• 3 minutes e-car sales collapse
  • 6 minutes America Is Exceptional in Its Political Divide
  • 11 minutes Perovskites, a ‘dirt cheap’ alternative to silicon, just got a lot more efficient
  • 13 hours GREEN NEW DEAL = BLIZZARD OF LIES
  • 6 days The United States produced more crude oil than any nation, at any time.
  • 2 hours Could Someone Give Me Insights on the Future of Renewable Energy?
  • 7 days How Far Have We Really Gotten With Alternative Energy
  • 11 days Oil Stocks, Market Direction, Bitcoin, Minerals, Gold, Silver - Technical Trading <--- Chris Vermeulen & Gareth Soloway weigh in
  • 10 days James Corbett Interviews Irina Slav of OILPRICE.COM - "Burn, Hollywood, Burn!" - The Corbett Report
  • 10 days The European Union is exceptional in its political divide. Examples are apparent in Hungary, Slovakia, Sweden, Netherlands, Belarus, Ireland, etc.
Small Banks Significantly Boost Loans to Oil And Gas Firms

Small Banks Significantly Boost Loans to Oil And Gas Firms

Regional banks BOK Financial, Citizens…

The Oil Price Rally Has Stalled... For Now.

The Oil Price Rally Has Stalled... For Now.

Oil prices have been climbing…

Tsvetana Paraskova

Tsvetana Paraskova

Tsvetana is a writer for Oilprice.com with over a decade of experience writing for news outlets such as iNVEZZ and SeeNews. 

More Info

Premium Content

Can ‘Fire Ice’ Replace Shale?

Fire

Scientists, researchers, and engineers have known for decades that there is an energy resource trapped inside ice and found under Arctic permafrost or beneath the ocean floor. Once thought to be rare in nature, newer estimates are that methane hydrates—popularly known as flammable ice or fire ice—are abundant in offshore waters of both resource-rich countries like the U.S., and resource-starving big energy importers like Japan.

The current state of methane hydrates development around the world is in studies, resource assessment, and production tests. “The most recent estimates of gas hydrate abundance suggest that they contain perhaps more organic carbon that all the world’s oil, gas, and coal combined,” the U.S. National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL) says.

Despite the fact that estimates suggest that the content of methane is “immense, possibly exceeding the combined energy content of all other known fossil fuels,” according to the U.S. Department of Energy, potential commercial production is years, probably decades, away.

But if, for example, Japan—the world’s biggest LNG importer and among the world’s top four oil and coal importers—or China, or India, or the U.S. were to manage to launch methane hydrate production in future, they would upend the world’s crude oil demand and potentially undermine the relevance of oil powerhouses such as Saudi Arabia and OPEC as a whole, or Russia.

Natural gas burns cleaner than coal, and therefore it is seen as a “bridge fuel to a low-carbon energy economy”. Still, it’s a fossil fuel, and the gas hydrates mining is currently facing both technological and environmental challenges to become commercially viable.

There are two very obvious dangers in making methane hydrates commercially exploitable: the danger of damaging and destabilizing the seabed due to the high pressure, and methane escape, with methane thought to be a much more damaging greenhouse gas than CO2.

Although estimates speak of its immense potential, possible production volumes are only speculative, because methane production has only reached the production test stage.

Last month, China said that it had successfully extracted gas from gas hydrates in the northern part of the South China Sea. Every day some 16,000 cubic meters (565,000 cubic feet) of gas, almost all of which was methane, were extracted from the test field.

In July last year, the U.S. Geological Survey said that large deposits of potentially producible gas hydrate was found in the Indian Ocean for the first time, in what was a joint research project with the governments of India and Japan.

Japan—estimated to have spent an additional annual average of around US$30 billion for fossil fuel imports in the three years following the Fukushima disaster—has been studying methane hydrates mining for years.

In March 2013, two years after the Fukushima disaster, Japan Oil, Gas and Metals National Corporation (JOGMEC) carried out the first methane hydrate offshore production test in the Japan Eastern Nankai Trough, successfully extracting 20,000 cubic meters (706,300 cubic feet) per day on average for six days. Related: The World Is Millions Of Barrels Away From Peak Oil

Japan is currently conducting the second such test, confirming the production of gas earlier this month, after having suspended the test in May due to a significant amount of sand entering a gas production well.

At the start of the second test, Japan’s Agency for Natural Resources and Energy (ANRE) said that in light of the test results, it would continue research and development, aiming to launch private-led projects for commercialization around the mid-2020s.

The U.S. has also been studying gas hydrate deposits for years. The University of Texas at Austin (UTA), for example, leads a multi-disciplinary and multi-institutional team studying methane hydrates in the Gulf of Mexico in a 2014-2020 program, supported by the DOE.

“The heart of this project is to acquire intact samples so that we can better understand how to produce these deposits,” Professor Peter Flemings, University of Texas Institute for Geophysics (UTIG) research scientist and the project’s principal investigator, said at the start of the program in 2014.

“This could be analogous to gas or shale oil 20 or 30 years ago,” Flemings said. “None of us thought we were going to produce any hydrocarbons out of shales then,” the scientist noted.

ADVERTISEMENT

Should gas hydrates production become commercially feasible, it could not only upend crude oil demand. It could be a breakthrough technology that would replace coal as an energy source, and allow resource-challenged countries like Japan to reduce import dependency. Or, depending on the point of view, methane hydrates could be a nightmare for environmentalists and renewable energy transition efforts, as it would unlock yet another fossil fuel resource.

So, could ‘fire ice’ become the new shale gas 20 or 30 years from now?

By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com:


Download The Free Oilprice App Today

Back to homepage





Leave a comment
  • Don Clifford on June 28 2017 said:
    Japan seems the most likely first adapter, for import substitution, and a replacement for nuclear. And with Japan&#039;s technical help, India also could benefit greatly from import substitution, and a gradual weaning from coal. The fact that methane hydrates are so widely dispersed geographically, is a strong case for energy security in many situations.
  • John Scior on June 29 2017 said:
    Very good article. It seems methane hydrates are the lost child of the energy production family. I believe the show " Ice Road Truckers" involved the truckers delivering supplies to an experimental extraction well in Canada if my memory serves me correctly. One thing few people forget to mention is the benefit of electrical generation through a combined cycle generating plant. One can achieve greater efficiency by this method. The clean burning fuel is almost always mentioned in this climate-change crazy anti-CO2 world of tomorrow we live in. Until inexpensive nuclear fusion is achieved ( c'mon you guys at LM ) the best way for an increasing population to enjoy this worlds resources is through higher efficiency in utilizing the resources we do have. Methane hydrates is one way to achieve this goal.
  • Len Rosen on June 29 2017 said:
    Methane hydrates are potential time bombs as energy sources. Frozen methane may have helped to precipitate the Deepwater Horizon blowout. Read about the Univesity of Texas study at: http://www.21stcentech.com/gulf-mexico-hydrates-part-university-texas-study/. And a recent research paper produced by the CAGE Centre for Arctic Gas Hydrate describes the evidence of explosive methane release in the Barents Sea at the end of the last Ice Age. So although the "resource" is prolific, it is a devil to harvest with considerable risk, well above that of existing fossil fuel exploration and extraction processes. For the CAGE study read: http://www.21stcentech.com/craters-barents-sea-point-explosive-ice-age/. Methane bombs on land are producing sinkholes in Siberia and Northern Canada. Just how large some of these explosive releases are can be read about in this posting: http://www.21stcentech.com/news-methane-bomb-69th-anniversary-hiroshima-bomb/.
  • John Higson on June 29 2017 said:
    There are no reservoirs of Methane Clathrate, it is a diffuse energy source, concentrating/harvesting it will be energy intensive, difficult and costly. It will probably never be worthwhile. What is the EROEI? Bet that it's lower than TO which is absolutely pathetic at 2:1, not enough to run industrial civilization as we know it. Such energy sources are a one way trip back to the 19th century, where we're heading anyway at some point in the not too distant future.

    The only viable way to keep the lights on is nuclear, but nobody wants to hear this after Fukushima. You cornucopians had better pray for ITER.
  • Jerome Barry on June 30 2017 said:
    It's a lot more likely that methane clathrate or hydrates as the case may be will be successfully
    used in our lifetimes than that fusion energy will ever be used for power generation.
  • Bill Simpson on July 01 2017 said:
    It is probably too spread out to be economic to collect. The oceans contain thousands of tons of gold, which will still be there when the Sun eventually consumes the Earth.
    The danger of this frozen methane is what it could cause if global warming ever gets high enough to begin rapidly releasing it from the permafrost and ocean floor. The huge amount of it could lead to massive warming if enough of it got liberated into the atmosphere because methane is much more effective at trapping heat than carbon dioxide is. Thankfully, methane doesn't last too long in the atmosphere, (about 8 years) so the amount needed to start a dangerously rapid increase in temperature would need to be enormous in order to overcome the rate at which it is being destroyed by sunlight. They could probably calculate that, once they get a handle on the amount trapped in permafrost and on the ocean floor. Then it might be possible to make an estimate of how much might get released as the temperature increases.
    My guess is that carbon dioxide is a much greater threat to melt the ice on Greenland, and eventually, even on Antarctica.
    Flooding of major coastal cities from sea level rise will become a significant problem a lot sooner than most people think. There is a lot of ice waiting to melt on Greenland.
    Climate modification using high altitude spraying of chemicals is coming within 20 years, as it becomes obvious that temperature is increasing at an increasing rate.

Leave a comment




EXXON Mobil -0.35
Open57.81 Trading Vol.6.96M Previous Vol.241.7B
BUY 57.15
Sell 57.00
Oilprice - The No. 1 Source for Oil & Energy News