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13 - Oil as a special resource: problems and experiences

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 July 2010

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Summary

When discussing the subject of oil in Antarctica, three questions must be answered:

  1. (1) Is there oil in this continent?

  2. (2) Are the necessary technologies for exploration and exploitation available?

  3. (3) Under what legal status could these operations be carried out?

The presence of oil in Antarctica

The information presented under this heading comes from a study recently conducted by M. Wannesson of the French Petroleum Institute, who unfortunately was unable to attend the Antarctic Resources Policy Conference.

Antarctica, with an area of 14 million km2, is one and a half times the size of Europe (up to the Urals). More than 95% of its area is covered by an ice cap approximately 2 kilometres thick, on average, which in some places may exceed 4 kilometres in depth. An entire series of geological and geophysical reports have led specialists to ask whether there is oil in Antarctica.

In point of fact, the hydrocarbons found in the course of scientific drilling do not provide the means, even on a local scale, to assess the amount of oil in this continent's subsoil. Moreover, the scarcity of geological information does not currently permit even a qualitative appraisal of Antarctica's overall potential petroleum reserves. Available geological reports only permit a comparison of this continent with regions having a common origin and a comparable geological evolution. These regions on the whole clearly do potentially contain petroleum.

Type
Chapter
Information
Antarctic Resources Policy
Scientific, Legal and Political Issues
, pp. 185 - 190
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1983

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