Magnolia Reporter

3/14/2011

 

A consortium of companies including Ginger Oil of Houston has received permits to begin drilling its Lamb No. 1 prospect well in the Tiger Creek Field of Claiborne Parish, Louisiana.

Test drilling will go to a depth of 12,300 feet. Drilling is expected to take three to four weeks.

Ginger has worked since 2007 on developing Tiger Creek. The company's press release August 22, 2008 reported the project under the name "Resource Creek." Ginger Oil completed in 2008 acquisition of mineral rights to the area in Claiborne Parish. The area is believed to contain a geologically interesting, deep, tight sandstone formation with the potential to contain hydrocarbon resources in the form of gas and condensate.

In June 2010 Ginger published an agreement with two leading oil and gas producers for participation in the exploitation of Tiger Creek. The company's two partners acquired the 72 percent cost share in the exploitation of the Tiger Creek in exchange for cash and financial commitments in connection with the first test drilling. The cost to drill the first well is approximately $12 million. If the consortium decides to proceed with production, this means additional investment of around $12 million in Lamb No. 1.

The resource potential of the Tiger Creek is classified as probable and amounts to 90 billion cubic feet of natural gas and 7.8 million barrels, a total of 22.2 million barrels of oil equivalent.

Ginger has 28 percent share of the costs and 20 percent share of revenues.

Ginger Oil is a U.S.-based oil and natural gas company focused on the prospect with the aim of finding new reserves. The company acquires, develops, extracts and sells oil and natural gas reserves. Ginger operates in Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana and Michigan. Exploration activities are conducted from Houston and its parent company based in Stockholm, Sweden.

 

Does anyone know anything about the formations in this area?  Well Serial # 242875

Sonris

Cnt Status Well Serial Well Name Well Num Permit Date Org ID Location Field Field Name Meas Depth











7 01 242875 HA RA SUN;LAMB 001 04-MAR-11 S408 022-22N-06W 7100 OAKS 12300











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Replies to This Discussion

Unit orders don't hold leases.  Producing wells hold leases.  Ginger/Stephens Producing have one.  Unit orders are good indefinitely but are basically worthless to a company if the leases expire.

I'm new to the site, but it didn't take me long to realize who the expert was on this site.  Thanks for your opinion on this particular well, Skip.  The reporting on it was confusing to me.    

Rafe, there are numerous small independent O&G companies in both states pulling for SWN to prove up the Lower Smackover/Brown Dense as it will be a windfall for those whose leasehold ends up in a good area.  A few are even drilling vertical wells to test the interval under their HBP leasehold.  Their producing wells and units are relatively easy to review on SONRIS.  None of them to date, as far as I have seen, have performed PR to tout the prospective nature of their leasehold.  They do not need to do so as interested mid-major and major energy companies will find them if the Brown Dense prospect works out.  Companies that sell stock perform the kind of PR seen in the Ginger Oil report.  And the majority of those companies are more interested in selling stock than in actually exploring for hydrocarbons or participating in the wells of those who do.  I am very skeptical of Ginger Oil but the proof will be if they actually do something other than issue reports.  Welcome to GHS.

Skip, I don't want to beat a dead horse, but I'm I correct to assume from your earlier replies that the Lamb No. 1 test cannot tell us anything about any BD at the "Tiger Creek" area?  Thanks.

As I mention above, some companies that hold development rights in the prospective LSBD fairway will drill vertical wells that will test the Lower Smackover Reservoir A.  With the exception of any electric logs which may be filed with the state, the science from those wells will be proprietary.  The operators will not share the science with "us".  They will share it with any interested horizontal operators that may come calling if the prospect proves commercial.  There is little reason for any small operator to drill LSBD test wells until they see interest from the industry.  Right now the prospect is unproven and no energy companies other than Southwestern are placing an emphasis on drilling exploration wells.

So you are of the opinion that Lamb No. 1 was not a test of LSBD, right? 

From the Well Engineering/Mechanical Report, when the well was Plugged & Abandoned on 4/14/11 the wellbore had penetrated the Top of the Haynesville Sand at 12,000'.  That being the case the True Vertical Depth of 12,500' would not have been deep enough to test the LSBD.  See Page 2 of the report, bottom section.

http://ucmwww.dnr.state.la.us/ucmsearch/UCMRedir.aspx?url=http%3a%2...

It was not drilled to sufficient depth to test the LSBD.  It was an unsuccessful Haynesville Sand well.

Got it.  Impressed how easily you zip through the data.  Thanks

I'm a different kind of "landman", Rafe.  My specialty is database research.  I've never taken a lease in my life.  And worked for the industry less than thirty day.  My client base is predominantly individuals, groups and businesses that own significant mineral assets.

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