I have heard that test wells for horizonatal Cotton Valley have come in with over 200 barrels of great quality condensate a day. Has anyone else heard this
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They are not shallow. Or cheap to drill. And the natural gas liquids and condensate production varies significantly over the extent of the prospective area. It is a conventional reservoir unlike the Haynesville Shale. Perform a SONRIS Lite search by organization for Indigo. They are the most active driller of horizontal CV wells.
Indigo is one of the names that I heard was having good success in south Caddo. Noticing that Indigo reached TD on the southwest Caddo wells but no production numbers. That is supposedly a very good well, BUT rumors abound in this business
There is a wide variance in productivity. The best horizontal CV wells can be as good or better than an average Haynesville well. I recall one that IP'ed 10MMCFD plus significant liquids.
the well I am hearing about is located near Keatchie and I am trying to find section, t and r for it is supposed to have significant condensate. On a side note, I have also heard that budgets for 2012 drilling is going to ramp up early in 2012 with budgets for the big players increasing for the Haynesville. Have you all heard that
Jay, was that an Indigo well?
Yes, kcm it was an Indigo well in 15/15, Section 23. The Berry 1-H well in 15/15, Section 24 is reported to have IP'd @ 14 million/day. The Walton well was averaging 50-60 barrels liquids/day in addition to the gas.
As to the ramp up in the Haynesville in 2012 by the Operators, that would fly in the face of their public announcements, which have indicated they were cutting back on rigs rather significantly in 2012. A possible exception to this might be BHP Billiton/Petrohawk.
I think the well number is 242739, Walton 23 H, in S23-T15N-R15W.
KCM,
I don't get it. Why would drilling budgets ramp up, with gas at $3.50?
Henry, I totally agree with you, but I heard it from a very reliable source who deals with the bigger companies and ALL of the majors have told him that their drilling schedules were raised for 2012 and in most cases, he said they were major increases in drilling. He too has asked why and got no response. Big companies do not usually do "dumb" things, so there has to be a reason. That is why I started this post--to see if anyone knew about these wells with higher condensate and if perhaps the majors are coming in to drill to that. I am just guessing that perhaps that could be a reason for projected drilling increase.
If it's true that drilling budgets have been raised for 2012, it would likely be unrelated to the Haynesville, and centered in the liquids rich plays.
that is what my source thinks but the companies are super tight lipped about it. Since one of the people he talked to was boasting about the good results of the Cotton Valley wells with significant condensate, he thought it might be about a shallowier play. Guess time will tell. It has to be about something other than nat gas with prices where they are
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