Chesapeake Energy Corporation Announces Production Curtailment and Details Haynesville Shale Joint Venture Amendment

Mar. 2, 2009-- Chesapeake Energy Corporation (NYSE:CHK) today provided an operational update and detailed an amendment to its Haynesville Shale joint venture agreement with Plains Exploration & Production Company (NYSE:PXP). Chesapeake has elected to curtail approximately 240 million cubic feet of natural gas equivalent (mmcfe) per day of its gross natural gas and oil production due to currently low wellhead prices in the Mid-Continent region. The company has curtailed approximately 200 million cubic feet per day of gross natural gas production and approximately 6,000 barrels per day of gross oil production for at least the month of March 2009. The curtailed production represents approximately 7% of Chesapeake’s current gross operated production capacity. Additionally, the company is considering a further 10% reduction in its drilling activity during 2009 if natural gas and oil prices remain low during the next few months……........….

On February 20, 2009, Chesapeake and PXP agreed to amend their Haynesville Shale joint venture agreement. In the amendment, Chesapeake granted PXP a one-time option to avoid paying the last $800 million of PXP's $1.65 billion drilling carry obligation to Chesapeake, which represents approximately 25% of the original joint venture transaction consideration. The amendment includes three key features. First, the option may only be exercised by PXP during the two-week period from June 15, 2010 through June 30, 2010. Second, should PXP elect to exercise the option, PXP will be required to convey 50% of all of its Haynesville Shale joint venture assets to Chesapeake as of December 31, 2010, including all investments in leasehold, production and reserves at that date. Chesapeake estimates PXP’s investment in the Haynesville Shale assets as of December 31, 2010 will likely range from $3.0 billion to $3.2 billion and believes the value of these assets at that time will be substantially greater than the cost basis. Third, until December 31, 2010, PXP’s obligations to both pay for 50% of Chesapeake’s drilling costs in the Haynesville Shale joint venture and participate in each well in which Chesapeake participates remain unchanged and are mandatory. ........

lCEO's comment about the jv change:
“Additionally, we are pleased to be able to assist our very good partner PXP in obtaining greater financial flexibility on terms useful to them and favorable to us. We were open to accommodating our joint venture partner’s request for a modification of the original agreement because of our great respect for PXP and our desire to be a supportive partner. While we would be happy for PXP to exercise its one-time option in June 2010, we anticipate it will not do so since it would then have to forfeit 50% of its anticipated $3.0 billion to $3.2 billion investment in the premier U.S. shale play.”

http://www.chk.com/News/Articles/Pages/1261333.aspx

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The production shut in is sorely needed. Wish several other companies would do the same as we need to knock some gas off line to get prices back in balance!

Of course if you are the mineral owner of the shut in well, this isn't quite a good deal. to avoid losing leases, I'm sure CHK will shut in certain unit wells which allow all of the acreage to be held by other unit wells. Or they will have a rolling shut in. Shut in the well for 29 days then on day 30 bring it back on line and shut in another well. Keep doing this to avoid triggering lease triggers. But if it brings prices back up, then the mineral owner may get more for the gas and offset the shut in's.

Thank goodness Ike and Gustav knocked out a lot of production from the Gulf. Many months after the storms, we are still down 2-3 BCF/day from GoM and much of that may never come back due to age and damage at faciltities.

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