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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Skip, section 35 of T18n r15w is under lease but expires in July. Most of the section is under cross lake but our neighborhood leased at $15k/acre. Sections to our south are in a unit. Do you have any knowledge that Chesapeake would let these leases expire.
Thanks.
This is a question about "challenges" in the SE corner of Red River Parish. According to the VP statement above (and I listened to the entire transcript too, but Skip really captured most of the info here), "as you move east and deeper into the basin (south) they tend to be challenged by high pressures and high temperatures which the industry is working on from a technological standpoint as well as faulting ans structural issues. ". In the specific areas of 12N-9W and 12N-8W, I don't think there are any faults on the maps I have seen. However, I do remember a discussion about some rapid changes in depth, or some such, up in 13N-8W (Martin Field mostly, I think). Does anyone have any knowledge of the nature of the problems and the nature of the solutions? Will better seismic help find the shale a bit better? I was encouraged to hear that Encana is working on the temp and pressure issues from a "tech standpoint" - I presume it means they are evolving their frac techniques? I am also encouraged that it is apparently not a rock clay content problem down there. I would guess that whatever they have to do, it will cost a bit more. Don't the wells get even deeper as you go further south, say in Sabine or Natchitoches Parishes?
Could be that up in 13-9 there is some faulting, but looking at the PHK map, it looks to me like the monster fault over on the east side is up in 14-9, running from SSW to NNE; just eyeballing it as best as I can, and I can't discern any other faults to the SE of there. I remember that when the wells in 13-8 started coming in variable, there was talk about the shale dipping, or some such - I gathered it was changing depth rapidly but not actually faulted. So I am left wondering how much it is a matter of depth, temp, rock quality, water from somewhere (I seem to recollect that a lot of water in the IP test can be due to poor fracture throwing the water back at you). I agree the wells have not been spectacular; I have an interest in the 2nd biggest producer in Liberty Field, and it only came in at 8.4 mmcf/d, but on a smallish (for then) choke. Since then, the chokes have been going down even further, which makes it harder to compare things. My personal best guess is that as you decrease the choke, IP should drop as the square of the ratio of the chokes, but that is making a few assumptions. Anyway, both 12-9, 13-9 and 13-8 all DO have some pretty reasonable wells, but mixed in with some not-so-great ones for sure too. I am just encouraged that they are "working on it"; it seems to me like the area would have to have Bossier Shale potential, given that the latest PHK maps place us pretty much in core for that, and it is shallower. I too am concerned about what it would mean for the operators to dump a lot of leasehold in this area; there are a bunch of units without a well yet! In commenting, I have just been hoping someone might know more about the technical challenges actually being faced and the potential solutions. I don't know if they would have drilled a vertical to quickly get HBP without a fault problem; after all Encana / Shell IS going berserk with gas platforms up in 13-9, sections 10 and 15, which would be ESE roughly of your vertical I think, but not by much.
Hi Skip,
I presume these temps are picked up on "classic" SONRIS, not SONRIS "lite"? I am still dinking around with the simpler tools. I also presume, though, that if we are talking townships in the range of 13 to 12N and 8-9W, there are not these temperature problems there? I found it interesting that Gosh Darn is pointing to possible good wells over in 13N-7W I believe, around Ashland. I am presuming the shale is descending into the abyss on a general SE heading, so I don't know that Ashland gives much hope for significantly further South. It's just my opinion too, but given the Bossier potential in this area, combined with relatively cheap lease extensions still likely for at least another year (rough estimate, based on how my lease went), if I were an operator I would try to get something drilled into the Bossier at least to hold (I also presume, though, that they try to hold into the Haynesville due to Pugh Clause stuff). I am personally already HBP, and just hoping, somewhat subjectively, that there is still some potential for more drilling in this area, as gas prices improve.
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