Two database reviews today brought home to me how far the Play has progressed and that it has entered a new phase of development.
I check the public hearing schedule each day to record Haynesville unit applications, as I have done for almost three years now. The spreadsheet that I use to track the unit applications has 37 lines per page. Over the last half of 2010 each page has contained the applications for 2 to 4 hearing dates. The page I am working on currently contains the applications for 11 hearing dates. And I still have 2 lines left. The formation of HA Drilling & Production Units has slowed to a crawl. IMO, this indicates that HA operators have ceased step out drilling and are now focused on production drilling. A number of recent company reports have stated this shift in focus. Most recently EnCana.
I regularly check the "Wells Permitted By Date"portion of the database as I maintain a running list of new permits for an industry client in their area of operation. The list of District 6 permits for Monday through Wednesday contains 37 total. 27 are Haynesville horizontal wells. Of those 27, 9 are permits for the initial well in a unit or section. 18 of the permits are for alternate unit wells. All but 2 are EnCana/SWEPI wells. Of those 9 permits for initial wells, Chesapeake had 5, SWEPI - 1, Petrohawk - 1, EXCO - 1 and J-W - 1.
Development activity has been on this trend through the last quarter of 2010. And the continuing supporting data makes it plain to me that we will likely see this for some time to come. I am hopeful that future improvement in nat gas prices will stimulate a return to step out drilling. The EnCana corporate report mentioned previously tends to give the impression that ECA and SWEPI think they have performed sufficient exploration to model the majority of the basin over 30 months of drilling.
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It seems odd that as large as the NG lobby should be that they aren't in talks with auto and engine manufacturers.. NG is cheap because there are only dead end markets for it.. NG powered transportation growth would set the NG market on fire and take the edge off petroleum prices. Maybe we aren't seeing it happen because of the petroleum lobby, huh?
Speculators will go where the money is...
So I did just a little analysis. Encana is basically letting go of 20 units here - actually 19.5, so it may actually be 39 units they have a half interest in (so I don't know what Shell is doing, or whether Shell has a half interest in all Encana units). If you take Les's townships map, and scan it North to South for HS units without well (summing across), you get:
Township HS Units, without wells
20N 16
19N 60
18N 50
17N 99
16N 59
15N 49
14N 31
13N 46
12N 81
11N 76
10N 84
9N 80
8N 54
7N 1
The total of units without wells is then 786 on the LA side. So the Encana move represents letting go of 2.5% of the units without well on the LA side of the HS (it may be 5% that are being let go in actually Shell has half interest in all units and they are letting theirs go too; I don't know how that really works). Of course Encana is only one operator, but I do seem to recollect they have a pretty sizable amount of the HS leased - they claimed 429,000 acres I think in a 3/2010 presentation, or about 670 units. So looking at it another way, they are letting go of about 3% of their total leasehold. So this does not seem to me to represent a major contraction of the play area envisioned by leasing, but maybe I am being optimistic. I would think these guys would really get anything with Bossier Shale HBP before having to re-lease too, if they can afford it. This is of course all only LA side of the play, since the starting data is all on the LA side. So the actual percentage of units dropped is lower, given there are a bunch of units over in Texas, or so I would think...
Hi Skip,
No intent on my part to disagree with your major premise - that the edges of the play are somewhat defined, and given the current economics, it makes sense to move toward focusing on currently profitable drilling. I just found it interesting to see just how many undrilled units there still are on the edges - basically on all the edges except the Desota - Texas border. And the operators either have to HBP these, or they will be dropping a bunch more leases, it would seem. I don't have the numbers on other operators, so I don't know what % has already been shed for the time being. Folks aren't talking much about the Bossier Shale either, and if I were making business decisions and had cheap leasehold in areas with good potential for Bossier but less prospective for Haynesville, I guess I would hate to lose that leasehold and potentially have to pay a premium for it later. This of course applies more to the southern edge of the play.
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…
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