Haynesville may become world's largest gas field: Chesapeake CEO

More proof that current bonuses do not reflect the true value of the Haynesville.


http://www.platts.com/Natural Gas/News/6142828.xml

(you may have to type in the link)

Views: 131

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

kickbacks
This Platt’s news item contained a significant error in the reporting. McClendon actually was referring to the Marcellus Shale when making the statement about the field containing 1.5 quadrillion cubic feet (1500 Tcf) of recoverable gas which would make it the largest in the world. McClendon did state the Haynesville Shale contains 500 Tcf (potentially 700 Tcf) of recoverable gas which is twice the level originally estimated by Chesapeake. A link to the news item is shown below:

http://www.platts.com/Natural%20Gas/News/6142828.xml
Thanks for the clarification, Les.
Les B:

Seemingly most every news item relating these remarks on the internet (including Platts) is attributing this 1.5 Qcf to the "ultimate size" of the Haynesville. Were you present at the conference or know someone who was?

If your remarks are correct, this same misquote is being cut and pasted around the blogosphere!
Dion, I watched a webcast of McClendon's presentation so have it straight from the horse's mouth. Unfortunately the other news agencies have just picked up the Platts news story so it originates from a single source. I have seen this before with Platts (and other) news sources where they botch the story.

By the way, I am amazed enough at Chesapeake's doubling (or tripling) of the Haynesville Shale's recoverable gas. I look forward to McClendon's explanation for the dramatic increase.
Les B:

So am I. I am wondering if this is an extrapolation of the latest round of IP announcements (seem to be improved approx. 20 -30%) as well as other results as to viable production outside of the original area delineation, at the same relative well spacing. If one "expands" uniformly according to those criteria, one can reasonably get to 350 - 400 tcf.

Over 30 years on 100% drillout, this would correspond to a 30 Bcfd peak (est'd.) at 180 - 185 rigs, on which one would outpace domestic conventional declines AND net imports, should same still be profitable to current exporters, thru 2030, from the info already out there. That would be HS, by itself. I can't imagine that CHK and others would want to keep that pace.

So, what do you think we are looking at? 50 yr. program? 60 yr. program?
Dion, I think that is exactly what Chesapeake and others are looking at for the Haynesville and Marcellus Shale plays (and maybe others also). Rather than developing the play as quickly as possible to a very high peak rate, the operators will develop at a pace to match natural gas demand and filling in behind the decline in conventional production. This is similar to the philosophy behind development of Qatar's North Field. The field contains 1000 Tcf of recoverable gas but will have a peak production rate of ~ 12-15 Bcfd.
Yes, this is the area that had an explosion in a water well and Cabot Oil was providing water to some landowners. A review of o/g regulations was to take place this spring.

http://www.pressconnects.com/article/99999999/NEWS01/80507030&t...
KB, there are several challenges regarding the Marcellus Shale development. The terrain is very hilly so shooting seismic and building well pads is difficult. The play covers a very large area and the formation parameters vary significantly so there may be good and bad parts. There is no existing production infrastucture and limited well service resources. And not least a NIMBY attitude is prevalent in the region.
KB:

The Marcellus has drilling and development issues which involve broad environmental consequences. The shale interval is known to contain higher concentrations of uranium and other heavy metals; I would suppose even with good containment, operators still may have issues with above-average levels of NORM and its disposal. The terrain is hilly, water must be managed properly to prevent contamination and erosion in and around well pads and pits. Water availability in many areas also poses problems.

Whoops... got caught not reading to thru to the next page again. Where I duplicated Les' post... what he said. -- DLW
Poor Aubrey, he will say anything to get attention and hopefully a stock price bounce. It is hard to listen to someone who held stock at $60.00, then HAD to let it go on margin calls at $16.00! He prays to the EXXON and BP Gods everynight to spare him additional pain!
I was shocked when he got killed on margin calls, I bet he felt like the Duke and Duke boys off of Trading places, LOL. He was drinking too much of his own kool-aid.

RSS

Support GoHaynesvilleShale.com

Blog Posts

The Lithium Connection to Shale Drilling

Shale drilling and lithium extraction are seemingly distinct activities, but there is a growing connection between the two as the world moves towards cleaner energy solutions. While shale drilling primarily targets…

Continue

Posted by Keith Mauck (Site Publisher) on November 20, 2024 at 12:40

Not a member? Get our email.

Groups



© 2024   Created by Keith Mauck (Site Publisher).   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service