Saw this and thought I'd throw it out in the open. http://smallbusiness.foxbusiness.com/entrepreneurs/2013/11/13/start...
If it would work for left behind what about a virgin find? Hmm
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That's my point. The ethane would likely be stripped back out somewhere in the Gulf at a refinery and cracked down there , not piped all the way back here for cracking. Maybe we should be thinking Crackers AND Refineries being built up here to handle this. Bring the mountain to Mohammed , so to speak! Logistics simplified.
Ethane will be produced in mass quantity right here in Harrision, Columbiana, and Carroll County guys. Not necessarily in the Gulf. Read investor presentations for MarkWest and M3 Midstream regarding processing. There may be an oversupply in a 2-3 years.
Jason , where in Columbiana?
Just to clarify, the crude oil coming from the Utica is not "heavy" oil. In the continuum of liquid hydrocarbons, the crude is actually quite light, approaching the lightness in density of condensate. The problem is getting the large, complex, paraffinic crude oil molecule to flow out of the shale, into the natural and man-made fractures, and then into the well bore. Speculation: I do not see any benefit to the use of ethane unless it is injected to flood a portion of the formation and perhaps thereby dissolve the crude oil to some degree, allowing it to flow from the shale into the fractures. Even if techically feasible, this would a long-term, very capital intensive proposition, and I guess far down the list of potential experiments to produce more from the Utica.
PG Guy,
Do you have any guess as to the matrix perm in that part of the play? I know porosity was good as far out as Ashland county but the pressure was nonexistent. Wonder if the porosity and ultimately matrix perm are good enough to flow in a normally pressurized reservoir. Any thoughts?
I can't address your question in its entirety, but this I have observed: In much of Ashtabula County crude produced from the Clinton is much darker than crude from adjacent areas of PA and OH, thus the name "Black Oil". This is an informal designation of relative color, as chemically the crude is virtually identical to the adjacent lighter colored crude. Compared to asphaltic crudes produced outside the Appalachian basin, this is still a light colored crude.
I am guessing that the "GOR" designation refers to high or low "gas-oil ratio" crude, but I would be glad to have that confirmed (or not) by someone familiar with the designation.
Yes, GOR is gas-to-oil ratio.
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