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Major oil find near Pak-Iran border

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Fellow members,
The following is from a Petroleum Handbook

Quote

Oil and natural gas were formed from the remains of prehistoric plants and animals—that’s why they’re called fossil fuels.

Hundreds of millions of years ago, prehistoric plant and animal remains settled into the seas along with sand, silt and rocks. As the rocks and silt settled, layer upon layer piled up in rivers, along coastlines and on the sea bottom trapping the organic material. Without air, the organic layers could not rot away.
Over time, increasing pressure and temperature changed the mud, sand and silt into rock (known as source rock) and slowly “cooked” the organic matter into petroleum. Petroleum is held inside the rock formation, similar to how a sponge holds water.

Over millions of years, the oil and gas that formed in the source rock deep within the Earth moved upward through tiny, connected pore spaces in the rocks. Some seeped out at the Earth’s surface, but most of the petroleum hydrocarbons were trapped by nonporous rocks or other barriers. These underground traps of oil and gas are called reservoirs. Contrary to popular misconception, reservoirs are not underground “lakes” of oil; they are made up of porous and permeable rocks that can hold significant amounts of oil and gas within their pore spaces. Some reservoirs are hundreds of feet below the surface, while others are thousands of feet underground.

Unquote.

It is only possible to ‘steal’ oil or gas if one taps into the same oil bearing structure. There is no oil and/or gas bearing structure belonging to Iran within 500 Km of Pakistan border. Therefore being close to Iran border implies nothing. Please understand that there is no such thing as “River of oil”. Any and all rumours floating about Iran not wanting to drill in Baluchistan were totally baseless.

Now let us discuss the reservoirs. The reservoir has two characteristics; the size of the hydrocarbon-bearing formation and depth of the ‘pay zone’.

One of the world’s largest reservoir, the Ghawar field of Saudi Arabia has an oil-bearing formation which is approx. 280 Km long and 40 Km wide. Its ‘payzone’ is 100 meters thick and lies about 2,000 meters below the surface.

In the 1960’s when most of the large oil deposits were discovered, a “Giant” field contained about 5-billion bbl. oil (or more) and a giant gas field had about 10 tcf of gas ( or more). The whole world has since been seismically searched and picked over. Geological knowledge has improved enormously in the past 30 years and it is almost inconceivable now that major fields of the 70-billion bbls still remain to be found

These days nearly all very large fields have already discovered and any oil filed in about of in excess of 1-billion barrels of oil or 1 tcf of gas is called a giant gas discovery. Nearly all new large oil finds these days are in 1 to 2-billion barrel range, but at $70-bbl oil, it converts into a lot of money

Historically, Pakistan has had smaller oil finds, the oil-bearing formation being only a few kilometres in size and pay zones about 30 meters thick. Average oil-bearing structures in Pakistan contain less than 50-million barrels of oil and total proven reserves are less than 500-million bbls. An oil find of the size of “Burgan field” of Kuwait (close to 70 –billion barrels), while not “impossible” it is highly unlikely.

Pakistan has had better luck with the gas discoveries. Sui gas field discovered in 1952 had about 10 tcf gas reserves (about 1.7-bbl oil equivalent) and indeed a giant gas field. It started production in 1955 and after more than 60 years it still has about 2 tcf gas left. However, since then we have not discovered any gas bearing structure of that size.

Another thing to remember is the cost of production. While older onshore oil well produces crude at $ 7 -10 per bbl., production from newer wells, depending upon well depth can be anywhere from $20 to $30- per bbl. Offshore drilling costs about 4 times as much. North Sea average drill depth is about 3,000 meters. Exxon has already drilled down to 5,000 meters. How much will be the average production cost? I would not even hazard a guess. However, it is safe to assume that it will be below $70 per bbl, thus economically viable at current oil prices.

Offshore drilling is not new in Pakistan. Wintershell was the first company that started offshore drilling in Pakistan but withdrew after 3 dry well off the Makran coast. Last I heard was that Ocean Oil held two offshore/ adjacent onshore blocks off Makran coast well.

I have also read in theTimes of Islamabad that ExxonMobil was on the “Verge” of discovering huge deposits. All indications are that this a ‘Conventional’ drilling and already as deep as 5,000 meters, close to the Iranian border. I would, therefore, eliminate the non-conventional sources such as Oil-shales.

My problem is that this revelation was not from the drilling company but from the caretaker Minister. Discoveries are normally announced after the same have been discovered; not before. IMHO the Minister has been highly indiscreet. The honourable minister will look extremely foolish if by chance this shows up as a dry hole or only a minor discovery or the news turns out to be fake.

I hate to be the harbinger of bad news but IMHO post 148 by Hon AA Khan appears to have a sound basis.

According to the news article of May 2018, Exxon had acquired 25% stake in the offshore drilling of Makran coast. I am therefore surprised to hear that in barely 3 months Exxon has already drilled down to 5,000-meter depth.

https://tribune.com.pk/story/1721191/2-exxonmobil-acquires-25-stake-offshore-drilling-pakistan/

On the verge does not mean actually discovered. My suggestion is that let us not count our chickens before they are hatched. Our current proven reserves are less than 500-million barrels. I would, therefore, be over the over the moon even if we find a 1-billion barrel oil field or a 10 tcf gas field. Any more would be more than GREAT news. However, we must wait until the actual results are announced before jumping to any conclusions
 
Last edited:
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ExxonMobil does not possess this block how they discovered.
 
.
Fellow members,
The following is from a Petroleum Handbook

Quote

Oil and natural gas were formed from the remains of prehistoric plants and animals—that’s why they’re called fossil fuels.

Hundreds of millions of years ago, prehistoric plant and animal remains settled into the seas along with sand, silt and rocks. As the rocks and silt settled, layer upon layer piled up in rivers, along coastlines and on the sea bottom trapping the organic material. Without air, the organic layers could not rot away.
Over time, increasing pressure and temperature changed the mud, sand and silt into rock (known as source rock) and slowly “cooked” the organic matter into petroleum. Petroleum is held inside the rock formation, similar to how a sponge holds water.

Over millions of years, the oil and gas that formed in the source rock deep within the Earth moved upward through tiny, connected pore spaces in the rocks. Some seeped out at the Earth’s surface, but most of the petroleum hydrocarbons were trapped by nonporous rocks or other barriers. These underground traps of oil and gas are called reservoirs. Contrary to popular misconception, reservoirs are not underground “lakes” of oil; they are made up of porous and permeable rocks that can hold significant amounts of oil and gas within their pore spaces. Some reservoirs are hundreds of feet below the surface, while others are thousands of feet underground.

Unquote.

It is only possible to ‘steal’ oil or gas if one taps into the same oil bearing structure. There is no oil and/or gas bearing structure belonging to Iran within 500 Km of Pakistan border. Therefore being close to Iran border implies nothing. Please understand that there is no such thing as “River of oil”. Any and all rumours floating about Iran not wanting to drill in Baluchistan were totally baseless.

Now let us discuss the reservoirs. The reservoir has two characteristics; the size of the hydrocarbon-bearing formation and depth of the ‘pay zone’.

One of the world’s largest reservoir, the Ghawar field of Saudi Arabia has an oil-bearing formation which is approx. 280 Km long and 40 Km wide. Its ‘payzone’ is 100 meters thick and lies about 2,000 meters below the surface.

In the 1960’s when most of the large oil deposits were discovered, a “Giant” field contained about 5-billion bbl. oil (or more) and a giant gas field had about 10 tcf of gas ( or more). The whole world has since been seismically searched and picked over. Geological knowledge has improved enormously in the past 30 years and it is almost inconceivable now that major fields of the 70-billion bbls still remain to be found

These days nearly all very large fields have already discovered and any oil filed in about of in excess of 1-billion barrels of oil or 1 tcf of gas is called a giant gas discovery. Nearly all new large oil finds these days are in 1 to 2-billion barrel range, but at $70-bbl oil, it converts into a lot of money

Historically, Pakistan has had smaller oil finds, the oil-bearing formation being only a few kilometres in size and pay zones about 30 meters thick. Average oil-bearing structures in Pakistan contain less than 50-million barrels of oil and total proven reserves are less than 500-million bbls. An oil find of the size of “Burgan field” of Kuwait (close to 70 –billion barrels), while not “impossible” it is highly unlikely.

Pakistan has had better luck with the gas discoveries. Sui gas field discovered in 1952 had about 10 tcf gas reserves (about 1.7-bbl oil equivalent) and indeed a giant gas field. It started production in 1955 and after more than 60 years it still has about 2 tcf gas left. However, since then we have not discovered any gas bearing structure of that size.

Another thing to remember is the cost of production. While older onshore oil well produces crude at $ 7 -10 per bbl., production from newer wells, depending upon well depth can be anywhere from $20 to $30- per bbl. Offshore drilling costs about 4 times as much. North Sea average drill depth is about 3,000 meters. Exxon has already drilled down to 5,000 meters. How much will be the average production cost? I would not even hazard a guess. However, it is safe to assume that it will be below $70 per bbl, thus economically viable at current oil prices.

Offshore drilling is not new in Pakistan. Wintershell was the first company that started offshore drilling in Pakistan but withdrew after 3 dry well off the Makran coast. Last I heard was that Ocean Oil held two offshore/ adjacent onshore blocks off Makran coast well.

I have also read in theTimes of Islamabad that ExxonMobil was on the “Verge” of discovering huge deposits. All indications are that this a ‘Conventional’ drilling and already as deep as 5,000 meters, close to the Iranian border. I would, therefore, eliminate the non-conventional sources such as Oil-shales.

My problem is that this revelation was not from the drilling company but from the caretaker Minister. Discoveries are normally announced after the same have been discovered; not before. IMHO the Minister has been highly indiscreet. The honourable minister will look extremely foolish if by chance this shows up as a dry hole or only a minor discovery or the news turns out to be fake.

I hate to be the harbinger of bad news but IMHO post 148 by Hon AA Khan appears to have a sound basis.

According to the news article of May 2018, Exxon had acquired 25% stake in the offshore drilling of Makran coast. I am therefore surprised to hear that in barely 3 months Exxon has already drilled down to 5,000-meter depth.

https://tribune.com.pk/story/1721191/2-exxonmobil-acquires-25-stake-offshore-drilling-pakistan/

On the verge does not mean actually discovered. My suggestion is that let us not count our chickens before they are hatched. Our current proven reserves are less than 500-million barrels. I would, therefore, be over the over the moon even if we find a 1-billion barrel oil field or a 10 tcf gas field. Any more would be more than GREAT news. However, we must wait until the actual results are announced before jumping to any conclusions
Why did Saddam Hussain accuse Kuwait's Ratga Field of stealing billions of dollars’ worth of oil from his Rumaila field and got himself and family killed for it?

What are Shared Oil Fields (of Iran) and how do they work, please explain it it to me in layman's terms because I am not an expert like you.

How and why does Iran share 23 fields in border areas with Bahrain, Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, UAE and Turkmenistan.
 
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Why did Saddam Hussain accuse Kuwait's Ratga Field of stealing billions of dollars’ worth of oil from his Rumaila field and got himself and family killed for it?

What are Shared Oil Fields (of Iran) and how do they work, please explain it it to me in layman's terms because I am not an expert like you.

How and why does Iran share 23 fields in border areas with Bahrain, Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, UAE and Turkmenistan.

I'm no expert but shared oil/gas fields means the field exists on both sides of the border (terrestrial or maritime). As in, the border cuts across the field which means that wells on both sides are extracting from the same source. This causes tension as both sides try to extract more than the other. Agreements should be reached though, and I'm sure some do happened.
 
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From a very credible source. Oilprice however still references same Pakistani sources.

Pakistan: Exxon Is Close To Making A Mega Oil Discovery

By Tsvetana Paraskova - Aug 06, 2018, 2:00 PM CDT
140db1797148cae1857d92bfcda368c9.jpg

ExxonMobil is close to discovering huge oil reserves in Pakistan near the border with Iran, and those reserves could even be larger than the oil reserves of Kuwait, the Pakistani Minister for Maritime Affairs and Foreign Affairs, Abdullah Hussain Haroon, said over the weekend.

Addressing business leaders at the Federation of Pakistan Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FPCCI), Haroon said that Exxon had drilled for oil close to the Iranian border and that the U.S. supermajor was optimistic about the oil find.

“Foreign investors are interested in coming to Pakistan, provided we manage to meet their standards and attract them to make investment,” the Pakistani minister said in a press release published by the FPCCI.

According to Arab News, if the oil discovery in Pakistan turns out to be as large as expected, the country would rank among the world’s top ten oil producing countries, ahead of Kuwait.

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Kuwait’s total proved oil reserves were 101.5 billion barrels at the end of 2017, according to the BP Statistical Review of World Energy 2018. The Kuwaiti reserves account for 6 percent of the world’s total proved oil reserves, putting Kuwait among the top ten countries in terms of largest oil reserves per country after Venezuela, Saudi Arabia, Canada, Iran, Iraq, and Russia.

In Pakistan, ExxonMobil signed an agreement in May this year to take a 25-percent working interest in the Indus Block G offshore Pakistan, where the other partners in the block are Italy’s major Eni and Pakistan’s Government Holdings Pvt Ltd and Oil and Gas Development Company Limited (OGDCL).

According to Arab News, Pakistan currently meets just 15 percent of its petroleum demand with domestic crude oil production, while 85 percent of its demand is met with imports. With the high imports, and the higher oil prices in recent months, Pakistan faces a large current account deficit and spends a substantial portion of its foreign exchange reserves on importing oil.

By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com
 
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Why did Saddam Hussain accuse Kuwait's Ratga Field of stealing billions of dollars’ worth of oil from his Rumaila field and got himself and family killed for it?

What are Shared Oil Fields (of Iran) and how do they work, please explain it it to me in layman's terms because I am not an expert like you.

How and why does Iran share 23 fields in border areas with Bahrain, Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, UAE and Turkmenistan.


Large oil /gas fields such as North Dome / South Pars condensate & gas field extend across the economic zones of Qatar & Iran. The hydrocarbon-bearing rock formations cover an area of nearly 10,000 Sq. Kms of which 6,000 Sq. Km is in Qatari waters and the rest in the Iranian zone in the Persian /Arab Gulf. Therefore it belongs to both the countries. Total reserves of the field are close to 100 tcf (17-billion bbl oil equivalent) out which Qatari share is 60 tcf.


Saddam accused Kuwait of drilling into the Rumania oil field. This field is located at Basra, barely 32 km from the Iraq/Kuwait border. With 17-billion bbl. of oil in place; this is the largest oil-bearing structure discovered in Iraq. The following is from the Oil & Gas Journal.

RUMAILA DISPUTE

Schofield also looks at the dispute between the two countries over the Rumaila oil field. He says no reliable geological maps are known to exist and there are two views within oil company circles over the relationship between the massive Iraqi Rumaila field, producing about 400,000 b/d before the 1990 invasion, and the much smaller Ratga field lying just within Kuwaiti territory to the immediate south.

The most popular view is that Ratga is the southern continuation of Rumaila lying on the lower slope of the main dome structure that rises in Iraq. Ratga oil is almost certainly drawn from a different level from that of the main Rumaila field in Iraq.

But he quotes the respected Lebanese geologist Z. R. Beydoun, who contends the Rumaila supergiant lies totally within Iraq. The exact location of Ratga field is uncertain while its geology is characterized provisionally as a possible crescent trend near and along the Iraqi border.

If this second view is correct, it is conceivable that the two oil fields are still connected indirectly by a saddle with a common aquifer.

KUWAIT OFFICIALS CONFIRM CONNECTION

But Schofield adds that Kuwait Oil Co. officials in confidence have confirmed Ratga is a geological extension of the Rumaila field.

Iraqi officials at Rumaila claim to have noticed a drop in pressure during the late 1980s as a result of Kuwait's 10,000 b/d production at Ratga.

Schofield also reports the Iraqi government accusation-during 1990 but before the invasion that the Kuwaitis were slant drilling under the international boundary into the Rumaila reserve

https://www.ogj.com/articles/print/...ing-the-world-iraq-kuwait-border-dispute.html

In all cases, when it is a common oil-bearing rock structure that extends across the national boundaries/ economic zones, the oil fields are shared.

There are no oil/gas producing structures/fields along the Pakistan /Iran border. Hence the rumours that Iran did not want Pakistan to drill in Baluchistan had no logical or rational basis. You don’t need to believe me; if you know any Petroleum Geologist or Petroleum Engineer working for any reputable oil company, please ask him.

My humble request to the fellow members is that we should stop following the ‘Illusions’, no matter how attractive. Instead as intelligent human beings, we should strive to seek the ‘Truth’.

I have nothing else to say on this subject.
 
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Hydrocarbon reserves are strategic assets and should not be publicized until and unless proven economically.
 
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ExxonMobil does not possess this block how they discovered.

Sir even news states its not discovered yet. so its pure assessment. Secondly one don't know how much he can extract or what will be the cost.
Media is acting like Sharif Brothers (Gold/iron in Chiniot claim).
Let them discover first.
 
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