From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Zau de Câmpie
Zau de Câmpie
Country Romania
Region Mureș County
Offshore/onshoreonshore
Operator Romgaz
Field history
Discovery1914
Start of development1914
Start of production1920
Production
Current production of gas100×10^3 m3/d
3.6×10^6 cu ft/d 0.035×10^9 m3/a (1.2×10^9 cu ft/a)
Estimated gas in place2.47×10^9 m3
87×10^9 cu ft

The Zau de Câmpie gas field is a natural gas field located in Zau de Câmpie, Mureș County, Romania. It was discovered in 1914, when the first gas extraction fields were created, supplying Târnăveni and Târgu Mureș with natural gas. [1]: 37  The Zau de Câmpie gas field was developed by Romgaz, beginning production of natural gas and condensates in 1920. By 2009 the total proven reserves of the Zau de Câmpie gas field were around 416 billion cu ft (11.8 billion m3), with a production rate of around 3.6 million cu ft/d (100,000 m3/d) occurring in 2010. [2] By January 2017 62 active drilling rigs were on site, with reduced estimated reserves of 87 billion cu ft (2.5×109 m3), slated to be depleted by 2029. [3]

The gas produced at Zau de Câmpie and in the surrounding area is considered to be the purest one; it consists of dry gases, usually made of 99% methane, with the rest being hydrocarbons ( ethane, propane, and butane). [4]: 2  [5] It currently uses a type C 25.1 Thomassen compressor unit to compress the gas extracted in the field. [6]

Framework

A quarter of Romania's natural gas reserves (100 billion m3 (3.5 trillion cu ft)) are located in Western Moldavia, Muntenia, and the Black Sea, with the remaining 75% located near methane gas reserve sites in Transylvania. [7] A fifth of these sites are located in the Giurgeu-Brașov Depression and Sibiu County, with the remainder located in Mureș County at sites such as Luduș, Șincai, Bazna, and Nadeș. [8]: 76  [9]: 102 

While not rich in natural gas, the Transylvanian Basin is home to Romania's largest methane gas reserves. [10]

In 1970, Romania ranked fourth in the world and second in Europe in the size of its natural gas deposits; [11]: 214  by 2016, it ranked third in Europe after the Netherlands and the United Kingdom. [7] The United States Geological Survey's 2000 World Energy assessment ranked the Transylvanian Basin region as the 56th largest in the world (exclusive of the United States), with 0.2% of the world's oil and gas resources, based on volume of reserves plus cumulative production. [12]

History

The gas deposits in Romania have a very long history of exploitation, almost unique at the level of Europe and among the few such old fields that are still in production in the world. The oldest deposits exploited by Romgaz are in Mureș County, where gas has been extracted since 1913. [13] Deposits of methane gas occur in three main areas; the first area is in the northwest and includes the Sărmașel, Zau de Câmpie, and Șincai gas fields. [11]: 216  The North Group contains 31 gas fields located to the north of the Mureș River. These are found under the form of dome traps. Representative for this group are the Sărmașel, Grebenișu de Câmpie, Zau de Câmpie, and Țaga gas fields. [10]

The first natural gas deposit in Romania was discovered in 1909, in Sărmașel, about 22 km (14 mi) north of Zau de Câmpie. In 1913, the first production of methane gas was recorded, of 113 m3 (4,000 cu ft), from the drilling site at the Sărmașel gas field. [13] That year, the local Greek Catholic priest announced to the Zau de Câmpie community that they will start "to dig for gas, in the form of the one from Sărmașel," on a 2,400 m2 (26,000 sq ft) plot of land belonging to the church. [14] Besides Sărmășel and Zau de Câmpie, other gas fields developed in the area were the ones at Deleni, Nadeș, Bazna, and Șincai, followed later by those at Bogata, Ilimbav, Miercurea Nirajului, Tăuni, Teleac, and Filitelnic. [15]

The first geological study of the Zau de Câmpie gas dome (in connection with the classification of mud volcanoes and salt mines in the Transylvanian Plain) was done by Augustin Vancea [ ro] in his 1929 Ph.D. dissertation. [16] [17]: 5  According to a CIA report from 1948 (quoting an article from the communist party organ Scînteia), the Zau de Câmpie gas field was under geological study since 1935, and exploration was begun in 1948, when an important deposit of gas was discovered at a depth of 633 m (2,077 ft). Concomitantly, the Ceanu MareCluj pipeline was being constructed, with the Zau de Câmpie wells due to supply natural gas to the city of Cluj. [18]: 2 

In July 2018, the Romanian Agency for Mineral Resources [ ro] announced that Romgaz's lease of the gas field had been extended until 2027, [19] [20] extended again to 2029 later that year. [21]

See also

References

  1. ^ Tofan, George-Bogdan; Niță, Adrian (June 2018). "Industrial activities in Mureș County" (PDF). Analele Universității din Oradea, Seria Geografie. XXVIII (1): 36–53.
  2. ^ "Gazul natural" (PDF). BCU Cluj. 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 15, 2024. Retrieved 2010-08-23.
  3. ^ "Date privind dezvoltarea si exploatarea in perimetrul Zau de Câmpie–Șăulia, jud. Mureș" (PDF). sgg.gov.ro (in Romanian). Government of Romania. Retrieved January 7, 2024.
  4. ^ Crețu, Simeon. ""Centru" Region Natural and Antropic Potential – Development Prospects" (PDF). shs.hal.science. Agency for Regional Development – Centru. pp. 1–10. Retrieved January 20, 2024.
  5. ^ Muntean, Valerica Doina (July 2012), "Renewable resource potential in Transylvania region", Calitatea: Acces la Success, 13 (3), Bucharest: 365–373, ProQuest  1095343644
  6. ^ "Societatea Națională de Gaze Naturale Romgaz S.A. Suc. Tg. Mureș achiziționează servicii mentenanță variatoare de frecvență VSDS". ebuget.ro (in Romanian). Retrieved January 21, 2024.
  7. ^ a b "Top 10 câmpuri petrolifere și gazeifere cu cea mai mare producție din România". www.economica.net (in Romanian). March 15, 2016. Retrieved January 20, 2024.
  8. ^ Berekmeri, Maria-Erzsebet (2006). "Built infrastructure disparities in Romania" (PDF). Romanian Review of Regional Studies. 2 (2): 74–80.
  9. ^ Pop, Andreea (2011). "The impact of the territory's public infrastructural level on the organization of the territory in the Reghin micro-region" (PDF). Geographica Timisiensis. 20 (2): 99–112. Archived from the original on 2018-05-02. Retrieved 2024-01-23.{{ cite journal}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown ( link)
  10. ^ a b Avram, Lazăr; Lupu, Diana-Andreea (2019). "The energy potential of natural gas fields from Transylvanian Basin – Current and future trends". Emerg. 5 (9): 156–162. doi: 10.37410/EMERG.2019.12.09. Retrieved January 24, 2024.
  11. ^ a b Carter, F. W. (April 1970). "Natural gas in Romania". Geography. 55 (2). Taylor & Francis: 214–220. JSTOR  40567242.
  12. ^ Pawlewicz, Mark (2005), "Transylvanian Composite Total Petroleum System of the Transylvanian Basin Province, Romania, Eastern Europe" (PDF), pubs.usgs.gov, United States Geological Survey, p. 2
  13. ^ a b Benea, Ionuț (December 28, 2022). "De ce a scăzut producția de gaze în 2022 și cât de vechi sunt zăcămintele exploatate de România" [Why gas production decreased in 2022 and how old are the fields exploited by Romania]. romania.europalibera.org (in Romanian). Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. Retrieved January 20, 2024.
  14. ^ "Atestare istorică". zaudecimpie.ro (in Romanian). Zau de Câmpie town hall. Retrieved January 21, 2024.
  15. ^ Velcea, Ion (1975). Geografia economică a R. S. România (in Romanian). University of Bucharest. p. 39. OCLC  254706929.
  16. ^ Vancea, Augustin (1929). Observațiuni geologice în regiunea de sud-west a Câmpiei Ardelene: cu o privire generală asupra geologiei Basinului Transilvaniei și cu descrierea specială a domului de gaz natural de la Zaul de Câmpie (Moinești) [Geological observations in the south-west region of the Transylvanian Plain: with a general look at the geology of the Transylvanian Basin and with a special description of the natural gas dome from Zaul de Câmpie (Moinești)] (PhD thesis) (in Romanian). Mediaș. 67 pages, 54 annexes.
  17. ^ Spulber, Liana (2010). Emisii geogene de metan în Transilvania și implicațiile lor asupra mediului înconjurător [Geogenic methane emissions in Transylvania and their implications on the environment] (PhD thesis) (in Romanian). Cluj-Napoca: Babeș-Bolyai University. 45 pages.
  18. ^ "Rumania. Economic – Fuel and power" (PDF), www.cia.gov, Central Intelligence Agency, pp. 1–4, November 1948, retrieved January 21, 2024
  19. ^ "Guvernul prelungește până în 2027 acordul pentru perimetrul de gaze de la Zau de Câmpie concesionat de Romgaz" [The government extends until 2027 the agreement for the gas perimeter at Zau de Câmpie concessioned by Romgaz]. Punctul (in Romanian). June 28, 2018. Retrieved January 7, 2024.
  20. ^ "Romgaz a cerut prelungirea acordurilor pentru exploatarea a patru perimetre de gaze naturale din județul Mureș". MS News (in Romanian). July 1, 2018. Retrieved January 7, 2024.
  21. ^ "Nota de Fundamentare – HG nr.1029/21.12.2018". www.gov.ro (in Romanian). Government of Romania. December 21, 2018. Retrieved January 28, 2024.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Zau de Câmpie
Zau de Câmpie
Country Romania
Region Mureș County
Offshore/onshoreonshore
Operator Romgaz
Field history
Discovery1914
Start of development1914
Start of production1920
Production
Current production of gas100×10^3 m3/d
3.6×10^6 cu ft/d 0.035×10^9 m3/a (1.2×10^9 cu ft/a)
Estimated gas in place2.47×10^9 m3
87×10^9 cu ft

The Zau de Câmpie gas field is a natural gas field located in Zau de Câmpie, Mureș County, Romania. It was discovered in 1914, when the first gas extraction fields were created, supplying Târnăveni and Târgu Mureș with natural gas. [1]: 37  The Zau de Câmpie gas field was developed by Romgaz, beginning production of natural gas and condensates in 1920. By 2009 the total proven reserves of the Zau de Câmpie gas field were around 416 billion cu ft (11.8 billion m3), with a production rate of around 3.6 million cu ft/d (100,000 m3/d) occurring in 2010. [2] By January 2017 62 active drilling rigs were on site, with reduced estimated reserves of 87 billion cu ft (2.5×109 m3), slated to be depleted by 2029. [3]

The gas produced at Zau de Câmpie and in the surrounding area is considered to be the purest one; it consists of dry gases, usually made of 99% methane, with the rest being hydrocarbons ( ethane, propane, and butane). [4]: 2  [5] It currently uses a type C 25.1 Thomassen compressor unit to compress the gas extracted in the field. [6]

Framework

A quarter of Romania's natural gas reserves (100 billion m3 (3.5 trillion cu ft)) are located in Western Moldavia, Muntenia, and the Black Sea, with the remaining 75% located near methane gas reserve sites in Transylvania. [7] A fifth of these sites are located in the Giurgeu-Brașov Depression and Sibiu County, with the remainder located in Mureș County at sites such as Luduș, Șincai, Bazna, and Nadeș. [8]: 76  [9]: 102 

While not rich in natural gas, the Transylvanian Basin is home to Romania's largest methane gas reserves. [10]

In 1970, Romania ranked fourth in the world and second in Europe in the size of its natural gas deposits; [11]: 214  by 2016, it ranked third in Europe after the Netherlands and the United Kingdom. [7] The United States Geological Survey's 2000 World Energy assessment ranked the Transylvanian Basin region as the 56th largest in the world (exclusive of the United States), with 0.2% of the world's oil and gas resources, based on volume of reserves plus cumulative production. [12]

History

The gas deposits in Romania have a very long history of exploitation, almost unique at the level of Europe and among the few such old fields that are still in production in the world. The oldest deposits exploited by Romgaz are in Mureș County, where gas has been extracted since 1913. [13] Deposits of methane gas occur in three main areas; the first area is in the northwest and includes the Sărmașel, Zau de Câmpie, and Șincai gas fields. [11]: 216  The North Group contains 31 gas fields located to the north of the Mureș River. These are found under the form of dome traps. Representative for this group are the Sărmașel, Grebenișu de Câmpie, Zau de Câmpie, and Țaga gas fields. [10]

The first natural gas deposit in Romania was discovered in 1909, in Sărmașel, about 22 km (14 mi) north of Zau de Câmpie. In 1913, the first production of methane gas was recorded, of 113 m3 (4,000 cu ft), from the drilling site at the Sărmașel gas field. [13] That year, the local Greek Catholic priest announced to the Zau de Câmpie community that they will start "to dig for gas, in the form of the one from Sărmașel," on a 2,400 m2 (26,000 sq ft) plot of land belonging to the church. [14] Besides Sărmășel and Zau de Câmpie, other gas fields developed in the area were the ones at Deleni, Nadeș, Bazna, and Șincai, followed later by those at Bogata, Ilimbav, Miercurea Nirajului, Tăuni, Teleac, and Filitelnic. [15]

The first geological study of the Zau de Câmpie gas dome (in connection with the classification of mud volcanoes and salt mines in the Transylvanian Plain) was done by Augustin Vancea [ ro] in his 1929 Ph.D. dissertation. [16] [17]: 5  According to a CIA report from 1948 (quoting an article from the communist party organ Scînteia), the Zau de Câmpie gas field was under geological study since 1935, and exploration was begun in 1948, when an important deposit of gas was discovered at a depth of 633 m (2,077 ft). Concomitantly, the Ceanu MareCluj pipeline was being constructed, with the Zau de Câmpie wells due to supply natural gas to the city of Cluj. [18]: 2 

In July 2018, the Romanian Agency for Mineral Resources [ ro] announced that Romgaz's lease of the gas field had been extended until 2027, [19] [20] extended again to 2029 later that year. [21]

See also

References

  1. ^ Tofan, George-Bogdan; Niță, Adrian (June 2018). "Industrial activities in Mureș County" (PDF). Analele Universității din Oradea, Seria Geografie. XXVIII (1): 36–53.
  2. ^ "Gazul natural" (PDF). BCU Cluj. 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 15, 2024. Retrieved 2010-08-23.
  3. ^ "Date privind dezvoltarea si exploatarea in perimetrul Zau de Câmpie–Șăulia, jud. Mureș" (PDF). sgg.gov.ro (in Romanian). Government of Romania. Retrieved January 7, 2024.
  4. ^ Crețu, Simeon. ""Centru" Region Natural and Antropic Potential – Development Prospects" (PDF). shs.hal.science. Agency for Regional Development – Centru. pp. 1–10. Retrieved January 20, 2024.
  5. ^ Muntean, Valerica Doina (July 2012), "Renewable resource potential in Transylvania region", Calitatea: Acces la Success, 13 (3), Bucharest: 365–373, ProQuest  1095343644
  6. ^ "Societatea Națională de Gaze Naturale Romgaz S.A. Suc. Tg. Mureș achiziționează servicii mentenanță variatoare de frecvență VSDS". ebuget.ro (in Romanian). Retrieved January 21, 2024.
  7. ^ a b "Top 10 câmpuri petrolifere și gazeifere cu cea mai mare producție din România". www.economica.net (in Romanian). March 15, 2016. Retrieved January 20, 2024.
  8. ^ Berekmeri, Maria-Erzsebet (2006). "Built infrastructure disparities in Romania" (PDF). Romanian Review of Regional Studies. 2 (2): 74–80.
  9. ^ Pop, Andreea (2011). "The impact of the territory's public infrastructural level on the organization of the territory in the Reghin micro-region" (PDF). Geographica Timisiensis. 20 (2): 99–112. Archived from the original on 2018-05-02. Retrieved 2024-01-23.{{ cite journal}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown ( link)
  10. ^ a b Avram, Lazăr; Lupu, Diana-Andreea (2019). "The energy potential of natural gas fields from Transylvanian Basin – Current and future trends". Emerg. 5 (9): 156–162. doi: 10.37410/EMERG.2019.12.09. Retrieved January 24, 2024.
  11. ^ a b Carter, F. W. (April 1970). "Natural gas in Romania". Geography. 55 (2). Taylor & Francis: 214–220. JSTOR  40567242.
  12. ^ Pawlewicz, Mark (2005), "Transylvanian Composite Total Petroleum System of the Transylvanian Basin Province, Romania, Eastern Europe" (PDF), pubs.usgs.gov, United States Geological Survey, p. 2
  13. ^ a b Benea, Ionuț (December 28, 2022). "De ce a scăzut producția de gaze în 2022 și cât de vechi sunt zăcămintele exploatate de România" [Why gas production decreased in 2022 and how old are the fields exploited by Romania]. romania.europalibera.org (in Romanian). Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. Retrieved January 20, 2024.
  14. ^ "Atestare istorică". zaudecimpie.ro (in Romanian). Zau de Câmpie town hall. Retrieved January 21, 2024.
  15. ^ Velcea, Ion (1975). Geografia economică a R. S. România (in Romanian). University of Bucharest. p. 39. OCLC  254706929.
  16. ^ Vancea, Augustin (1929). Observațiuni geologice în regiunea de sud-west a Câmpiei Ardelene: cu o privire generală asupra geologiei Basinului Transilvaniei și cu descrierea specială a domului de gaz natural de la Zaul de Câmpie (Moinești) [Geological observations in the south-west region of the Transylvanian Plain: with a general look at the geology of the Transylvanian Basin and with a special description of the natural gas dome from Zaul de Câmpie (Moinești)] (PhD thesis) (in Romanian). Mediaș. 67 pages, 54 annexes.
  17. ^ Spulber, Liana (2010). Emisii geogene de metan în Transilvania și implicațiile lor asupra mediului înconjurător [Geogenic methane emissions in Transylvania and their implications on the environment] (PhD thesis) (in Romanian). Cluj-Napoca: Babeș-Bolyai University. 45 pages.
  18. ^ "Rumania. Economic – Fuel and power" (PDF), www.cia.gov, Central Intelligence Agency, pp. 1–4, November 1948, retrieved January 21, 2024
  19. ^ "Guvernul prelungește până în 2027 acordul pentru perimetrul de gaze de la Zau de Câmpie concesionat de Romgaz" [The government extends until 2027 the agreement for the gas perimeter at Zau de Câmpie concessioned by Romgaz]. Punctul (in Romanian). June 28, 2018. Retrieved January 7, 2024.
  20. ^ "Romgaz a cerut prelungirea acordurilor pentru exploatarea a patru perimetre de gaze naturale din județul Mureș". MS News (in Romanian). July 1, 2018. Retrieved January 7, 2024.
  21. ^ "Nota de Fundamentare – HG nr.1029/21.12.2018". www.gov.ro (in Romanian). Government of Romania. December 21, 2018. Retrieved January 28, 2024.


Videos

Youtube | Vimeo | Bing

Websites

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Encyclopedia

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Facebook