Oil and Gas Supply Module
[1] Technically recoverable resources are resources in accumulations producible using current recovery
technology but without reference to economic profitability.
[2] Proved reserves are the estimated quantities that analysis of geological and engineering data
demonstrate with reasonable certainty to be recoverable in future years from known reservoirs under
existing economic and operating conditions.
[3] Inferred reserves are that part of expected ultimate recovery from known fields in excess of
cumulative production plus current reserves.
[4] Undiscovered resources are located outside oil and gas fields in which the presence of resources has
been confirmed by exploratory drilling; they include resources from undiscovered pools within confirmed
fields when they occur as unrelated accumulations controlled by distinctly separate structural features or
stratigraphic conditions.
[5] Donald L. Gautier and others, U.S. Department of Interior, U.S. Geological Survey, 1995 National
Assessment of the United States Oil and Gas Resources, (Washington, D.C., 1995); U.S. Department of
Interior, Minerals Management Service, Report to Congress: Comprehensive Inventory of U.S. OCS Oil
and Natural Gas Resources, (February 2006); and 2003 estimates of conventionally recoverable
hydrocarbon resources of the Gulf of Mexico and Atlantic Outer Continental Shelf as of January 1, 2003.
[6] The amounts added (in billion barrels) among the various OGSM regions are as follows: Northeast
0.4, Gulf Coast 5.0, Midcontinent 3.8, Southwest 4.1, Rocky Mountain 1.5, and West Coast 1.3.
[7] Source: Noyes Data Corporation, Oil Shale Technical Data Handbook, edited by Perry Nowacki, Park
Ridge, New Jersey, 1981, pages 89-97. The Paraho Oil Shale Project design had a maximum production
rate of 100,000 syncrude barrels per day, which is used in the OSSS as the standard oil shale facility
size.
[8] Technically recoverable resources are resources that can be produced using current technology.
[9] U.S. Department of Interior, U.S. Geological Survey, The Oil and Gas Resource Potential of the Arctic
National Wildlife Refuge 1002 Area, Alaska, Open File Report 98-34, 1999; U.S. Geological Survey,
USGS Fact Sheet FS-028-01, April 2001; and, Oil and Gas Resources of the Arctic Alaska Petroleum
Province, by David W. Houseknecht and Kenneth J. Bird, U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper
1732–A, 2005.
Notes and Sources for Table 9.2
Note: Resources in areas where drilling is officially prohibited are not included in this table. Also, the
Associated-Dissolved Gas and the Alaska values are not explicitly utilized in the OGSM, but are included
here to complete the table. The Alaska value does not include stranded Arctic gas.
Source: Onshore, State Offshore, and Alaska - U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) with adjustments to
Unconventional Gas Recovery resources by Advanced Resources, International; Federal (Outer
Continental Shelf) Offshore - Minerals Management Service (MMS); Proved Reserves -- EIA, Office of
Oil and Gas. Table values reflect removal of intervening reserve additions between the date of the latest
available assessment and January 1, 2007.
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