The geothermal potential of Clarke Lake and Milo gas fields in northeast British Columbia

The increasing consumption of energy and its side-effects on the environment are driving an international effort to enhance the use of more environmentally-friendly energy resources such as geothermal energy which this research addresses. The work has involved an analysis of data provided by the B.C...

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Main Author: Arianpoo, Nastaran
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/12648
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spelling ftcanadathes:oai:collectionscanada.gc.ca:BVAU./12648 2023-05-15T16:17:48+02:00 The geothermal potential of Clarke Lake and Milo gas fields in northeast British Columbia Arianpoo, Nastaran 2009-09-01T13:48:22Z 3681027 bytes application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/2429/12648 eng eng University of British Columbia http://hdl.handle.net/2429/12648 Electronic Thesis or Dissertation 2009 ftcanadathes 2013-11-23T21:53:18Z The increasing consumption of energy and its side-effects on the environment are driving an international effort to enhance the use of more environmentally-friendly energy resources such as geothermal energy which this research addresses. The work has involved an analysis of data provided by the B.C. Ministry of Energy, Mines and Petroleum Resources collected from oil and gas wells drilled in the Northeast region of British Columbia for the purpose of evaluating the potential to exploit geothermal energy in the region. The study area was narrowed to two gas fields near Fort Nelson – Clarke Lake and Milo. The objectives of the project have been 1. to investigate the geothermal potential of the area; and, 2. to examine if non-geothermal wells could be used to recover geothermal energy; Using data gathered from the gas well log records, temperature gradient and heat flow maps were successfully generated for the study area using ArcGIS. A preliminary reservoir assessment has been done based on these maps. The results show the region has notably high potential for a deep geothermal project using Enhanced Geothermal System (EGS) methodologies to produce significant amounts of electrical energy for a very long time in a sustainable fashion. It is recommended that additional exploration and exploitation drilling should be done at Clarke Lake to verify the conclusions and strengthen the assumptions about suitable local rock permeability and fluid availability at depth. With respect to geothermal energy production from spent oil and gas wells, there is currently insufficient temperature and fluid flow to either recover heat for a district heating system in the nearby community of Fort Nelson or to generate electricity using a Binary Cycle process. The quantity of heat is too low to be an economically viable investment while the temperature is too low at the current gas plants to technically generate power. The research has demonstrated that data from drilled oil and gas wells when studied can be used with confidence to evaluate the geothermal potential of a region and should be applied to other locations in British Columbia and elsewhere to produce similar temperature gradient and heat flow maps. Thesis Fort Nelson Theses Canada/Thèses Canada (Library and Archives Canada) Fort Nelson ENVELOPE(-122.700,-122.700,58.805,58.805)
institution Open Polar
collection Theses Canada/Thèses Canada (Library and Archives Canada)
op_collection_id ftcanadathes
language English
description The increasing consumption of energy and its side-effects on the environment are driving an international effort to enhance the use of more environmentally-friendly energy resources such as geothermal energy which this research addresses. The work has involved an analysis of data provided by the B.C. Ministry of Energy, Mines and Petroleum Resources collected from oil and gas wells drilled in the Northeast region of British Columbia for the purpose of evaluating the potential to exploit geothermal energy in the region. The study area was narrowed to two gas fields near Fort Nelson – Clarke Lake and Milo. The objectives of the project have been 1. to investigate the geothermal potential of the area; and, 2. to examine if non-geothermal wells could be used to recover geothermal energy; Using data gathered from the gas well log records, temperature gradient and heat flow maps were successfully generated for the study area using ArcGIS. A preliminary reservoir assessment has been done based on these maps. The results show the region has notably high potential for a deep geothermal project using Enhanced Geothermal System (EGS) methodologies to produce significant amounts of electrical energy for a very long time in a sustainable fashion. It is recommended that additional exploration and exploitation drilling should be done at Clarke Lake to verify the conclusions and strengthen the assumptions about suitable local rock permeability and fluid availability at depth. With respect to geothermal energy production from spent oil and gas wells, there is currently insufficient temperature and fluid flow to either recover heat for a district heating system in the nearby community of Fort Nelson or to generate electricity using a Binary Cycle process. The quantity of heat is too low to be an economically viable investment while the temperature is too low at the current gas plants to technically generate power. The research has demonstrated that data from drilled oil and gas wells when studied can be used with confidence to evaluate the geothermal potential of a region and should be applied to other locations in British Columbia and elsewhere to produce similar temperature gradient and heat flow maps.
format Thesis
author Arianpoo, Nastaran
spellingShingle Arianpoo, Nastaran
The geothermal potential of Clarke Lake and Milo gas fields in northeast British Columbia
author_facet Arianpoo, Nastaran
author_sort Arianpoo, Nastaran
title The geothermal potential of Clarke Lake and Milo gas fields in northeast British Columbia
title_short The geothermal potential of Clarke Lake and Milo gas fields in northeast British Columbia
title_full The geothermal potential of Clarke Lake and Milo gas fields in northeast British Columbia
title_fullStr The geothermal potential of Clarke Lake and Milo gas fields in northeast British Columbia
title_full_unstemmed The geothermal potential of Clarke Lake and Milo gas fields in northeast British Columbia
title_sort geothermal potential of clarke lake and milo gas fields in northeast british columbia
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/12648
long_lat ENVELOPE(-122.700,-122.700,58.805,58.805)
geographic Fort Nelson
geographic_facet Fort Nelson
genre Fort Nelson
genre_facet Fort Nelson
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/12648
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