I noticed today that apparently the 'off-site' drilling is creating SONRIS errors.
Example: In DeSoto Parish, Louisiana, if one goes to SONRIS LITE and does a well search by STR (S24-T12N-R13W), the only well which appears is a Hosston well, Pinnacle's Collins #1, SN 239251.
However, S24-T12N-R13W has a PRODUCING Haynesville well. But since that well-pad was sited in S25-T12N-R13W, one has to do the search on S25 to find this well, as it does NOT appear in a S24 search.
Has anyone else noticed similar discrepancies for other wells and sections, or is this simply a one-time error?
If this problem is noted system wide, does anyone know if DNR has plans to correct it?
Tags: Error, SONRIS, search, well
It's not an error or glitch. It is the way that the Department of Natural Resources/Office of Conservation has always organized wells. By the section containing the surface location. That was logical for the decades of vertical or directional wells however it does cause some difficulty in an age of horizontal wells many with surface locations outside of the section being produced. The way to deal with this is to change the way you search the database. Instead of searching by section-township-range and entering data in all three search boxes, you should simply leave the section box blank. This will pull up all the wells in the township organized by section. If you can not remember the serpentine numbering system for sections in a township print yourself a township grid. With very rare exceptions Haynesville laterals run north and south. Therefore if you are looking for a well producing from Section 16, as an example, you would need to review the wells in Sections 9 and 21 as those are the sections immediately north and south respectively. This type of search has many advantages as you can see all the wells in the immediate vicinity, the status and the operator.
" . . . Therefore if you are looking for a well producing from Section 16, as an example, you would need to review the wells in Sections 9 and 21 as those are the sections immediately north and south respectively. This type of search has many advantages as you can see all the wells in the immediate vicinity, the status and the operator. . . ."
yep. That may work fine if your area of search is in or near the center of a Township. And if your "section of interest" is a border section (example: S6-T12N-R13W) then you still have to search in T13N-R13W; T12N-R14W, as wells as T12N-R13W. And if the well descriptions are not clearly written, you still don't know what the heck you're looking at! . . . or where it is. (Unless you are really, really good with UTM coordinates and Lambert grids!)
Encourage your child to learn abstracting! It has a future.
The future is just fine for those of us who understand the Public Land Survey System. And if I had any children I would counsel them against tilting at windmills. LOL!
Well, I have to consider that "non-acceptable". It means one now has to search for a specific section by searching ALL eight adjoining sections? There really needs to be SOME correlation within the 'target' or producing section.
Glory Be! Invest Now in your local Abstract Company!
Feel free to complain to Commissioner Angelle, JB. However he will likely point out that there are only two adjoining sections to be searched, not eight.
Thanks Skip.
I take your reply to mean that thus far the Commission is only allowing "adjacent site" drilling in a N-S direction? Never E-W? and never on a diagonal?
How about over in the Toledo Bend area? I can't see those as being NS bores.
You're welcome, JB. No, the Commissiion will allow a surface location with a lateral in most any direction that an operator may wish that meets regulatory quidelines. The north-south Haynesville lateral axis is owing to the natural fracture pattern in the shale. An operator can drill the vertical portion of a well on an east-west diagonal into an adjoining section before turning horizontal on a north-south axis. That would serve for instances like Toledo Bend. As I mention in my previous reply, there are few and rare exceptions to the common north-south lateral Haynesville pattern. If you can come up with an organizational database program that changes with every possible nuance of horizontal drilling by all means suggest it to the Commissioner.
JB,
The SONRIS LITE well search by STR only considers the point of entry of the well which can be confusing with horizontal drilling. Try using the SONRIS GIS feature to search instead. Click on GIS NEW (TEST) then zoom in to your area of interest. In the Table of Contents menu, open "Oil/Gas" and check the box for "HS Wells" and "Well Bottom Holes and Bores." This will show you both the point of entry and the the lateral for each well. You will also want to enable sections under the Boundaries menu and turn on the labels for each item by clicking the red "A" underneath. If this sounds confusing, you can start with the tutorial that opens with the map. Hope this helps.
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