Japan discovers subsea 'fire ice'

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Japan discovers subsea 'fire ice'
« on: March 13, 2013, 06:51:25 PM »
Australian Mining 13 March, 2013 Alex Heber

Japan’s recent successful extraction of methane hydrate, known as "fire ice", from its seabed could secure the country’s future gas supply.
The consortium drilling for the fossil fuel that looks like ice but is in fact a very densely-packed methane surrounded by water, are claiming this is a world first.


According to Australia Network News the discovery was made one kilometre below sea level.

When burnt the substance has a pale flame and leaves nothing behind but water.

The group behind the find is led by Japan Oil, Gas and Metals National Corporation, who began initial work in February 2012.
This week the companies started a two-week experimental production, an economy, trade and industry ministry official said.
"It is the world's first offshore experiment producing gas from methane hydrate," the official said, adding that the team successfully collected methane gas extracted from the half-frozen substance.
The government-led project will use high pressure to separate the methane from the solid compound.
Methane is the key component of natural gas.

It is estimated around 1.1 trillion cubic metres of natural gas lies in the ocean floor off the coast of Shikoku island, western Japan.

"We aim to establish methane hydrate production technologies for practical use by the fiscal 2018 year", a consortium official said.
Following the shut down of the country’s nuclear reactors in the wake of 2011’s tsunami nuclear crisis, Japan has gone in search of new energy supplies.
Over two years on and only two of the nation’s 50 reactors are operational, forcing Japan to buy expensive fossil-fuel energy alternatives.

Australian Mining has recently covered a number of developments in the subsea mining sphere and as the groundswell for subsea mining grows, new technology and seabed mining techniques are being developed.
Subsea mining has come into the fore in recent years, particularly in the Pacific, which has vast quantities of seabed mineral deposits.

While the economic costs seem prohibitive, there are rich pickings to found on the seabed.
"true love is life's best treasure.
wealth and fame may pass away,
bring no joy or lasting pleasure.
true love abides all way.
through the world i'll gladly go,
if one true love i know."

___________________________________________________________________________________________________ ______________________
Everyone, who came into my world, left footprints in my heart. Some, so faint, I can hardly detect them. Others, so clear, I can easily discern them. Regardless, they all influenced me. They all made me who I am.

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Re: Japan discovers subsea 'fire ice'
« Reply #1 on: March 13, 2013, 07:33:57 PM »
mayaman talaga ang mga japanese

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juan

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Re: Japan discovers subsea 'fire ice'
« Reply #2 on: March 13, 2013, 07:48:04 PM »
This will make it even many2X times richer as it will be importing very little or no energy. :)
"true love is life's best treasure.
wealth and fame may pass away,
bring no joy or lasting pleasure.
true love abides all way.
through the world i'll gladly go,
if one true love i know."

___________________________________________________________________________________________________ ______________________
Everyone, who came into my world, left footprints in my heart. Some, so faint, I can hardly detect them. Others, so clear, I can easily discern them. Regardless, they all influenced me. They all made me who I am.

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Asians Hunt Gas Treasure Locked in Ice Beneath Seabeds: Energy
« Reply #3 on: March 13, 2013, 09:00:20 PM »
By Rakteem Katakey & Tsuyoshi Inajima - Mar 13, 2013 8:44 PM GMT+1100

Japan and India, Asia’s biggest energy consumers after China, are closer to unlocking natural gas deposits trapped in ice below the seabed that may prove bigger than the world’s known fossil-fuel reserves.

Japan Oil, Gas & Metals National Corp. said yesterday it produced gas in the world’s first offshore test to extract the fuel from the frozen depths. A team including Oil & Natural Gas Corp. (ONGC), India’s biggest energy explorer, will drill off the east coast this year and try to produce the fuel, according to two officials at the regulator Directorate General of Hydrocarbons. They asked to not be named before the official announcement.

The nations are trying to catch up with North America, where discoveries of gas in shale rock and tar sands herald an energy revolution carrying the U.S. and Canada toward energy independence. While shale is found in only certain parts of the globe, carbon frozen with water -- called methane hydrates or burnable ice -- is found under most sea beds. The catch: There’s no technology yet to commercially extract that gas.

“Methane hydrates are everywhere, including in some of the fastest-growing economies,” said Will Pearson, director for global energy & natural resources at Eurasia Group in London. “If the technology is developed, it’ll alter the gas market. What is already the golden age of gas will last much longer.”
 
Natural gas, the fuel burned to make heat and electricity, is predominantly methane. A methane hydrate is a crystal of methane molecules surrounded by a cage of water molecules, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.
 
Methane hydrates, stable under low temperatures and high pressure, can disintegrate when removed from those conditions.
 
Double Size
Initial estimates suggest carbon deposits in hydrates are double the size of all known oil, gas and coal reserves, the U.S. Geological Survey said in a January 2013 report. The world’s proven reserves of natural gas alone were 208.4 trillion cubic meters at the end of 2011, according to BP Plc. (BP/)
 
Gas molecules locked in ice have also been found in the North American permafrost and the Gulf of Mexico.
India is drilling for frozen gas it has preliminarily estimated to be as large as 1,894 trillion cubic meters, according to the website of the Directorate General of Hydrocarbons, the oil and gas exploration and production regulator. Japan’s deposits of frozen gas may be large enough to supply its needs for about 100 years, according to Japan Oil, Gas & Minerals, a government-affiliate known as JOGMEC.
 
‘More Independence’
“Methane hydrate could give Japan its own energy source and more independence,” said Tomoo Suzuki, professor emeritus at Tokyo Institute of Technology, who leads a study on methane hydrate deposits off the coast of Kochi prefecture. “The question is whether extracting gas from methane hydrate can be economically viable.”
Japan Drilling Co. (1606), which signed a contract to drill wells for the test project last year, climbed 3.9 percent to 6,730 yen in Tokyo trading today, extending yesterday’s 18 percent gain. Japan Petroleum Exploration Co. (1662), the operator of the offshore project, declined 4.8 percent to 3,975 yen after rising 5.7 percent yesterday.
 
India, which discovered methane hydrates in the Bay of Bengal off its east coast, will later this year drill a few wells and engage in some test production to determine the size of the resource, a person familiar with the program said. Scientists have also found traces of conventional gas under the layer of hydrates on the ocean floor, the person said.
Oil & Natural Gas Chairman Sudhir Vasudeva didn’t answer calls to his telephone seeking comment on the company’s plan to extract methane from hydrates.
 
Test Phase
In Japan’s test phase, gas was produced in the Nankai Trough about 50 kilometers (31 miles) off the coast of the country’s main Honshu island, JOGMEC said.

The Eastern Nankai Trough deposits may hold the equivalent of about 40 trillion cubic feet of methane, a primary element of natural gas, according to the statement. That’s equivalent to about 11 years of Japan’s LNG imports, it said.
 
The country is trying to to enable commercial use by fiscal 2018, according to JOGMEC. Japan used a depressurization method in its latest test, a technology that was used when Japan and Canada jointly conducted a test production in the permafrost of northern Canada in 2008. That was the world’s first continuous and stable production from frozen gas sediments, according to the company.
 
Production Cost
The success of the offshore test doesn’t guarantee commercialization because of the short time span of production, said Yuji Morita, a senior researcher at Japan’s Institute of Energy Economics. The production cost won’t be an issue in the run-up to the commercialization of the fuel, Morita said.
 
“Hydrates store immense amounts of methane, with major implications for energy resources and climate, but the natural controls on hydrates and their impacts on the environment are very poorly understood,” the U.S. Geological Survey said in its January report. “Extraction of methane from hydrates could provide an enormous energy and petroleum feedstock resource.”
Explorers must find a way to avoid releasing large quantities of methane from hydrates into the air and the ocean. Methane traps heat so effectively it is about 10 times more potent than carbon dioxide as a greenhouse gas, according to the agency. Ice melts can reduce the pressure on the hydrates, resulting in the gas leaking out.
 
A study in the journal Nature in December 2011 found thawing of permafrost may release the equivalent of 380 billion tons of carbon dioxide this century if the Arctic warms by 7.5 degrees Celsius (13.5 degrees Fahrenheit). That includes large quantities of methane, which may increase temperatures.
 
New Sources
Nations around the world are seeking new energy sources as demand increases. China, the world’s biggest energy consumer, is looking for technology to produce from the world’s biggest estimated shale gas deposit and enhance output from coal seams.
 
While India imports more than 75 percent of its crude oil and a quarter of its natural gas requirements, Japan buys all its oil and gas from overseas and is seeking to find ways to cut its dependence on Middle Eastern crude oil.
“Countries that highlight the opportunity are those with limited oil and gas production,” said Nathan Piper, an Edinburgh-based analyst at RBC Capital Markets. “Gas hydrates remain challenging due in part to the offshore location.”
 
To contact the reporters on this story: Rakteem Katakey in New Delhi at [email protected]; Tsuyoshi Inajima in Tokyo at [email protected]
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Jason Rogers at [email protected]; Peter Langan at [email protected]


« Last Edit: March 13, 2013, 09:03:55 PM by juan »
"true love is life's best treasure.
wealth and fame may pass away,
bring no joy or lasting pleasure.
true love abides all way.
through the world i'll gladly go,
if one true love i know."

___________________________________________________________________________________________________ ______________________
Everyone, who came into my world, left footprints in my heart. Some, so faint, I can hardly detect them. Others, so clear, I can easily discern them. Regardless, they all influenced me. They all made me who I am.

*

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Re: Japan discovers subsea 'fire ice'
« Reply #4 on: March 14, 2013, 08:53:39 AM »
i have a japanese who keeps on inviting me to go there but somehow...

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Re: Japan discovers subsea 'fire ice'
« Reply #5 on: March 14, 2013, 05:37:49 PM »
On a reflective note, after WWII, Japan was confronted with an enormous debt. War reparations.
But the Philippines had Big Brother USA looking after it. Not to mention money being continually sent by o/s Pinoys to date.
So, why is Philippines still a 3rd world country? :-\ ;)


"true love is life's best treasure.
wealth and fame may pass away,
bring no joy or lasting pleasure.
true love abides all way.
through the world i'll gladly go,
if one true love i know."

___________________________________________________________________________________________________ ______________________
Everyone, who came into my world, left footprints in my heart. Some, so faint, I can hardly detect them. Others, so clear, I can easily discern them. Regardless, they all influenced me. They all made me who I am.