Publications
Survey of Energy Resources 2007
Crude Oil and Natural Gas Liquids Country Notes
|
Proved recoverable reserves (crude oil and NGLs, million tonnes) |
225 |
|
Production (crude oil and NGLs, million tonnes, 2005) |
23.3 |
|
R/P ratio (years) |
10.3 |
|
Year of first commercial production |
1964 |
Although drilling for oil took place as long ago as 1892, it was not until well after World War II that Australia achieved oil-producer status. Since then, numerous oil fields have been discovered, notably in the following areas: Gippsland Basin (Bass Strait), off Victoria; Cooper Basin, South Australia; Eromanga and Surat Basins, Queensland; Carnarvon Basin (North-west Shelf) off Western Australia; Bonaparte Basin in the Timor Sea.
According to Geoscience Australia data as at 1 January 2005, 'remaining commercial reserves' were 113.6 gigalitres of crude oil and 100.8 gigalitres of condensate. With the inclusion of 117.1 gigalitres of naturally-occurring LPG, total proved recoverable oil reserves amounted to 331.5 gigalitres, equivalent to 2 085 million barrels or almost 225 million tonnes. Commercially published estimates of Australian oil reserves differ considerably from Geoscience Australia's level: Oil & Gas Journal quotes 1 437 million barrels and
World Oil 4 015.
The estimated additional reserves recoverable, on the basis of Geoscience Australia's estimates of reserves that have not yet been declared commercially viable (non-commercial reserves), are as follows (in gigalitres): crude oil 124.2; condensate 314.9; naturally-occurring LPG 174.8, giving a total crude plus NGLs of 613.9 gigalitres or 3 861 million barrels.
Production of oil (including condensate and other NGLs) has fluctuated in recent years: in 2005 it averaged 554 000 b/d, of which crude oil accounted for 58%, condensate 22% and LPG/ethane for 20%. About 50% of Australia's total oil output in 2005 was exported, mostly to Japan and other Asian destinations, the USA and New Zealand.
