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Oil and Natural Gas Supply

Oil and natural gas are the lifeblood of our economy, accounting for more than 60 percent of the energy consumed in the United States. To meet projected demand, our Nation has a vital interest in ensuring that competitively-priced domestic natural gas and oil remain part of the U.S. energy portfolio for decades to come. Read More.

Announcements

Methane Hydrates Funding Opportunity Announcement Extension The purpose of this amendment is to extend the closing date for Technical Topic Area 1, “Resource Assessment and Field Testing on the Alaska North Slope” (DE-PS26-08NT43260-01) and Technical Topic Area 4, “Hydrate in the Global Environment” (DE-PS26-08NT43260-04) of the Funding Opportunity Announcement, "Methane HYdrates 2008". Because of confusion surrounding the closing date for Technical Topic Area of Interest 1 and Technical Topic Area of Interest 4 of this Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA), the closing date for these topic areas is extended to Monday, June 16, 2008 at 8:00 PM EST. Applicants who have already submitted applications under these Areas of Interest need not resubmit.

DOE seeking candidates for two advisory committes The Department of Energy is currently seeking nominations of qualified individuals to serve on the Ultra-Deepwater Advisory Committee and the Unconventional Resources Technology Advisory Committee. The closing date for receipt of resumes is May 2, 2008. Read more

The Spring 2008 edition of Fire in the Ice is now available. In this edition read about the release of preliminary results from an MMS assessment of GOM in-place natural gas hydrate, the Korean National Program expedition, Mt. Elbert test data, a marine hydrates model, and other announcements. The "Spotlight on Research" features Marta Torres of Oregon State University.

SCNGO Funding Opportunity Released
The intent of this Department of Energy (DOE), National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL) funding opportunity announcement (FOA) is to initiate R&D to address a broad spectrum of environmental, and exploration and production (E&P) issues associated with unconventional oil and gas resource development, including those associated with the Bakken Shale of North Dakota and Montana, the Arctic North Slope and other frontier resource areas. For more information regarding the FOA, please visit the DOE-NETL business / solicitation website.

DOE Report: Alaska North Slope Has Plenty of Potential  The Office of Fossil Energy has issued a comprehensive new report Alaska North Slope Oil and Gas: A Promising Future or an Area in Decline? To answer this question, the report examines the potential for Arctic Alaska to remain a major contributor to the Nation's domestic energy supply under different development scenarios.

NETL-Funded Pipeline Robot Revolutionizes Inspection Process The self-propelled Explorer II robot demonstrates it can maneuver through most gas lines to spot pipeline defects before they escalate into gas leaks or ruptures.
Read more on this technology.

Oil and Gas R&D Solicitations Released
Over $35 million of government funding was identified in Section 999 of the Energy Policy Act of 2005 to conduct R&D in the areas of (1) Ultra-deepwater architecture and technology, (2) Unconventional natural gas and other petroleum resources exploration and production technology, and (3) the technology challenges of small producers. NETL will provide oversight for the “Ultra-Deepwater and Unconventional Natural Gas and Other Petroleum Resources Program” conducted by the Research Partnership to Secure Energy for America (RPSEA). The following link, www.rpsea.org/en/cms/?43, will direct you to the RPSEA’s first solicitations, which are now open.

The Methane Hydrate Research Fellowship Program

Announcements Archive >

Key LInks

While domestic resources remain plentiful, increasingly, these resources are concentrated in geologically challenging and operationally complex settings such as deep formations, deepwater offshore, and lower permeability formations. Their recovery requires innovative exploration and production technologies, along with sustained attention to environmental protection.

Through NETL, scientists and engineers in government and industry are focusing on innovative solutions to these challenges. NETL supports research, development, and field demonstrations of advanced technologies to enhance near-term and mid-term supplies through the efficient use of the nation's existing resources. NETL also performs analyses of natural gas and petroleum issues to support policy decisions and to ensure a balanced R&D portfolio.

  • To help industry increase supplies of oil and gas in the near term, NETL focuses on developing low-cost technologies to expand the economic life expectancy of individual wells, spurring innovations to find and tap missed or bypassed reservoirs in the field, and transferring new technology to the thousands of small and independent operators that account for the lion’s share of the U.S. industry.
  • Over the mid term, NETL’s E&P efforts target critical emerging resources -- such as tight gas, deep gas, and heavy oil -- that are currently poorly understood and underutilized. These unconventional and emerging resources require the application of new technologies to make recovery economic. Such efforts have borne fruit in the past. Earlier DOE-funded research has catalyzed an unconventional natural gas industry that currently accounts for 30 percent of the Nation’s gas supply—a share expected to grow.
  • Sustaining natural gas and oil supplies over the long term will require adding fundamental new sources to the nation's resource base. As a result, NETL is leading a national R&D effort to evaluate methane hydrates and other potential future resources that may one day contribute to our nation’s supply demands.
Meeting National Goals
NETL’s RD&D efforts contribute to the following vital national goals:
  • Secure and reliable energy supplies
    The United States is home to an abundant supply of both natural gas and oil, yet there exists a supply and demand gap because much of the conventional resource base has been harvested. Future sources of supply will come from more remote locations, increasingly complex and deeper reservoirs, and more environmentally sensitive areas. New technologies will certainly be needed to develop these resources in an environmentally and economically acceptable manner. With advanced technologies, our Nation can continue producing these valuable domestic resources while also meeting environmental protection goals.
     
      Conventional / Unconventional Gas
     
    America's demand for natural gas is expected to grow as much as 50% by 2025. Unconventional gas resources, much of which currently are not economically recoverable, are expected to bear much of the burden of meeting this demand.
       
  • Clean power generation
    The clean-burning properties of natural gas make it a preferred fuel for power generation. Indeed, natural gas consumption in the power generation sector is projected to increase from 5.0 trillion cubic feet in 2003 to 9.4 trillion cubic feet in 2025. Cost-effective production, processing, transmission, and storage technologies will enable natural gas to fulfill this central role in meeting our Nation’s growing electricity needs.
 
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