Austin, Brazoria, Brazos, Burleson, Chambers, Colorado, Fayette, Fort Bend, Galveston, Grimes, Hardin, Harris, Jasper, Jefferson, Lee, Madison, Matagorda, Montgomery, Newton, Orange, Polk, San Jacinto, Trinity, Tyler, Walker, Washington & Wharton.
Some of these counties are also included in the Eagle Ford (North) Group because of shale development but the main targets in this region for the last couple of years appears to have been in either the Austin Chalk fields or in the Yegua/Cook Mountain.
Everyone is welcome. If you want to talk about another formation or type of development that I haven't mentioned, please, feel free to open a discussion.
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Tom, the Eagleford / Woodbine section really starts to get thin in Angelina Co., however the Jurrassic is very much in play and starting to catch fire for Haynesville drillilng. Look for EOG to drill Haynesville wells soon there. the Leor well is testing Cotton Valley / Bossier, in think, and this is also in play in Angelina. There is a southwest extension of the Haynesvill play that is creeping into Angelina and I think that is the #1 play at this time. Ask me next week and it may be something different.
GOR is gas to oil ratio. The Eagle Ford shale in northern Dewitt and Karnes is deep, and makes very good liquids, mainly in the form of condensate. I believe the liquids are in a gaseous phase in the subsurface and the liquids condense out or the gas as the pressure decreases near the surface. This is good because the gas migrates through the shale easier than liquid. This acreage goes for about $20,000 per acre. Some of the Eagle Ford well in southern La Salle County make no condensate, only dry gas at a similar depth. This acreage is not nearly as valuable, and cannot produce economic wells at today’s gas prices, in my opinion.
A membrane unit is a very large contraption that filters our Co2 by pushing the gas through a membrane. They work best with low volumes and are expensive and need maintenance.
Trinity Co. has some good potential, as the Woodbine sands are productive (EAGLEBINE) and do make some condensate. It really does not matter what the price is if you can make large volumes of gas and I think this is what Trinity Co. has to offer.
Yes, blending is possible but only in very small amounts. I am aware of Enbridge buying untreated Woodbine gas in Trinity Co. but the seller is limited to 250 Mcf per day. If one wants to drill for this gas and sell gas in quantities capable of paying out the investment the gas must be treated with an amine plant or a membrane unit. All of the wells in Glendale field make Co2 in amounts that need treatment, to include Austin, Woodbine, Buda, Georgetown and Edwards. The WCS Cameron Mineral trust horizontal A/C well in Carmona field (Polk Co) had a membrane unit on it, which is a big, expensive pain. The GOR’s are running around 12 bbls per 1000 mcf. This is an issue. The wells in Houston County tend to make oil from these Cretaceous reservoirs.
In Trinity County, on equal depth with the activity in Houston Co., and near the county line, both the Buda and the Chalk and the Woodbine have tested gas with 4% Co2 (plus or minus). I don’t think hydraulic stimulation will change the gas oil ratio or the nature of the hydrocarbon. I wish it would!!! This is just my opinion, and I am known to be wrong on a reoccurring basis. There is obviously something going on with a change in the source material and / or the thermal maturity which changes as one enters Trinity County. I think this is why the play has not spilled over into Trinity Co. yet, but probably will as gas becomes more attractive.
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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