Anyone know what’s going on in Sec 19/14-14 in Kickapoo? They put up a well then took it down then two days later they put it back up and took it back down Any information will be appreciated
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Thank you sooo much for all the information on this i really appreciate it.
Hey Rock Man hope you are doing well,
Got a question my Sepla invoice for September went to over $21000 usually be around $200-$400 are you hearing why such large increase does that mean my check will be larger? Sec 19 14 14 and Sec 18 14 14
Thanks for all your insight I really appreciate it
JAMES
Best I can think that is happening here is that the operator (SWN) moved in workover rig(s) to run tubing in the most recently drilled Haynesville laterals.
Attached to this one is a map of the Section 18 14N 14W block - the red dots indicate 7 Haynesville producing pads (some pads overlap the others).
All these new wells were completed flowing up larger (5.5") production casing. Once the production declines some, it is common practice to move in rig and run smaller diameter production tubing (e.g., 2.875") into the wells to help better unload the wells and subsequently increase production.
An engineer can explain this better than I, but the smaller diameter tubing positively impacts downhole annular pressure and results in better well bore unloading of fluid (water) and increased gas rates.
This is my best guess - result should be increased production and revenues and ultimately higher EUR
Second set of production graphs
Last set of production graphs
All these graphs plus maps are from the ENVERUS site.
Note that this format for production graphs and maps is being discontinued by ENVERUS in December as the push more and more for subscribers to use their new and more expensive PRISM platform
PS note - failure to run tubing and unload the wells will result in continued production decline from these laterals as bottom hole pressure drops over time.
After these workovers, I would expect a production increase (at best) and a flattening of production decline (at a minimum).
These tubing running operations can be relatively short in time - which explains why a rig would one day be on location and then gone in short order (a few days)
THANKS so much really appreciate you thanks again
Replying to item posted this Jan 14) / no more "reply" options left in that thread on this discussion site.
Don't know anything that isn't posted on SONRIS. Rig moved off in October and frac plans have been filed.
Latest production posts on state sites right now is October 2022 / these run 2-3 months behind present day.
It is just sit and wait time until this well is frac'd and put to sales.
Based on directional survey and GR log, looks like Haynesville Shale lateral.
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EDWL 18&19&30-14-14 HC |
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Hey Rock hope all is well……. What info you know about this well? Thanks so much for your information
FYI to all. When a discussion thread runs out of "Reply" options scroll to the top of the page and reply in that "Reply To This" box under the discussion title. That will enter the reply in the correct sequence and allow for additional replies with the Reply button that we are used to. Thanks, Rock Man.
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