude oil Heavy Light-medium

57 Figure 3.21. Capacity and location of Alberta refineries

58 actualforecast Figure 3.22. Alberta demand and disposition of crude oil Crude oil removals from Alberta Alberta demand

59 Figure 3.23. Alberta supply of crude oil and equivalent actualforecast Non upgraded bitumen Light-medium SCO Pentanes plus Heavy

60 Figure 3.24. Alberta crude oil and equivalent production actualforecast

61

62

63

64 Figure 4.4 Coalbed methane production forecast from CBM wells actual forecast

65 Figure 5.1. Annual reserves additions and production of conventional marketable gas

66 Figure 5.2. Remaining conventional marketable gas reserves

67 Figure 5.3. New, development, and revisions to conventional marketable gas reserves

68

69 Figure 5.5. Distribution of conventional gas reserves by size Remaining reserves (10 9 m 3 ) Total number of pools (10 6 m 3 ) Initial reserves (10 9 m 3 )

70 Figure 5.6. Conventional gas pools by size and discovery year

71 Figure 5.7. Geological distribution of conventional marketable gas reserves

72 Figure 5.8. Remaining conventional marketable reserves of sweet and sour gas Sweet natural gas Sour natural gas

73 Figure 5.9. Expected recovery of conventional natural gas components

74

75 Ultimate potential based on 2004 study Figure 5.11. Conventional gas ultimate potential Remaining reserves Production

76

77 Figure 5.13. Conventional gas in place by geological period

78

79 Figure 5.15. Successful conventional gas wells drilled and connected

80

81

82 Figure 5.18. Marketable gas production by modified PSAC area PSAC 6 PSAC 4 PSAC 5 PSAC 2 PSAC 3 PSAC 1 Gas from oil wells PSAC 7 PSAC 8 % of total production Connection year 2% 4% 3% 12% 4% 20% 39% 6% 10%

83 Figure 5.19. Conventional marketable gas production and number of producing wells

84 Figure 5.20. Natural gas well productivity in 2006

85 Pre - 1997 200620052004200320012002200019991998 1997 Gas from oil wells Figure 5.21 Raw gas production by connection year % of total production from gas wells 3 Connection year 3 4 24 9 6 12 16 5 6

86 Figure 5.22. Comparison of raw natural gas production Texas onshore Louisiana onshore Alberta

87 Figure 5.23 Average initial natural gas well productivity in Alberta

88 Figure 5.24. Alberta natural gas well activity and price actualforecast

89 Figure 5.25. Conventional marketable gas production actualforecast 7.1 5.3 3.6 1.8 0 Tcf

90 Figure 5.26. Gas production from bitumen upgrading and bitumen wells used for oil sands operations actualforecast

91 Figure 5.27. Total gas production in Alberta actualforecast

92 Figure 5.28. Alberta natural gas storage injection/withdrawal volumes

93

94

95 Figure 5.31. Alberta marketable gas demand by sector Reprocessing plant shrinkage Transportation Electricity generation Other industrial Industrial - petrochemical Industrial – oil sands Residential Commercial actualforecast

96 Figure 5.32. Historical volumes “available for permitting”

97 actual forecast Mining and Upgrading In Situ In Situ Cogeneration Mining and Upgrading Cogeneration Figure 5.33. Purchased natural gas demand for oil sands operations

98 Figure 5.34. Gas demand for bitumen recovery and upgrading actualforecast Purchased gas Produced gas from bitumen Process gas from upgrading* * Some 1.0 10 9 m 3 of process gas not shown on this chart is used for electricity generation (2007-2016).

99 actual forecast Process Gas for Mining/Upgrading Produced Gas from Bitumen Wells for In situ Recovery Purchased Gas for In situ Recovery Purchased Gas for Electricity Cogeneration Purchased Gas for Mining/Upgrading Process Gas for Electricity Cogeneration Figure 5.35. Total Purchased, Process and Produced Gas for Oil Sands Production

100 actualforecast 10.7 7.1 5.3 3.6 1.8 0 Tcf Figure 5.36. Total marketable gas production and demand 25%24%28%36%44%

101 Figure 6.1. Remaining established NGL reserves expected to be extracted from conventional gas and 2006 annual production

102 Figure 6.2. Remaining established reserves of conventional natural gas liquids

103 Figure 6.3. Schematic of Alberta NGL flows Alberta Gas & NGL Market Alberta Gas & NGL Market - NGL Mix - Ethane - Propane - Butanes - Pentanes Plus Field Plants Field Plants Marketable Gas Raw Gas Extraction Plant - Ethane - Propane - Butanes - Pentanes Plus Chicago, IL Other Canadian Markets Other Canadian Markets US Markets Alberta Border Crude Oil Fractionation Plants - Ethane - Propane - Butanes - Pentanes Plus Propane Butanes Straddle Plants - NGL Mix - Ethane - Propane - Butanes - Pentanes Plus Oil Pools Refineries Alliance High Pressure Pipeline Gas Pools Gas Pools Sulphur Battery Dry Gas NGL Mix Spec product Rich gas R R R R Point royalties collected Dry or rich gas

104 Figure 6.4. Ethane supply and demand 10 3 m 3 /d Actual Forecast

105 Figure 6.5. Propane supply from natural gas and demand 10 3 m 3 /d Actual Forecast * excludes solvent flood volumes

106 Figure 6.6. Butanes supply from natural gas and demand 10 3 m 3 /d Actual Forecast * excludes solvent flood volumes

107 Figure 6.7. Pentanes supply from natural gas and demand for diluent 10 3 m 3 /d Actual Forecast * excludes solvent flood volumes demand met by alternative sources and types of diluent

108 Figure 7.1. Sources of sulphur production Sour gas Refining and upgrading

109 Figure 7.2. Sulphur production from gas processing plants in Alberta

110 Figure 7.3. Sulphur production from oil sands

111 Figure 7.4. Canadian sulphur offshore exports

112 Figure 7.5. Sulphur demand and supply in Alberta Alberta demand Removed from Alberta Stockpile actualforecast Stockpile Withdrawal Total Demand Production

113 Figure 8.1 Total coal production Subbituminous Bituminous thermal Bituminous metallurgical

114

115 million tonnes actualforecast Figure 8.3 Alberta marketable coal production Subbituminous Thermal bituminous Metallurgical bituminous

116 actualforecast Figure 9.1. Alberta electricity generating capacity

117 actualforecast Figure 9.2. Alberta electricity generation

118 Figure 9.3. Alberta electricity transfers

119 Figure 9.4. Alberta electricity consumption by sector actualforecast

120 9.5. Alberta oil sands electricity generation and demand * Industrial – oil sands historical data on electricity demand was estimated using an assumption of 10 kWh/bbl for in situ oil sands projects that do not operate cogeneration units. actualforecast Potential generation Demand

121


Download ppt "Actualforecast Hydro, wind, and other renewables NGLs Coalbed methane Conventional natural gas Mined and in situ bitumen Conventional heavy oil Conventional."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google