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40 Trillion Cubic Feet of Shale Gas Reserves in Pakistan

EIA’s Energy in Brief: What is shale gas and why is it important? « M. Ulric Killion's space

What is shale gas and why is it important?

Shale gas refers to natural gas that is trapped within shale formations. Shales are fine-grained sedimentary rocks that can be rich sources of petroleum and natural gas. Over the past decade, the combination of horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing has allowed access to large volumes of shale gas that were previously uneconomical to produce. The production of natural gas from shale formations has rejuvenated the natural gas industry in the United States.


How is Shale Gas Produced?

Two major drilling techniques are used to produce shale gas. Horizontal drilling is used to provide greater access to the gas trapped deep in the producing formation. First, a vertical well is drilled to the targeted rock formation. At the desired depth, the drill bit is turned to bore a well that stretches through the reservoir horizontally, exposing the well to more of the producing shale.

Hydraulic fracturing (commonly called “fracking” or “hydrofracking”) is a technique in which water, chemicals, and sand are pumped into the well to unlock the hydrocarbons trapped in shale formations by opening cracks (fractures) in the rock and allowing natural gas to flow from the shale into the well. When used in conjunction with horizontal drilling, hydraulic fracturing enables gas producers to extract shale gas at reasonable cost. Without these techniques, natural gas does not flow to the well rapidly, and commercial quantities cannot be produced from shale.

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Diagram of a Typical Hydraulic Fracturing Operation

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Source: ProPublica, Hydraulic Fracturing - ProPublica

What Are the Environmental Issues Associated with Shale Gas?

Natural gas is cleaner-burning than coal or oil. The combustion of natural gas emits significantly lower levels of carbon dioxide (CO2), nitrogen oxides, and sulfur dioxide than does the combustion of coal or oil. When used in efficient combined-cycle power plants, natural gas combustion can emit less than half as much CO2 as coal combustion, per unit of electricity output.

However, there are some potential environmental concerns that are also associated with the production of shale gas. The fracturing of wells requires large amounts of water. In some areas of the country, significant use of water for shale gas production may affect the availability of water for other uses, and can affect aquatic habitats.

Second, if mismanaged, hydraulic fracturing fluid — which may contain potentially hazardous chemicals — can be released by spills, leaks, or various other exposure pathways. Any such releases can contaminate surrounding areas.

Finally, fracturing also produces large amounts of wastewater, which may contain dissolved chemicals and other contaminants that require treatment before disposal or reuse. Because of the quantities of water used and the complexities inherent in treating some of the wastewater components, treatment and disposal is an important and challenging issue.
 
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Maybe China, India and Pakistan can start a committee to help and minimise cost to extract the gas and use each other knowledge.

What do you say?
 
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Seems strange that China has the worlds largest deposits yet is importing rather than going after shale gas. Makes me wonder that the costs in pollution, water and the cost of extraction are prohibative.
 
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Renewable is the way to go. This has to potential to poison land and create water shortage in Pakistan
 
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With so much natural resources underground and Pakistan is sitting idle. I wish BD had 1/10th of what Pakistan had for free.. :cheesy:
 
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Seems strange that China has the worlds largest deposits yet is importing rather than going after shale gas. Makes me wonder that the costs in pollution, water and the cost of extraction are prohibative.

china has just started shale gas operations so the production wasnt there before
China takes step towards tapping shale gas potential with first well | Environment | The Guardian
also in the past the technology wasnt there, only recently has the world really started looking at shale gas
 
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any alternative source to confirm this news?

any Pakistani newspaper?
 
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Unlike the bulk of world's conventional natural gas reserves that are found in Russia, Iran, Venezuela and Qatar, the shale gas reserves have been discovered in rock formations spread across many parts of the world, including Australia (396 TCF), China (1275 TCF), North America (1931 TCF), South America (1225 TCF), Europe (639 TCF), South Africa (485 TCF), India (63 TCF) and Pakistan (51 TCF). Many energy analysts argue that tapping these new hydrocarbon resources could be a game-changer in terms of global economics and geo-politics.

South Asia Investor Review: Shale Gas Reserves in Pakistan

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It's great that Pakistan found this huge reserve but I want them be careful about production of shale gas which can cause a lot of environmental damage. There's a very good documentary called GasLand read the Wikipedia page (sorry i can't post the link).
 
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koi faida nai ... Coal ka to hum achaar daal rahe hain .

Chalo km az km achaar to khanay ko milay! Abhi tak na hum ne Thar Coal ka achaar khaya hai, na Kala Bagh Dam ka khaya hai, Railway k achaar ko hum ne "ulli" laga di. Ab umeed hai ka Raccodi aur shale gas ka achaar bhi nahin banay ga! :-) Waisay aap coal ka achaar daalnay ki baat krtay hain. Mujhe to saray saray Pakistan ka achaar banta howa dikhai de raha hai :-(
 
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