Description: The Orphan Fund Procurement Program is responsible for identifying orphaned upstream oil and gas well and facility sites in Saskatchewan. Using the funds within the Saskatchewan Oil and Gas Orphan Fund (SOGOF), this program is responsible for securing vendors to abandon, decommission, and reclaim orphan facitity sites. In the upstream oil and gas industry, an orphan is defined as a well, facility, or associated site that has been investigated by the Ministry of Energy and Resources and confirmed as not having any legally responsible and/or financially able party to deal with the abandonment and/or reclamation responsibilities. Once a licensee has been deemed an orphan, the Orphan Fund Procurement Program manages the well and facility licences by securing vendors to abandon the wells, decommission the facilities and reclaim the well and facility sites. The dataset identifies the Orphan inventory list of well icences that the ministry has designated orphans and provides further details of each licence in terms of the abandonment and/or reclamation progress under the Orphan Fund Procurement Program.
Copyright Text: Government of Saskatchewan, Ministry of Energy and Resources
The Saskatchewan Oil and Gas Orphan Fund is solely funded by the Saskatchewan oil and gas producers. Under the authority established in The Oil and Gas Conservation Act and The Financial Security and Site Closure Regulations, the following sources of revenue are derived from industry:
Description: The Orphan Fund Procurement Program is responsible for identifying orphaned upstream oil and gas well and facility sites in Saskatchewan. Using the funds within the Saskatchewan Oil and Gas Orphan Fund (SOGOF), this program is responsible for securing vendors to abandon, decommission, and reclaim orphan facitity sites. In the upstream oil and gas industry, an orphan is defined as a well, facility, or associated site that has been investigated by the Ministry of Energy and Resources and confirmed as not having any legally responsible and/or financially able party to deal with the abandonment and/or reclamation responsibilities. Once a licensee has been deemed an orphan, the Orphan Fund Procurement Program manages the well and facility licences by securing vendors to abandon the wells, decommission the facilities and reclaim the well and facility sites. The dataset identifies the Orphan inventory list of well icences that the ministry has designated orphans and provides further details of each licence in terms of the abandonment and/or reclamation progress under the Orphan Fund Procurement Program.
Copyright Text: Government of Saskatchewan, Ministry of Energy and Resources
The Saskatchewan Oil and Gas Orphan Fund is solely funded by the Saskatchewan oil and gas producers. Under the authority established in The Oil and Gas Conservation Act and The Financial Security and Site Closure Regulations, the following sources of revenue are derived from industry:
Description: This feature class shows the location of active, pending and terminated projects licensed under the Oil and Gas Conservation Act and Regulations across Saskatchewan. The following are the types of projects: ASP: An Alkaline Surfactant Polymer (ASP) project is an enhanced oil recovery based on the utilization of a surfactant and polymer to increase reservoir pressure and improve sweep efficiency when oil is displaced towards a production well. Cavern Disposal: A storage of wastes from hydrocarbon production in solution-mined salt caverns. Cavern Storage: A storage of hydrocarbon in solution-mined salt caverns. CO2 Injection: A CO2 Injection project is an enhanced oil recovery process based on the injection of CO2 into the producing formation to improve recovery, either through water-alternating CO2 injection or CO2 miscible flooding. CO2 Storage: A CO2 storage project means a development that is the long-term isolation of CO2 in subsurface geological formations and is primarily applicable to saline aquifers and depleted hydrocarbon reservoirs. It does NOT preclude to storage associated with hydrocarbon recovery – CO2 Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR), and does NOT include CO2 storage in unminable coal beds, basalt formations, shales, and salt caverns, and disposal of acid gas. Cyclic CO2 Injection: A Cyclic CO2 injection project is an enhanced oil recovery process based on the injection of CO2 into the producing formation, followed by a shut-in period where the injected gas dissolves into the oil, swelling it, and reduces its viscosity. Gas Injection: Gas injection is an enhanced oil recovery technique that uses injected gas to supplement the pressure in an oil reservoir or field. Other: Other types of projects which may not be covered under the existing list. Polymer Injection: A polymer project is an enhanced oil recovery process where oil recovery is improved by injecting water into a hydrocarbon bearing formation. The polymer increases pressure in the reservoir and displaces oil towards production well. Reservoir Storage: A storage of hydrocarbon in underground reservoir formations. SAGD: A Steam-Assisted Gravity Drainage (SAGD) project is an enhanced oil recovery process where oil recovery is improved through steam injection. Steam is used by injection and production well pairs to develop steam chambers, which increases the mobility of oil within the reservoir and improves recovery. Solvent Injection: Solvent injection is an enhanced oil recovery technique which involves the injection of a solvent into the reservoir to improve recovery. Spacing Modification: Spacing modification projects are areas where there is large scale development at reduced spacing, where a project is in place to evaluate and track the development. Steamflood: A Steamflood is an enhanced oil recovery process where steam is injected into a reservoir into a hydrocarbon formation. The heat introduced by the steam heats the oil and reduces the viscosity, thereby increasing the mobility of the oil and improving recovery. Waterflood: A waterflood project is an enhanced oil recovery process where oil recovery is improved by injecting water into a hydrocarbon bearing formation. Water injections increase pressure in the reservoir and displaces the oil towards a production well.
Copyright Text: Government of Saskatchewan, Ministry of Energy and Resources. The Oil and Gas Conservation Act and Regulations.