SHALLOW COALBED GAS ASSESSMENT AT FORT YUKON, ALASKA
In 2004, a cooperative effort between federal and state agencies and the university of Alaska Fairbanks began evaluating the shallow gas potential in Fort Yukon, Alaska, a remote community of more than 500 people situated above the Arctic Circle on the banks of the Yukon River. This project was designed to demonstrate the use of a light weight slim hole coring drill rig and obtain the necessary data to assess the economic and environmental feasibility of producing natural gas from Tertiary-age lignitic coal that underlies Fort Yukon. In June 2004 the drill rig and associated equipment were shipped to Fort Yukon via river barge. The rig was sited directly over a 1994 USGS climate test hole to utilize existing surface conductor casing through Holocene river gravels. Drilling began August 21, 2004, with coring of the first lignite at a depth of approximately 1,280 feet on August 26. A second coal seam was successfully cored on September 1 at a depth of approximately 1,905 feet with the final hole depth of 2,287 feet reached on September 3. Coal core samples have been analyzed for their methane content, formation transmissivity and water quality, and economic modeling is underway. Preliminary results of gas content analyses indicate an average of 20% to 30% gas saturation in targeted coal seams, with a maximum of about 50% in one canister. Based on these test results, the low gas saturation levels would likely require pumping large volumes of water from the coal seams in order to produce gas. Preliminary water quality analyses indicate that the subsurface water is potable.