The event was jointly held by the Coordinating Committee for Geoscience Programmes in East & Southeast Asia (CCOP), the Korea Institute of Geoscience and Mineral Resources (KIGAM), and the Vietnam Petroleum Institute (VPI).

Dr. Byeong-Kook Son, head of KIGAM’s oil and gas research group, introduced the results of the assessment in 13 sedimentary basins and 21 shale formations in Asia.

He cited the latest update of the shale oil and gas reserves in Asian countries as follows: Malaysia 8.19 trillion cubic feet (TCF) (equivalent to 232 billion cu.m); the Philippines 149.8 TCF (4,242 billion cu.m), Vietnam 77 TCF (2,180 billion cu.m), Indonesia 58.12 TCF (1,646 billion cu.m), the Republic of Korea 72.5 TCF (2,053 billion cu.m), and Laos 51 TCF (1,444 billion cu.m).

leftcenterrightdel
Delegates at the workshop

Prof. Dr. Azara N.Tucuncu, from the US-based Unconventional Natural Gas and Oil Institute (UNGI)’s petroleum engineering department, said the research and exploitation of non-traditional resources like shale oil and gas require huge costs.

He suggested that the Vietnamese Government put forth specific policies to support oil and gas companies, such as the Vietnam Oil and Gas Group (PetroVietnam or PVN).

PVN could also collaborate with foreign partners in the field, he recommended.

According to Dr. Trinh Xuan Cuong, deputy director of the VPI, his institute is cooperating with domestic and foreign partners to carry out long-term research programmes on unconventional oil and gas.

The VPI is conducting research on the characteristics and prospects of gas hydrates in the East Sea, shale oil and gas in sedimentary basins on the continental shelf of Vietnam, and coal-bed methane in Hanoi, Thanh Hoa-Nghe An, and Tuy Hoa.

Source: VNA