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Electricity generation/consumption, renewable energy, smart grid, oil/gas, carbon emissions
4,020 datasets
Mount Salt No. 1 Well was drilled in the Otway Basin, South Australia, reaching a total depth of 10,044 feet between May and September 1962. The well targeted Cretaceous sediments for petroleum potential, recording traces of crude oil and a gas show. The operation was subsidized under the Petroleum Search Subsidy Act 1959-1961.
A 30-day research cruise conducted between February 1 and March 2, 1989, measured light hydrocarbon gases in the water column over offshore sedimentary basins. The survey was a cooperative project between the Australian Bureau of Mineral Resources and Transglobal Exploration and Geoscience. Work focused on the Gippsland, Bass, Otway, Stansbury Basins and the Torquay Sub-basin.
Nineteen hydrocarbon accumulations discovered in the Canning Basin of Western Australia as of January 1993. The report, produced by Geoscience Australia Data, details six commercial accumulations, their geological settings, and production logistics. It covers onshore and offshore areas, including the Lennard Shelf, Fitzroy Trough, and Kidson Sub-basin.
Drilled between August 22nd and November 10th, 1963, the Geltwood Beach No. 1 Well reached a total depth of 12,300 feet in the Otway Basin, South Australia. The dataset, provided by Geoscience Australia, summarizes the stratigraphic sequence encountered and the results of hydrocarbon testing. The well was plugged and abandoned as a dry hole after drillstem tests yielded only slightly gas-cut salty water and drilling mud.
Supplementary file 1 by Wenfeng Geng presents a decision support framework for prioritizing renewable energy technologies in smart grids. The framework applies an expert-weighted TOPSIS method to rank four alternatives—solar PV, wind, hydropower, and biomass—based on four criteria. The dataset, last updated on 2026-04-30, is a 19.7 KB DOCX file containing the methodology and results, including closeness coefficients and sensitivity analysis.
Geoscience Australia Data conducted a multi-disciplinary study integrating sequence stratigraphy, palaeogeography, and geochemical data. The study maps the spatial and temporal distribution of Jurassic to earliest Cretaceous source rocks in the Browse Basin. This work aims to understand the source rocks' contribution to known hydrocarbon accumulations and charge history.
A qualitative analysis of Swedish energy policymaking documents and interviews concerning smart grids and grid tariffs. The dataset, authored by Jenny Palm, examines the representation of households across four dimensions of energy democracy. It was last updated on May 12, 2026.
Washington's largest emitters, those releasing 10,000 metric tons of CO2 equivalent or more annually, have reported their greenhouse gas emissions to the state's Department of Ecology since 2012. This dataset accounts for the majority of the state's emissions and includes a subset of emissions covered by the Climate Commitment Act. The data is reported by facilities, fuel suppliers, natural gas suppliers, and electric power entities across multiple sectors.
Geoscience Australia conducted a multi-disciplinary study integrating updated biostratigraphy, well correlations, seismic data, and paleogeographic interpretations for ten Hettangian to Maastrichtian supersequences. This regional petroleum systems model identifies four distinct petroleum systems and source rock distribution within the Browse Basin. The analysis highlights specific hydrocarbon accumulations, such as those in the Ichthys/Prelude and Burnside areas, sourced from Jurassic–Cretaceous formations.
A 122.0 MB PDF report details archaeological excavations conducted by the Starokyivska expedition of the Institute of Archaeology of the NAS of Ukraine in 2011 and 2012. The research covered four sites in Kyiv: T. Shevchenko Lane, 3; Desyatynna St., 13—B; O. Honchara St., 69; and Otto Schmidt St., 18—D. The report states that no intact archaeological layers or finds from the late 19th or early 20th centuries were discovered, with artifacts found only in redeposited soil.
ORNL_CLOUD provides global gridded estimates of annual soil respiration (Rs) and soil heterotrophic respiration (Rh) at 1 km resolution. The dataset was generated using a quantile regression forest model trained on 4,115 records from 1,036 studies in the Soil Respiration Database Version 5 (SRDB-V5), combined with global meteorological, land cover, and topographic covariates. These model inputs cover the period from 1961 to 2016.
Intact soil core collection and analysis of chemical and physical attributes is carried out annually at the ALTAR Desert Uplands 2 site to a target depth of 100cm. Repeat sampling takes place at 24 fixed points associated within a radius around the core site flux tower. The dataset is published by the Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network's Data Discovery platform.
Intact soil core collection and analysis of chemical and physical attributes is carried out annually at the ALTAR Desert Uplands 1 site to a target depth of 100cm. Repeat sampling takes place at 24 fixed points associated within a radius around the core site flux tower. The dataset is managed by the Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network's Data Discovery platform and was last updated on 2026-05-16.
National Offshore Petroleum Titles boundaries are defined in accordance with the Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage Act 2006. The dataset is based on the Australian Geodetic Datum and uses 5-minute graticular blocks to determine positions. It is derived from well information available through the National Offshore Petroleum Information Management System (NOPIMS).
Australia's petroleum exploration history, focusing on the shift from onshore Paleozoic basins to offshore Mesozoic basins and back to onshore for unconventional resources. The dataset includes a conference abstract and presentation from the APPEA Conference & Exhibition 2013, authored by researchers from Geoscience Australia and partner surveys. It discusses discoveries from the 1960s to the early 1980s and exploration license trends from 2010 to 2012.
May 2014 digital representation of Australia's scheduled and offshore areas as defined under the Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage Act 2006. The dataset was developed by Geoscience Australia in consultation with other Commonwealth agencies and covers the Australian marine jurisdiction from approximately 8°S to 70°S and 39°E to 174°E. It is provided as an ESRI Geodatabase and REST web service.
The Canning Basin in Australia, covering approximately 720,000 km², is a frontier petroleum province. This dataset contains geochemical biomarker data derived from carotenoid pigments in crude oils and source rocks, designed to clarify paleo-depositional environments and water stratification. The study extends prior work by Edwards et al. (2013) and Spaak et al. (2017, 2018), implemented by GeoMark Research.
Geoscience Australia published a 1998 study analyzing the origin of dry gas and oil in the Gilmore Field. The research uses a molecular and multi-element isotopic approach to identify an overmature, dry gas source. The study models reservoir filling from Devonian source rocks during the Early Cretaceous.
Lake Eliza is a hypersaline coastal lake in southeast South Australia. The dataset likely contains sedimentological data from two contrasting lake margin areas studied in summer, comparing fine carbonate sediments with high organic content on the protected western shore to quartz-carbonate sand on the exposed eastern shore. The data is hosted by the Australian Ocean Data Network and was last updated in May 2026.
The northern Exmouth Plateau and offshore Canning Basin in Australia are the focus of this dataset. It describes a research project by the Bureau of Mineral Resources (BMR) to map Triassic and Jurassic reef complexes for petroleum exploration. The project planned a 34-day cruise in early 1990 to acquire seismic profiles and dredge samples.