Pembina oil field
Pembina oil field is located in Alberta
Pembina oil field
Location of Pembina oil field
CountryCanada
RegionCentral Alberta
Offshore/onshoreonshore
Coordinates53°06′N 115°12′W / 53.1°N 115.2°W / 53.1; -115.2
Field history
Discovery1953
Start of production1953
Production
Producing formationsCardium Formation, Viking Formation, Rock Creek Member

The Pembina oil field is one of the largest and most prolific conventional oil fields in the province of Alberta, Canada.[1]

The mature field is centered on Drayton Valley and is named for the Pembina River, which crosses the region from southwest to northeast. It taps reservoirs in the Cretaceous formations of the Western Canada Sedimentary Basin for oil and gas production. The main hydrocarbon-bearing unit is the Cardium Formation. Production also comes from the Viking Formation and sandstone beds of the Fernie Formation such as the Rock Creek Member.

History

The first oil was discovered by Mobil Oil in February 1953,[2] and it started a boom that saw the investment of $900 million in the area.[3]

References

  1. "Pembina Oil Field". Alberta’s Energy Resources Heritage. Alberta Bulture & Tourism. Retrieved 2021-08-09.
  2. Justen, John J. (September 1957). "Canada's Pembina Field" (PDF). Journal of Petroleum Technology. 9 (09): 21–26. doi:10.2118/856-G. Paper Number: SPE-856-G. In mid–1953 the successful completion of the wildcat, Pembina No. 1, recorded the discovery of the Pembina field.
  3. "History". Town of Drayton Valley. Retrieved 2009-03-04.
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