Accra, Dec. 3, GNA – The country’s upstream petroleum industry regulator, Petroleum Commission, has signed a pact with TG-GEOPARTNERS, to conduct a major multi-client 3D geophysical survey in the offshore Keta Basin in the Volta Region.
The new multi-client 3D seismic acquisition programme is expected to help unlock and accelerate development of what could be the next wave of major oil discoveries in the country.
The project, which will comprise the acquisition of about 14,000 square-km of 3D-long-offset broadband multi-client seismic over open blocks, would be available for application.
Mr Egbert Faibille Jr, the Chief Executive of the Petroleum Commission, signed on behalf the commission, while the Managing Director of TG-GEOPARTNERS, Mr Thomas Tsiboe-Darko signed for the partners.
The advanced new acquisition and imaging techniques would provide improved illumination of complex structures and the process of acquisition is set to commence in early 2021 over a period of 10 months, with final processed volumes available in both time and depth by the second quarter of 2022.
In an interview with the Ghana News Agency, Mr Tsiboe-Darko, said the agreement with the Petroleum Commission to conduct the very large 3D seismic survey in the relatively underexplored, but highly prospective Keta Basin, offshore was a welcome news for the country.
He said the primary-play would undoubtedly be the late cretaceous turbiditic, thus a geologic deposit of a turbidity current, which is a type of sediment gravity flow responsible for distributing vast amounts of clastic-sediment into the deep ocean channels found in Jubilee.
“We are excited about the possibility of extensive late cretaceous and tertiary basin floor fans containing very large volumes of hydrocarbons, which could exceed the existing discoveries offshore Ghana,” he said.
Mr Tsiboe-Darko explained that the application of its new imaging technologies was required to improve subsurface understanding and lead to the increased exploration success rates.
Multi-client seismic surveys provide a cost-effective means of acquiring high-quality data as costs can be shared and larger surveys acquired for a better overall view of the prospectivity than is generally the case with smaller proprietary surveys.
It ensures access to large surveys in both mature and virgin areas, allowing oil companies to reduce their exploration risk and helping to reduce the time required from license award to drilling wells.
Postage-stamp-size surveys often leave holes in the data coverage that are inefficient due to the disproportionate time spent on line turns, and have different acquisition parameters and azimuths, making regional exploration more challenging.
Industry experts welcomed the move by the Petroleum Commission to ensure that the country’s data room would be richer and attractive to investors.
GNA