2017 Annual Meeting
(521a) Greenhouse Gas Intensities and Energetic Productivity Dynamics of Giant Global Oilfields: A Life Cycle Approach
Unfortunately, prior oil-sector GHG and energetic productivity analyses rely on âsnapshotâ data of varying quality and vintage, and have largely neglected the fact that the energy intensity of producing oil can change significantly over the life of a particular oil project. These changes result from age-related changes in engineering practice (e.g. water/gas/steam injection) and processing requirements (e.g., fluid separation). Neglecting temporal trends in oil-sector emissions is problematic for long-term climate and integrated assessment modeling, where emissions trends over decades are of interest.
Here, via a detail engineering-based life cycle approach, we use decades-long historical data from twenty-five globally significant oil fields (> 1 billion barrels ultimate recovery) to model GHG intensities and energy return on investment (EROI) from oil production as a function of time. The net energy ratio (NER) and external energy ratio (EER) are used as two measures to estimate oil fields EROI. We find that volumetric oil production declines with depletion, but this depletion is accompanied by significant growth â in some cases over tenfold â in per-MJ GHG emissions. At the same time while energetic productivity decline significantly, with some fields seeing declines in excess of 90%. Depletion and reservoir exhaustion requires increased energy expenditures in drilling, oil recovery, and oil processing.
Probabilistic Monte Carlo simulation is used to draw generalized historical trends from the aggregated data of onshore/offshore, and light/medium/heavy oil fields: over 25 years, this model predicts about two-fold increase in GHG intensities, and ~ 30% and ~ 20% declines in NER and EER, respectively. We also derive a general relationship for projecting evolving dynamics of GHG emissions, NER, and EER trends over time.
In summary, the per-MJ GHG emissions and EROI from oil fields change from âoil-to-oilâ, but also differ significantly âtime-to-timeâ over a fieldâs productive life. These trends have implications for long-term climate and energy system modeling, as well as for climate policy, due to potential large increases in carbon intensity and extraction energy as global oilfields age. These effects may result in significant underestimation of future energy demand in the global oil sector in long-run models like integrated assessment models.