Paper: Estonian oil shale resources calculated by GIS method
http://www.minest.ee/mining
txt:
Oil Shale, 2003, Vol. 20, No. 3 SPECIAL ISSN 0208-189X
pp. 404-411 © 2003 Estonian Academy Publishers
ESTONIAN OIL SHALE RESOURCES
CALCULATED BY GIS METHOD
I. VALGMA*
Department of Mining, Tallinn Technical University
82 Kopli St., Tallinn, 10412 Estonia
http://www.ttu.ee/maeinst/
A digital map of Estonian oil shale mining was created for joining the data
about technological, environmental, and social limitations in the deposit. For
evaluating potential resource of oil shale, based on borehole database, its
amount, tonnage and energy were calculated. Thereafter the quantity of economical
oil shale for power plants and shale oil resource were calculated.
Energy rating is the most important factor for determining oil shale reserves
in the case of using it for electricity generation. In the case of oil production,
data on oil yield and potential resources in oil shale are the most important
figures to determine the value of the deposit. Basing on the models, oil resource
has been calculated. Resource data can be used for composing master
plans for the deposit considering both power generation and oil production.
The data can be also used for composing development plans of mines and for
logistics calculations.
Introduction
Oil shale bed in Estonia is deposited in the depth of 0–100 m with the thickness
of 1.4–3.2 m in the area of 2,884 km2
(Fig. 1). The mineable seam consists
of seven kukersite layers and four to six limestone interlayers. The layers
are named A–F1. The energy rating of the bed is 15–45 GJ/m2
.
Oil shale mining in then Estonia Province started in 1916; it was extracted
in surface mines using the opencast method. Underground mining
started in 1922. Room-and-pillar mining, which is the only underground oil
shale mining method today, was started in 1960. During the years 1971–
2001 in some mines longwall mining with shearers was used. In total ten oil
shale surface mines and thirteen underground mines have been in operation.
Probability of opening new operations is high if oil shale processing or cement
productions become more active.
*
Estonian Oil Shale Resources Calculated by GIS Method 405
Estonia
Russia
Lake Peipus
Mined out area
Exploration fields
Gulf of Finland outcrop
25 50
kilometres
0
Jõgeva county
Järva county
Lääne-Viru county
Ida Viru county
Jõhvi
Kohtla-Järve
0
4
Kiviõli
Kunda
M t
Narva
Narva-Jõesuu
Rakvere
Sillamäe
Tapa
Fig. 1. Baltic oil shale area
The Criteria of the Oil Shale Reserve
The criteria of the oil shale reserve are: energy rating, calorific value of the
layers, thickness and depth of the seam, location, available mining technology,
world price of competitive fuel and its transporting cost, oil shale mining
and transporting cost. In addition, nature protection areas are limiting
factors for mining. The economic criterion for determining Estonia’s kukersite∗
oil shale reserve for electricity generation is the energy rating of the
seam in GJ/m2
. It is calculated as the sum of the products of thickness, calorific
values and densities of all oil shale layers A–F1 and limestone interlayers.
A reserve is mineable when energy rating of the block is at least
∗
In addition to kukersite oil shale in Estonia, there are occurrences of another kind of oil shale –
Dictyonema argillite, mined and used in Sillamäe for extracting uranium in 1948–1953.
Table 1. Estonian Oil Shale Reserves, M tons, January 1, 2002
Range of mineability
Economic Subeconomic
Cut-off-grade – energy rating of bed, GJ/m2
Reserves
35 25
Range of exploration:
Measured & indicated 1,186 1,760
Indicated & inferred 302 1,751
Total 1,488 3,511
Including:
Operating mining fields:
Measured 513 150
Inferred 172 36
Abandoned mining fields:
Measured 17 73
Inferred 5 7
406 I. Valgma
35 GJ/m2
, and subeconomic if energy rating is 25–35 GJ/m2
. According to
the Balance of Estonian Natural Resources, the oil shale reserve was 5 billion
tonnes in the year 2002. Economic reserve was 1.5 billion t and subeconomic
– 3.5 billion t (Table 1). These numbers apply to oil shale usage for
electricity generation in power plants and are calculated only by oil shale
layers, which is fiction because in most cases the total bed is used for combustion.
In the case of wide-scale using of oil shale for cement or oil production,
the criteria must be changed.
The presented official reserve data are not reliable as seen in Fig. 2. Reliability
is only 50 % on the lines of 35 and 25 GJ/m2
, as well as in any other
point on the deposit. As well known in practice, the reliability is sufficient
beginning with 70–85 %. In fact about 35 % from the reserve of the Estonia
mining field are below economic level.
Fig. 2.
0.85
0.7
0.5
0.7
0.85
35 GJ/sq m
25 GJ/sq m
Permisküla
Narva
Aidu
Viru
Estonia
Ojamaa
Uus Kiviõli
Puhatu
Tudu
Peipsi
Ahtme
Oandu
Sonda
Seli
Fig. 2. Reliability of reserves
Oil shale resource depends on the consumption amount. The graph in
Fig. 3 shows the age of oil shale resources if resource is calculated by criteria
proceeding from electricity generation. If the output level is ten million tonnes
per year, the economic reserve in mining fields of operating mines will
last for 25 years. In the case of technological development and changing environmental
limitations, this period could prolong to 45 years. When accounting
all economic reserve, the period of mining will last 60 years with
10 Mt production.
The following conclusions could be made after evaluating the age of resources:
• Economic reserve will last until the year 2025
• The reserve must be recalculated using new criteria in the case of widescale
oil production
Estonian Oil Shale Resources Calculated by GIS Method 407
0
20
40
60
80
100
5 10 15 20 25 30
Oil Shale Output, mill. tonnes per year
Resource age in years
Economic,
Measured &
Indicated
reserve
Economic,
Measured &
Indicated
reserve plus half
of marginally
economic
Economic
reserve of
operating mines
Total reserve of
operating mines
Fig. 3. Age of oil shale resources
Modeling
Basing on geological data, several grids of oil shale layers and seams were
created (height, thickness, in-place tonnage, energy rating, overburden
thickness and stripping coefficient).
Oil Shale Resource
For evaluating potential resource of oil shale, its amount, tonnage and energy
must be calculated. Then the quantity of economical oil shale for both electricity
and oil production is calculated. Assuming that Estonia deposit is a
combination of current exploration fields, the polygon shown in Fig. 4 marks
the deposit area covering 2,884 km2
. The quantity of the oil shale seam could
be calculated by extracting seam thickness and corresponding areas from the
created isopachs using SQL query.
Inverse distance weighting (IDW), triangulation with smoothing, natural
neighbour, rectangular interpolation and Kriging methods could be used for
interpolation. IDW Interpolation can be used because the errors of the initial
data exceed smoothing level of the method. Smoothed isopleths give a more
clear overview of the deposit and allow to extrapolate the data beyond the
data points.
Calculating and interpolating energy rating per square meter are necessary
for energy resource evaluation. The graph based on the model (Fig. 4)
shows the energy ranges of oil shale of the deposit, the quantity already
mined out and the available resource. Most of the mined-out seam has had
the energy rating value over 35 GJ/m2
(Fig. 5). Energy rating of the seam is
an essential argument for economical calculations.
408 I. Valgma
10x10km
43
41
39 37
31
27
25
35
33 29
21
23
45
43
25
45
47
27
33
37
39
41
Fig. 4. Energy rating of oil shale, GJ/m2
. The resource over 35 GJ/m2
is oil shale
economic reserve. Bold contours in north mark the mined-out area
0
1000
2000
3000
4000
5000
6000
7000
8000
9000
10000
Energy rating of oil shale, GJ/m2
Oil shale resource, PJ (1015J)
Mined out PJ 0 0 0 0 37 0 7 382 1465 1219 2790 4570 6451 362
Unmined PJ 570 9923 9340 7939 7150 6628 6844 6886 5704 5097 4047 3630 768 0
21 23 25 27 29 31 33 35 37 39 41 43 45 47
Fig. 5. Oil shale resource of the Estonia deposit in PJ. Most of the mined-out seam
has had energy rating over 35 GJ/m2
The models enable to present the graphs of energy rating showing its extent
and ranges. Energy rating is the most important factor for determining
oil shale reserve in the case of using it for electricity generation. In the case
of oil production, the most important figures are oil yield and its resource.
Basing on the models, oil resource has been calculated and is presented in
Fig. 6.
Estonian Oil Shale Resources Calculated by GIS Method 409
Fig. 6. Shale oil resource, million tonnes, in ranges of oil yield
Choosing between various interpolation methods showed that IDW gives
the most reliable figures for oil shale tonnage with average figures of the
reserve blocks. Natural Neighbour regions and Kriging are the more suitable
interpolation methods when using more detailed data and blocks. Rectangular
Interpolation is unsuitable in the case of irregular mesh of the initial data.
All methods give 2.3 m for oil shale seam average thickness except
rectangular interpolation that gives 2.1 m and 11 % deviation. Other methods
give deviation from 1 to 3 %, which are smaller than errors of the initial
data.
Calculated Data of the Deposit
The main results of the calculations are data models of the deposit such as
isopleths and 3D drawings of mining conditions like seam thickness, seam
depth, calorific value of oil shale and oil yield. The main possible calculations
basing on oil shale bedding models are: choosing optimum mining location,
dynamics and statistics of the mining phenomenon, evaluation of oil
shale quantity, energy and oil reserve. IDW method gives satisfactory data
for the deposit overview (Table 2), other suitable methods can be used for
modeling with all initial drill hole data in the case of resource calculations
for some specific location.
One of the preliminary results of the modeling is obtaining cost data. Reinsalu
has applied his methodology and study to the current deposit model
and shown the cost of oil shale tonne over the deposit. The cost is 100
kroons per tonne in the center of Estonia mining field (Fig. 7). Oil cost in
situ is 100 % for cost of the tonne in the centre of Estonia mining field and
according to Fig. 8 can be applied to other parts of the deposit.
0
50
100
150
200
250
Oil yield, t/m 2
Oil resource, Mt
Mined out Mt 0 0 1 0 2 24 34 85 151 14
Unmined Mt 140 247 187 170 173 156 127 94 48 0
0.4 0.45 0.5 0.55 0.6 0.65 0.7 0.75 0.8 0.85
410 I. Valgma
Table 2. Data of Estonia Oil Shale Deposit
Calculated with IDW Method
Parameter Unmined % Mined-out % Total or average
Area, km2
2476 86 409 14 2,884
Oil shale tonnage, Mt 10,139 84 1,900 16 12,039
In-place tonnage, t/m2
4.1 98 4.6 111 4.2
Specific weight, t/m3
1.8 101 1.7 96 1.8
Quantity, Mm3 5,657 84 1,116 16 6,774
Energy, PJ 74,524 81 17,283 19 91,808
Energy rating, GJ/m3
30 95 42 133 32
Oil resource, Mt 1,342 81 311 19 1,652
Oil yield per m2
, t/m2
0.54 95 0.76 133 0.57
Oil yield, t/t 0.13 96 0.16 119 0.14
170
105
165
155
135
145
125
115
95
0
Puhatu
Narva
Uus Kiviõli
Tudu 35 GJ/m2
Permisküla
Peipsi 25 GJ/m2
Ida-Virumaa
Harjumaa
Järvamaa
Lääne-Virumaa
Jõgevamaa
Estonia
Ahtme Viru
Oandu
Ojamaa
Sonda
Seli
Aidu
Fig. 7. Oil shale cost, Estonian kroons
43
48
52
18
23
33
28
38
48
43
Uus Kiviõli 0
Tudu
Peipsi
Puhatu
Narva
35 GJ/m2
Permisküla
25 GJ/m2
Ida-Virumaa
Harjumaa
Järvamaa
Lääne-Virumaa
Jõgevamaa
14
Estonia
Ahtme Viru
Oandu
Ojamaa
Sonda
Seli
Aidu
Fig. 8. Shale oil cost, USD/barrel
Estonian Oil Shale Resources Calculated by GIS Method 411
Conclusions
Modeling with GIS methods together with geostatistical analysis is an effective
and promising method for re-evaluating the resources of Estonian oil
shale as well as of any other flat-laying deposit. Modeling with available
digital geographic and technogenic data gives the possibility to analyze the
resource at any level of details.
Ascknowledgements
This study is supported by EstSF Grant No. 4870 Oil Shale Resource.
REFERENCES
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References and additional information on Estonian oil shale can be found at:
http://www.ttu.ee/maeinst/mgis