Projects
|
Following is a summary of projects that Raven Ridge Resources (RRR) has undertaken during the past few years. This information is provided to illustrate some of the services we provide to our clients. If you are interested in evaluating or developing coalbed methane or other energy resources, we encourage you to contact us. Additional information is available by calling +1 (970)-245-4088 or faxing to +1 (970)-245-2514. RRR has been active in U.S. energy development projects since its inception in 1985. Please click on the links below for an overview of:
RRR has provided a wide variety of consulting services for energy projects in the following U.S. basins and regions:
Our domestic clients include oil, gas and coalbed methane exploration and development companies; coal mining companies; and the U.S. EPA, which seeks to reduce methane emissions from coal mining activities through voluntary projects. A partial list of our clients includes:
Coalbed
Methane
RRR has conducted numerous evaluations concerning the potential for recovery of methane from active coal mines. These analyses range from preliminary evaluations using publicly available data to in-depth evaluations incorporating extensive resource and economic data supplied by the mine. We have performed these studies for private-sector mining company clients as well as the U.S. EPA. We have also examined in detail the recovery of methane from abandoned coal mines in the U.S., and have developed a methodology for estimating emissions of methane from abandoned mines. In addition, we have helped firms verify, report, and market carbon credits, an increasingly important service as companies move forward with greenhouse emissions trading initiatives.
RRR undertook two major projects concerning development of underground coal gasification (UCG) resources in the western U.S. In the more recent of these projects, we developed a program for exploration and development of UCG resources near Rawlins, Wyoming for Williams Energy Ventures. RRR developed and managed state-of-the-art drilling and completion operations, and designed a database that allowed retrieval of geotechnical information for mapping and modeling applications. We also assisted with remediation at the site. Our in-house staff and associates have the experience and capability to undertake a wide range of energy exploration and development projects throughout the United States and internationally. Please contact us for more information.
Gas Enrichment
RRR provided an expert to a United Nations Development Programme mission to India for the purpose of developing a “project brief”. This document described a plan for a coalbed methane demonstration project that calls for developing a gas recovery program at two underground coal mines. The recovered gas would fuel an internal combustion power generation station and a compressed natural gas vehicle refueling station.
As a result, RRR led a second mission to India to prepare a Project Document that
detailed the activities and proposed a budget.
Formulating the project concept presented in this document entailed
compiling extensive information on India’s coal industry, energy sector, and
regulatory framework. It also required visiting various institutions and coal
mine sites to gather and review information on coal characteristics and
resources, to determine the most prospective coalfields and identify specific
sites for the proposed project. We proposed a project concept that would effectively capture methane in working
coal mines from 1) mined out areas, using vertical wells drilled from the
surface; 2) the coal face, via deep inseam drilling of long holes in coal and
surrounding strata; and 3) in the coal reserves by drilling surface boreholes in
advance of mining. Methane would be
brought to the surface and subsequently used for power generation or as a
substitute for diesel fuel in dump trucks.
The Project Document also identified technical and institutional barriers
to commercial methane recovery and use in India, and identified strategies for
overcoming these barriers. These strategies included providing training in
coalbed methane recovery and use technologies, and demonstrating the use of
current drilling technologies. The Global Environmental Facility (GEF) approved the project and funded it for a total of $US 19.2 million. The project is moving toward implementation.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Based on RRR’s resource estimates and recommendations, Sumitomo has developed a project proposal for recovering and
utilizing methane from the
Akabira Mine. The project would use methane recovered from the mine to generate
electricity to help meet the power needs of the surrounding area.
We are preparing to begin work on the next stage, to develop production
forecasts to help enable Sumitomo to optimize the sizing of the power generation
equipment.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Raven Ridge Resources advised Glencoal Energy and its joint venture partners on maximizing the efficiency of underground coal gasification (UCG) development drilling and resource recovery. If an exploration and development program is implemented, it will result in the emplacement of the first UCG commercial demonstration module using controlled retractible injection point technology.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
In 1990 RRR traveled to Poland as part of a
U.S. EPA and
U.S. AID-sponsored mission for the purpose of evaluating the potential for
recovering and using coalbed methane. This mission entailed extensive data
gathering from a variety of Polish government organizations and technical
institutions. We visited the country’s three major coal producing basins and
compiled geologic information related to the coal and coalbed methane resources
of these basins, as well as data on ventilation, drainage, and utilization of
methane from coal mines. RRR successfully compiled and interpreted the various data, using it to
prepare a number of maps and tables showing which mining areas and specific
mines had the highest potential for coalbed methane development. The result was
the 1991 report Assessment of the Potential for Economic Development and
Utilization of Coalbed Methane in Poland, published by U.S. EPA.
Subsequently,
RRR compiled data and prepared a 1995 U.S. EPA report titled Reducing
Methane Emissions From Coal Mines in Poland: A Handbook for Expanding Coalbed
Methane Recovery and Utilization in the Upper Silesian Coal Basin. This
report focused on Poland’s gassiest coal basin, profiled in detail 17 mines
with the highest potential for increased coalbed methane recovery and
utilization. RRR also conducted an investigation for McCormick Resources predicting the volume of methane that could be recovered from mines of the Jastrzebie Coal Concern.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
RRR began working in Russia in 1992, when
we visited both Russia and
Ukraine as part of a U.S. EPA mission to identify opportunities for coalbed
methane recovery and utilization in those countries. We visited the Kuznetsk and Donetsk Coal Basins to gather
geologic information related to coal and coalbed methane resources, as well as
ventilation, drainage, and utilization of methane from the many coal mines in
these basins. RRR compiled
information on the geologic setting of the basins, as well as coal reserves and
coal production, coal characteristics, and the most promising opportunities for utilizing
this methane. RRR presented this information in the 1994 report Reducing
Methane Emissions from Coal Mines in Russia and Ukraine: The Potential for
Coalbed Methane Development.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Beginning
in January 1997 through mid 1999, RRR undertook a major coalbed methane resource
assessment in Turkey for DanOil, LLC and its joint venture partner Data Su. We
were asked to evaluate the commercial coalbed methane potential for a 6,100
square mile lease area. This effort culminated in the preparation of a detailed
resource estimate and recommended drilling targets. The project required total of four trips to Turkey. These involved training Turkish staff in the fundamentals of coalbed methane, logging and sampling of two coal exploration coreholes, gathering data, and evaluation of an adjacent lease area. Following these missions, RRR compiled and interpreted the data collected, and prepared an assessment of the potential for development of coalbed methane in the area of interest. Due to the geologic complexity of these methane resource areas, the resource estimate was prepared by dividing these areas into individual blocks based on geologic structure and coal seam depths for calculation of the in-place resource. Using this approach, we were able to prepare a detailed resource estimate and recommend drilling targets. RRR then presented the findings of this project to numerous major and large independent oil and gas companies for Dan Oil.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
RRR first began working in Ukraine
in 1992 as part of a U.S. EPA mission to identify opportunities for
coalbed methane recovery and utilization in both Russia and Ukraine countries.
During this mission, RRR visited the Donetsk Coal Basin (most of which is
in Ukraine) and the L’vov-Volyn Basin, and compiled extensive geologic, coal,
and coalbed methane information on these basins.
Following publication of the 1994 report Reducing Methane Emissions
from Coal Mines in Russia and Ukraine: The Potential for Coalbed Methane
Development, RRR undertook subsequent U.S. EPA missions to Ukraine to
identify opportunities for coalbed methane projects at specific mines in the
Donetsk Basin, specifically the Skochinksy Mine.
We performed a preliminary technical and economic analysis of methane
utilization potential at this mine. Since
then, we have continued to provide assistance to the Alternative Fuels Center in
Ukraine, including training in the use of an economic model for determining the
feasibility of various coalbed methane projects. Separate and distinct from its U.S. EPA work in Ukraine, RRR, as an equity partner in CBM Energy Limited, developed a coalbed methane prospect in Ukraine. This required travel to Ukraine and extensive data collection. RRR calculated coal reserves and recoverable methane reserves within the area of interest, prepared a financial analysis, and designed a pilot exploration and development program.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Under contract to Alkane
Energy PLC (formerly Coalgas UK, PLC), RRR determined
methane reserves contained in abandoned underground coal mines within the Alkane
license areas in the U.K. Alkane seeks to establish numerous sites
above abandoned coal mine workings that will draw medium heating value gas from
the mine void space for use as fuel for local industry, or for generating power
through the use of internal combustion engines for distribution through the
electric grid. We performed simulation modeling of methane emissions from these
mines using computational fluid dynamics software (PORFLOWTM). RRR
also prepared production rate schedules and determined cash flow projections
that Alkane is using in business planning and capital solicitation.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
In 1993, RRR assessed coalbed methane exploration work performed to date in the
Shangani River valley in northern Zimbabwe. The project, performed for Union
Carbide Management Services, included evaluating previous coal and coalbed
methane resource estimates for the region.
RRR modified these estimates based on adsorption testing performed in our
laboratory, and on desorption data that was reprocessed using RRR’s
statistical methods.
Prior to this assessment, James Marshall of RRR visited the Wankie coal mine in
Hwange,
Zimbabwe, as a side trip during a six-week cultural and business exchange in
Zaire sponsored by Rotary International. This time spent in Zimbabwe and Zaire helped familiarize RRR
with geological and general conditions in southern Africa.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Other
Countries RRR has provided desorption testing and other wellsite services for coalbed methane projects in Belgium (for the Belgian Geological Survey), Spain (for Union Texas Petroleum), and France (for Enron). In addition, we have traveled to Romania and Indonesia to investigate coalbed methane opportunities in these countries. Our associates in Australia and other countries help us stay up to date on coalbed methane activities and opportunities throughout the world. |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Return to top of page | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Grand Junction, Colorado 81505 U.S.A. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| +1 (970) 245-4088 · +1 (970) 245-2514 (fax) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
e-mail: info@ravenridge.com |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||