A lease is a legal document executed between a mineral owner and a company or individual that conveys the right to explore, develop and produce hydrocarbons and/or other products for a specified period of time over a given area. The source and official record are LAS case files available at http://dnr.alaska.gov/projects/las/. The lease case files available in this dataset were queried by case type specific to the division of oil and gas. The codes used to query records contained in this dataset follow and descriptions are available from the Division of Oil and Gas. Case Type Code: 783 - Oil & Gas Lease Non- Competitive, 784 - Oil & Gas Lease Competitive, 785 - Oil & Gas Transferred Federal Lease, 788 - Shoreland Preference Right Lease, 789 - Oil and Gas Shallow Natural Gas Lease, 790 - Oil and Gas Storage Lease.
This data set is available from the Alaska Department of Natural Resources Division of Oil and Gas and was developed to provide the general public with easy access to oil and gas leasing information. It is not a legal record and is for informational purposes only. Source documents remain the official record. The purpose of areawide leasing is to provide an established time each year that the state will offer for lease all available acreage within five geographical regions: the Alaska Peninsula, Cook Inlet, North Slope, North Slope Foothills and Beaufort Sea. By conducting lease sales at a set time each year, the state will have a stable, predictable leasing program, which will allow companies to plan and develop their exploration strategies and budgets years in advance. The result will be more efficient exploration and earlier development, which will, in turn, benefit the state and its residents. The leasing program is governed by Alaska Statute 38.05.035. PLEASE NOTE - These tracts do not reflect tracts excluded from a particular lease sale. The user must refer to the sale announcement and possibly other documentation to identify tracts that have been permanently deleted or deferred from a particular sale. More information can be found through the Division of Oil and Gas lease sales program.
This map shows the oil and natural gas wells across the United States. Oil and Natural Gas Well: A hole drilled in the earth for the purpose of finding or producing crude oil or natural gas; or producing services related to the production of crude or natural gas. Geographic coverage includes the United States (Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, North Dakota, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wyoming) as well Oil and Natural Gas wells in the Canadian provinces of British Columbia and Manitoba that are within 100 miles of the country's border with the United States. According to the Energy Information Administration (EIA) the following states do not have active/producing Oil or Natural Gas Wells: Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Georgia, Hawaii, Iowa, Idaho, Massachusetts, Maine, Minnesota, North Carolina, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Vermont, and Wisconsin. Some states do have wells for underground Natural Gas storage facilities where these have been identified they were included. This layer is derived from well data from individual states and provinces and United States Agencies. This layer is complete for the United States but further development of data missing from two Canadian provinces and Mexico is in process. This update release includes an additional 497,036 wells covering Texas. Oil and gas exploration in Texas takes advantage of drilling technology to use a single surface well drilling location to drill multiple bottom hole well connections to extract oil and gas. The addition of Well data from Texas results in the addition of a related table to support this one surface well to many bottom hole connections. This related table provides records for Wells that have more than one bottom hole linked to the surface well. Sourced from the HIFLD Open Data Portal for Energy.
This dataset contains oil and gas agreements cases derived from Legal Land Descriptions (LLD) contained in the US Bureau of Land Management's, BLM, Mineral and Land Record System(MLRS) and geocoded (mapped) using the Public Land Survey System (PLSS) derived from the most accurate survey data available through BLM Cadastral Survey workforce. Geospatial representations might be missing for some cases that can not be geocoded using the MLRS algorithm. Each case is given a data quality score based on how well it mapped. These can be lumped into seven groups to provide a simplified way to understand the scores.Group 1: Direct PLSS Match. Scores “0”, “1”, “2”, “3” should all have a match to the PLSS data. There are slight differences, but the primary expectation is that these match the PLSS.Group 2: Calculated PLSS Match. Scores “4”, “4.1”, “5”, “6”, “7” and “8” were generated through a process of creating the geometry that is not a direct capture from the PLSS. They represent a best guess based on the underlining PLSS Group 3 – Mapped to Section. Score of “8.1”, “8.2”, “8.3”, “9” and “10” are mapped to the Section.Group 4- Combination of mapped and unmapped areas. Score of 15 represents a case that has some portions that would map and other that do not.Group 5 – No NLSDB Geometry, Only Attributes. Scores “11”, “12”, “20”, “21” and “22” do not have a match to the PLSS and no geometry is in the NLSDB, and only attributes exist in the data. Group 6 – Mapped to County. Scores of “25” map to the County.Group 7 – Improved Geometry. Scores of “100” are cases that have had their geometry edited by BLM staff using ArcGIS Pro or MLRS bulk upload tool.
This is GIS data of well-header information for oil and gas wells in Kansas. The data is based on well information submitted to the Kansas Corporation Commission on wells planned, drilled, worked over, or plugged. Well information is also collected from wireline logs, core or cuttings submitted for storage, or historical compilations. Some data from other states is included for research purposes. The Kansas Geological Survey compiles and publishes this data. For field/column definitions, download this spreadsheet.The Kansas Geological Survey works with the Kansas Corporation Commission and the Kansas Department of Revenue to create an accurate listing of the oil and gas wells in Kansas. While the other agencies have regulatory duties facilitated by having an accurate accounting of oil and gas wells, the Survey maintains the listing for research purposes and for use by citizens and companies interested in the oil and gas resources of the state.
Administrative boundaries for oil and gas fields in California.CalGEM is the Geologic Energy Management Division of the California Department of Conservation, formerly the Division of Oil, Gas, and Geothermal Resources (as of January 1, 2020).Update Frequency: As Needed
Geospatial data about United States Oil and Natural Gas Wells. Export to CAD, GIS, PDF, CSV and access via API.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Outer Continental Shelf Oil and Natural Gas Wells - Alaska RegionThis feature layer, utilizing National Geospatial Data Asset (NGDA) data from the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, displays oil and natural gas wells found in the Alaska Region Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) waters. According to BOEM, "Well Information includes information on borehole activities such as drilling activity, counts on the number of boreholes completed, and number of shut-in's. Additional information includes the lease number, well name, spud date, the well class, surface area/block number, and statistics on well status summary."Well AL001 in Cook InletData downloaded: October 28, 2024Data source: Borehole Online QueryNGDAID: 53 (Outer Continental Shelf Oil and Natural Gas Wells - Alaska Region NAD 83)OGC API Features Link: (Outer Continental Shelf Oil and Natural Gas Wells - Alaska Region) copy this link to embed it in OGC Compliant viewersFor more information: National OCS Oil and Gas Leasing Program; Energy EconomicsSupport documentation: Borehole Online Query Field DefinitionsFor feedback please contact: Esri_US_Federal_Data@esri.comNGDA Data SetThis data set is part of the NGDA Utilities Theme Community. Per the Federal Geospatial Data Committee (FGDC), Utilities is defined as the "means, aids, and usage of facilities for producing, conveying, distributing, processing or disposing of public and private commodities including power, energy, communications, natural gas, and water. Includes sub themes for Energy, Drinking water and Water treatment, and Communications."For other NGDA Content: Esri Federal Datasets
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This file contains a file geodatabase with spatial datasets that accompany the scientific paper titled: "Recent Greater Sage Grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus)
Population Dynamics in Wyoming Are Primarily Driven by
Climate, not Oil and Gas Development" (Ramey, Thorley, Ivey 2015).
Australia has a thriving oil and gas industry with expanding infrastructure and many exploration opportunities. Geologically the country contains potential for large oil and gas discoveries with extensive sedimentary basins. Australia is also one of the world leaders in providing low cost geological data with an open Acreage Release process and competitive taxation regimes. Politically Australia is very stable with a very high standard of living and a long-standing democratic culture based on the rights of the individual and the rule of the law. There is a free market philosophy which welcomes foreign investment - Australia has no mandatory local equity requirements and has no government owned oil companies. Government facilitation of investment includes fast-tracking of approvals processes for major projects.
This CD provides some basic Australia data including: Oil and Gas Resources of Australia 2003
This publication is the definitive reference on exploration, development and production of Australia's petroleum resources. It covers exploration, reserves, undiscovered resources, development, coalbed methane resources, production, crude oil and shale oil and supporting information and statistics. It includes a forecast of Australia's crude oil and condensate production up to the year 2020, and sustainability indicators for petroleum resources. Information on Australia's petroleum data availability is also included. An estimate of Australia's undiscovered oil and gas potential and a review of geological sequestration of carbon dioxide in Australia is included. Australian Research and Promotional Material
Australian research includes research papers for Australia, Australia regions (Northwest Shelf and the Southern Margin) and CO2 Sequestration. Promotional materials refer to pamphlets which outline geological products available from Geoscience Australia and contacts for obtaining these products. This material is grouped by region with the research papers.
Geoscience Australia Online Databases Demonstration The Geoscience Australia Petroleum Databases Demonstration is a Microsoft Powerpoint presentation containing instructions on how to use Geoscience Australia's online Petroleum Databases located at: www.ga.gov.au/oracle/apcrc/ This output represents the data which is considered open file and commercial-in-confidence. Petroleum Databases available at Geoscience Australia include: the Australian Geological Provinces Database, the Petroleum Information Management System (PIMS) GIS , the National Petroleum Wells Database and the National Geoscience GIS
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
License information was derived automatically
This map service provides access to most of the Resource Map datasets shown on the GeoAtlas application. **Please Note – All published Saskatchewan Geological Survey datasets, including those available through the Saskatchewan Mining and Petroleum GeoAtlas, are sourced from the Enterprise GIS Data Warehouse. They are therefore identical and share the same refresh schedule. This map service is used by the GeoATLAS web application, sub-section Resource Map in the Mineral Exploration theme. It includes Base Metals Potential, Coal Potential, Gold Potential, Helium Potential, Bitumen (Oil Sands) Potential, Lithium Potential, Potash and Salt Resource Potential, Rare Earth Elements Potential and Uranium Potential schema in Production Data Warehouse. Note: Oil and Gas pools are found in the /Petroleum service.
Oil and Gas Lease contains spatial and tabular data potraying Competitive and Non-Competitive Oil and Gas Leases, and Oil and Gas Storage Leases issued by the Alaska Department of Natural Resources.
This spatial data set characterizes the geographic representation of land parcels within the State of Alaska contained by the Oil and Gas Lease category. It has been extracted from data sets used to produce the State status plats. This data set includes cases noted on the digital status plats up to one day prior to data extraction.
Each feature has an associated attribute record, including a Land Administration System (LAS) file-type and file-number which serves as an index to related LAS case-file information. Additional LAS case-file and customer information may be obtained at: http://dev.dnr.alaska.gov/projects/las/ Those requiring more information regarding State land records should contact the Alaska Department of Natural Resources Public Information Center directly.
This online map displays facility sites in group or by facility types in separate layers: Facility Boundary layer digitized by CalGEM to show the areas that delineate approximately any equipment ancillary for oil and gas production or injection operations that are under the jurisdiction of CalGEM (CCR 1760).CalGEM is the Geologic Energy Management Division of the California Department of Conservation, formerly the Division of Oil, Gas, and Geothermal Resources (as of January 1, 2020).WellSTAR homepageUpdate Frequency: Nightly
The Oil & Gas Mapper is published by the Kansas Geological Survey (KGS). The data is based on well information submitted to the Kansas Corporation Commission on wells planned, drilled, worked over, or plugged. Well information is also collected from wireline logs, core or cuttings submitted for storage, or historical compilations. Some data from other states is included for research purposes. The mapper also contains water wells from the WWC5 project, oil and gas leases, and waterflood areas among other layers.
This online map displays facility sites in group or by facility types in separate layers: 1. All facility types in separate layers including tank, tank setting, pit, and pipeline layers. 2. Facility Group sites, each group has associated facilities that belong to the same operator. One group site may represent multiple facilities. 3. Facility Boundary layer digitized by CalGEM to show the areas that delineate approximately any equipment ancillary for oil and gas production or injection operations that are under the jurisdiction of CalGEM (CCR 1760).CalGEM is the Geologic Energy Management Division of the California Department of Conservation, formerly the Division of Oil, Gas, and Geothermal Resources (as of January 1, 2020).WellSTAR homepageUpdate Frequency: As Needed
Active lease blocks currently leased by private entities for oil and/or gas mining rights. The leases are within the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS).Dataset SummaryThe source data for this layer is from the U.S. Department of Energy's Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) website and updated regularly. The features in this polygon layer contain attributes pertaining to the lease status of active leases. The BOEM cautions that the location of these features is to be considered approximate and are not an official record for the exact baseline coordinates.Link to source metadataWhat can you do with this layer?This layer is a feature service, which means it can be used for visualization and analysis throughout the ArcGIS Platform. This layer is not editable.
There are 487 onshore oil and gas fields in California encompassing 3,392 square miles of aggregated area. The California State Water Resources Control Board (State Water Board) initiated a Regional Monitoring Program (RMP) in July 2015, intended to determine where and to what degree groundwater quality may be at potential risk to contamination related to oil and gas development activities including well stimulation, well integrity issues, produced water ponds, and underground injection. The first step in monitoring groundwater in and near oil and gas fields is to prioritize the 487 fields using consistent statewide analysis of available data that indicate potential risk of groundwater to oil and gas development. There were limited existing data on potential groundwater risk factors available for oil and gas fields across the state. During 2014-2016, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) extracted and compiled data from various sources, including the California Division of Oil, Gas, and Geothermal Resources (DOGGR) and the Department of Water Resources (DWR). Geospatial data from the DOGGR were used in the prioritization analysis. Dataset include geospatial data for 222,637 petroleum wells, administrative boundaries for 514 oil, gas, and geothermal fields, and boundaries for DOGGR's 6 juristictional districts. The data were downloaded from DOGGR's Geographic Information System (GIS) Mapping website at http://www.conservation.ca.gov/dog/maps. The DOGGR GIS Mapping website is periodally updated, and the datasets downloaded by the U.S. Geological Survey in 2014 may no longer be available on the DOGGR website.
This online map displays facility sites in group or by facility types in separate layers: including tanks.CalGEM is the Geologic Energy Management Division of the California Department of Conservation, formerly the Division of Oil, Gas, and Geothermal Resources (as of January 1, 2020).WellSTAR homepageUpdate Frequency: Nightly
GIS maps of Alabama resource data; includes maps of geology, natural hazards, and water.
Use Oil & Gas Exploration for the inspection and inventory of oil and gas production facilities.
A lease is a legal document executed between a mineral owner and a company or individual that conveys the right to explore, develop and produce hydrocarbons and/or other products for a specified period of time over a given area. The source and official record are LAS case files available at http://dnr.alaska.gov/projects/las/. The lease case files available in this dataset were queried by case type specific to the division of oil and gas. The codes used to query records contained in this dataset follow and descriptions are available from the Division of Oil and Gas. Case Type Code: 783 - Oil & Gas Lease Non- Competitive, 784 - Oil & Gas Lease Competitive, 785 - Oil & Gas Transferred Federal Lease, 788 - Shoreland Preference Right Lease, 789 - Oil and Gas Shallow Natural Gas Lease, 790 - Oil and Gas Storage Lease.