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The Leading Edge; April 2001; v. 20; no. 4; p. 371; DOI: 10.1190/1.1438952
© 2001 Society of Exploration Geophysicists
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The future of oil has a "deep color"

Gene Sparkman

Houston, Texas

The first 20% of the full text of this article appears below.

Ronald Oligney and Michael Economides in their book The Color of Oil (Round Oak Publishing Company, 2000) describe the primary colors of oil as "money, people, and technology." Figure 1, an illustration from the book, shows U.S. Lower 48 oil production peaking in the late 1960s and continuing on a steady decline after that. The decline in U.S. domestic production was delayed somewhat when the lower 48 production was supplemented by the inclusion of Alaska oil into the totals. This total also has peaked and is on a downward trend. Oligney and Economides point out that even breakthrough new technology such as 3-D seismic and horizontal wells only made a slight "bump" on the downward trend. New large reservoirs must still be found to impact the trend. They have used Figure 2 in other presentations to provide an Alaskan North Slope type scenario that could reverse this downward trend. The deepwater region in . . . [Full Text of this Article]







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