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Title:
Global estimates of hydrate-bound gas in marine sediments: how much is really out there?
Authors:
Milkov, Alexei V.
Affiliation:
AA(BP America, Exploration and Production Technology Group, 501 Westlake Park Boulevard, Houston, TX 77079, USA)
Publication:
Earth Science Reviews, Volume 66, Issue 3, p. 183-197.
Publication Date:
08/2004
Origin:
ELSEVIER
Abstract Copyright:
(c) 2004 Elsevier B.V.
DOI:
10.1016/j.earscirev.2003.11.002
Bibliographic Code:
2004ESRv...66..183M

Abstract

It is generally assumed that oceanic gas hydrates contain a huge volume of natural gases, mainly methane. The most widely cited estimate of global hydrate-bound gas is 21×10 15 m 3 of methane at STP (or ˜10,000 Gt of methane carbon), which is proposed as a "consensus value" from several independent estimations. This large gas hydrate reservoir is further suggested as an important component of the global carbon cycle and as a future energy source. Here, I present a revised and updated set of well-justified global estimates and discuss how and why they changed over time. It appears that the global estimates of hydrate-bound gas decreased by at least one order of magnitude from 1970s-early 1980s (estimates on the order of 10 17-10 18 m 3) to late 1980s-early 1990s (10 16 m 3) to late 1990s-present (10 14-10 15 m 3). The decrease of estimates is a result of growing knowledge of the distribution and concentration of gas hydrates in marine sediments and ongoing efforts to better constrain the volume of hydrate-bearing sediments and their gas yield. These parameters appear to be relatively well constrained at present through DSDP/ODP drilling and direct measurements of gas concentrations in sediments. The global estimate of hydrate-bound gas that best reflects the current knowledge of submarine gas hydrate is in the range (1-5)×10 15 m 3 (˜500-2500 Gt of methane carbon). A significantly smaller global gas hydrate inventory implies that the role of gas hydrates in the global carbon cycle may not be as significant as speculated previously. Gas hydrate may be considered a future energy source not because the global volume of hydrate-bound gas is large, but because some individual gas hydrate accumulations may contain significant and concentrated resources that may be profitably recovered in the future.
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