Geological Surveys
Geological surveying
on the OCS consists of bottom sampling, shallow coring, and deep
stratigraphic tests. These data are useful in determining the general
geology of an area and whether the right types of rocks exist for
petroleum formation and accumulation.
Bottom samples
are obtained by dropping a weighted tube to the ocean
floor and recovering it with an attached wire line. Depending upon the
nature of the ocean floor, penetration is normally limited to a few tens
of feet. Bottom samples can also be obtained from dredging.
Shallow coring
is performed by conventional rotary drilling equipment to obtain a
near-surface sample of the rocks of the seabed. Choice of location is
carefully controlled to avoid any shallow (geological and manmade)
hazards, for example, faults or environmentally sensitive areas.
Penetration is limited to 50 feet of consolidated rock.
In any planning
area, deep stratigraphic test wells, commonly known as
continental offshore stratigraphic test (COST) wells, can be drilled to
determine the geological character of rock strata. The location of such
wells is carefully controlled by a permit issued by the MMS. These
tests, which may be more than 20,000 feet deep, provide information that
can be used by the Government and industry to evaluate tracts to be
offered in a lease sale. Basically, an operator sets up a consortium of
other companies where drilling costs are shared. The wells are drilled
in accordance with MMS regulations. All stratigraphic tests must be
completed 60 days before the sale and the information is released to the
public 10 years after completion of the well or 60 calendar days after
the issuance of the first oil and gas lease within 50 miles (80.6 km) of
the well site. The last COST well was drilled in 1989, in the Central
Gulf of Mexico. A discussion of the cost well program is described by
Dellagiarino (1991).
The Resource
Evaluation specialists at MMS have been using workstations with modern
3-D seismic and geological interpretation software to:
 |
Determine the
hydrocarbon potential of each of the OCS blocks |
 |
Determine fair
market value for the OCS tracts being offered for lease |
 |
Determine fair
market value for the OCS tracts being offered for lease; |
 |
Assess undiscovered
amounts of natural gas and oil; |
 |
Quantify reserves
of natural gas and oil on the OCS; and |
 |
Perform post lease
comparative analyses of company submitted bids for acceptance or
rejection. |
It has been of
interest to compare the data acquisition statistics for the oil industry
with those of MMS.
Industry has tended
to acquire more data than the MMS. However, of the data shot by industry
in the Alaska OCS, the MMS has acquired approximately 90 percent. Alaska
remains a large frontier area with limited data coverage by industry, a
fact that necessitates the MMS to acquire as much of these data as
feasible. In recent years, the Gulf of Mexico has acquired most 3-D
surveys and most large 2-D surveys. However, the MMS does not acquire
the volume that industry obtains to reprocess.
The MMS acquired
more data in the Atlantic Region than industry in 1976 and 1983. Before
1976, the MMS database was limited because industry had shown very
little interest in leasing this frontier area, although industry had
been acquiring geophysical data.
During the period
1976 to 1984, the MMS not only acquired most of the industry data, but
purchased much of the pre-1976 data. Since 1985, there has been less
activity, reflecting a decrease in industry interest.
Some of the reasons
the MMS does not acquire all the data held by industry are as follows:
 |
Redundancy of data,
because industry does not share it, |
 |
Difference in data
quality, |
 |
Budgetary
constraints, |
 |
Personnel
limitations for data reduction and interpretations, and |
 |
Data storage,
retrieval and display limitations. |
In conclusion,
totals for mileage acquired, permits issued, and expenditures reflect
the overall trends of oil and gas pricing, limitations of areas due to
offshore moratoria, and a shift of industry emphasis to foreign
theatres.