Realizing the Energy Potential of Methane Hydrate for the United States (2010)

Chapter: Appendix D: Comparison of Units of Measurement of Amounts of Methane by Volume and Weight

Previous Chapter: Appendix C: Presentations to the Committee
Suggested Citation: "Appendix D: Comparison of Units of Measurement of Amounts of Methane by Volume and Weight." National Research Council. 2010. Realizing the Energy Potential of Methane Hydrate for the United States. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12831.

APPENDIX D
Comparison of Units of Measurement of Amounts of Methane by Volume and Weight

Amounts of methane can be reported either by volume or by weight. In the petroleum industry, amounts are given by volume, commonly as trillions (1012) of cubic feet (ft3) or TCF and billions (109) of ft3 (BCF) in the United States. Elsewhere in the world, where the metric system is used, the amounts are usually reported in cubic meters (m3). A convenient conversion factor is 35.3 ft3/m3.

In the oceanographic and atmospheric communities, amounts of methane are often reported by weight, that is, grams (g) or metric tons (106 g) usually with an appropriate prefix to simplify the use of exponents. Common expressions are teragrams (Tg = 1012 g), petagrams (Pg = 1015 g), and gigatons (Gt = 109 × 106 or 1015). The conversions from volume to weight or from weight to volume of methane are based on the relationship that a mol of methane, weighing 16 g, has a volume of 22.4 liters at standard temperature and pressure (STP). Useful conversion factors are 714 g/m3 and 20.2 g/ft3.

The following table compares amounts of methane in units of TCF, m3, and Pg in three categories: (1) assessments of amounts of conventional natural gas (methane); (2) estimates of the amounts of methane in methane hydrate; and (3) amounts of methane in the atmosphere.

Suggested Citation: "Appendix D: Comparison of Units of Measurement of Amounts of Methane by Volume and Weight." National Research Council. 2010. Realizing the Energy Potential of Methane Hydrate for the United States. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12831.

TABLE D.1 Comparison of Methane Measurements

 

TCF

By Volume, m3

By Weight, Pg

Conventional natural gas (Methane)a

 

 

 

Global assessment of conventional methane in reserves and technically recoverable resources

16,000

4.4 × 1014

3.2 × 102

U. S. methane consumption in 2008

23

6.5 × 1011

4.7 × 10−1

Methane in methane hydrateb

 

 

 

Very early global estimates, based on many erroneous assumptions, of the methane content of gas hydrate

~35,000,000

~1018

~7.1 × 105

Recent range of global estimates of methane in methane hydrate

35,000 to 177,000

1 × 1015 to 5 × 1015

7.1 × 102 to 3.6 × 103

Mean MMS estimate of methane in hydrate in the Gulf of Mexico

21,000

6 × 1014

4.3 × 102

Mean U. S. Geological Survey estimate of technically recoverable methane from hydrate on the North Slope of Alaska

85.4

2.4 × 1012

1.7

Estimate of methane in hydrate, eastern Nankai Trough, Japan

40

1.14 × 1012

8.1 × 10−1

Atmospheric methanec

 

 

 

Atmospheric abundance of methane

~250

~7 × 1012

~5

Estimate of total global flux of methane from all sources entering the atmosphere per year

30

8.4 × 1011

0.6

Estimate of total global sink for all methane entering the atmosphere per year

29

8.1 × 1011

0.58

aSee Chapter 1.

bSee Chapter 2.

cFor discussion, see Kvenvolden, K. A. and B. W. Rogers. 2005. Gaia’s breath—global methane exhalations. Marine and Petroleum Geology 22: 579- 590.

Suggested Citation: "Appendix D: Comparison of Units of Measurement of Amounts of Methane by Volume and Weight." National Research Council. 2010. Realizing the Energy Potential of Methane Hydrate for the United States. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12831.
Page 159
Suggested Citation: "Appendix D: Comparison of Units of Measurement of Amounts of Methane by Volume and Weight." National Research Council. 2010. Realizing the Energy Potential of Methane Hydrate for the United States. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12831.
Page 160
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