Overview
ABSTRACT
Methane hydrates are crystalline solids made of a methane molecules encaged in interlocking water molecules. They are stable solids under certain conditions of pressure and temperature that occur naturally on Earth in the Arctic and Antarctic regions (low temperature) and in deep sea (high pressure). Methane hydrates form a significant store of methane (estimated at between 2,500 and 8,500 billion tons of CH4), trapped in part during the last glaciation. They are being studied for the potential effects on global warming if by natural or anthropogenic destabilization they were to release gaseous methane directly into the atmosphere. They are also being considered as a potential source of natural gas, for which global demand is expected to increase in the coming decades.
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Roland VIALLY: Geologist, Geosciences Division, IFP Énergies nouvelles, Rueil-Malmaison, France
INTRODUCTION
The first discovery of gas hydrates dates back to the early 19th century, when physicist and chemist Humphrey Davy mixed water with chlorine to describe a solid compound above 0°C. This work was later continued by Michael Faraday. At the time, interest in these compounds was focused on fundamental research to identify their composition.
In the 1930s, during the boom in the US oil and gas industry, methane hydrates were detected as a potential blockage in gas pipelines. Research then turned to the study of hydrate formation and ways of avoiding them in pipelines. In recent years, methane hydrates, particularly those present underground, have once again been the subject of major studies in a wide variety of fields.
– The role of methane hydrates in climate cycles. During ice ages, methane is stored in the form of methane hydrates, which can be released into the atmosphere during interglacial periods. These studies focus not only on current global warming, but also on estimating the amount of methane stored in these hydrates over geological time.
– The importance of methane hydrates in destabilizing sedimentary slopes. The oil and gas industry is moving into ever deeper zones, requiring production and transportation facilities on the seabed. The massive presence of hydrates needs to be detected and analyzed in terms of geotechnical risk.
– Since the discovery of these hydrates in sediments in the early 1970s, they have always been of interest to natural gas explorers and producers, because of the considerable volume of methane they represent, even if current production techniques are complex and costly.
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KEYWORDS
climatology | gas production | gas exploration
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Energy resources and storage
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Methane hydrates – Resources and environmental issues
Bibliography
- (1) - World Energy Outlook - Agence Internationale de l'Énergie (2014) http://www.iea.org/bookshop/477-World_ Energy_Outlook_2014
- (2) - HUREAU (G.), VIALLY (R.) -...
Directory
Gas hydrate research organizations
Sugar Project (GEOMAR), Germany http://www.geomar.de/en/research/fb2/fb2-mg/projects/ sugar-2-phase/
Recorder, Canada https://csegrecorder.com/
...Events
International Conference on Gas Hydrates: every 3 years
The last one (8th ICGH) took place in 2014 in Beijing ( http://www.icgh8.org/dct/page/1 ) and the next one will take place in the United States in 2017.
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