Oil & Gas Pro

USGS drops new numbers on natural gas found in Bossier formation. It's years worth.

USGS drops new numbers on natural gas found in Bossier formation. It's years worth.

BY LIZ SWAINE | Staff writer  5/7/2026

The U.S. Geological Survey has released numbers that even some of their staff members refer to as “sizable” - a 10-year quantity of natural gas trapped in rock under northwest Louisiana and east Texas. 

In January, USGS issued an estimate of 47.9 trillion cubic feet of gas they believe could be present in the Gulf Coast Haynesville formation.

On Wednesday, it was the Bossier formation’s turn: 343.5 trillion cubic feet of “undiscovered, technically recoverable” but perhaps not economically viable gas believed to be in the Bossier formation through to the Western Haynesville, an area that generally comprises Leon, Freestone, Limestone, and Robertson counties in east Texas.

“It’s just the way it came out,” said USGS geologist Chris Schenk of the estimate. “We put our input in and see what happens.”

That input came up with a number that USGS estimates is enough “to supply the United States for more than 10 years at the current rate of consumption.” It can also be drilled using the technology we have now, Schenk told The Shreveport Bossier City Advocate.

And now some Geology 101

The Bossier and Haynesville geologic formations are deep and old, formed at least 145 million years ago in the Jurassic period.

Between the formations and the earth’s surface is two miles of hard stuff: sandstone, limestone and shale.

The Haynesville formation is older and usually deeper, from 10,000 to 17,000 feet below the surface. The Bossier is generally 500-800 feet shallower than the Haynesville, and younger.

But all is not so straightforward. The Railroad Commission of Texas, which oversees drilling in the Lone Star state, warns that because Texas and Louisiana name things differently, “It is generally recognized that the shale interval in East Texas is the Lower Bossier that correlates with the Haynesville of Louisiana.” In other words, same thing, different name.

The Western Haynesville’s riches

The Western Haynesville is a relatively small area in east Texas that has been found to be rich with productive, over-pressured shales.

The USGS has noticed, writing in their report: “Production from the few wells drilled in this AU (Assessment Unit) shows that estimated ultimate recoveries are substantially higher than those of typical shales of the Bossier Formation.”

Shreveport mineral consultant Skip Peel said the few gas companies working the Western Haynesville have found that to be true and have been putting pedal to metal.

“The Western Haynesville is 5 years old. The first two years of that was Comstock and Aethon leasing land and drilling just a few test wells. The last three years has been particularly Comstock in full development mode, building pipelines, building all kinds of infrastructure, treating facilities, whatnot, because they've decided that that's their future.”

Peel said in the legacy Haynesville, an area that is roughly the parts of northwest Louisiana and east Texas that are not considered the Western Haynesville, companies have been drilling both Haynesville and Bossier-depth wells for some time.

“The USGS report will bring more attention, public attention, investor attention, to the Western Haynesville. And so that's good for Comstock, and Aethon was the company that was also kind of the secondary operator in the Western Haynesville.”

“That’s one of the reasons why Mitsubishi Corporation bought them (Aethon) is because of their footprint in the Western Haynesville."

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    Jesse Joyner

    A smidgen of background on selling your minerals. In one respect, I've been quite fortunate to inherit sweet-spot mineral rights from my dad in Bossier Parish. Plus, I also inherited land & mineral rights per my birthright on my mom's side in Natchitoches Parish.

    Yep, a Louisiana good ol' boy (like me) sometimes just gets lucky, huh? We're born into mailbox money. It was nothing to do with what we did or didn't do . . . except pop out of a womb. Our families simply followed the Napoleonic Code . . . and didn't cut us out of the will.

    Easy peasy.

    Didn't take much smarts to get what we got/get what we deserved. I mean, many Louisiana boys have simply stayed alive long enough to outlive their elders.

    Hence, mailbox money.

    Now, let me be honest. Let me tell you what my dad told me. My dad said: "Never sell your land and never sell your mineral rights." And what he meant by that was . . . you should only lease your land and minerals to an operator.

    Now, um, here's the rub. My dad was a "do as I say, not as I do" good ol' boy. My dad was the real deal. He'd grown up around the large landowners of South Bossier and had inherited Red River river bottom. Primo for growing crops . . . and sprouting pumpjacks. But when such a large family of kids faces a funeral and the land has to be divided up . . . some voices want to go ahead and instantly turn their raw commodity of land . . . into greenback cash.

    So my dad didn't take his own advice due to family pressure. Wish he had. Of course, I also ignored the advice, too . . . back when, years ago, I needed the money and sold my land and mineral rights in Natchitoches Parish. Dumb me. Such regret. My mom's family had held onto their undivided family tract for many decades . . . after my mom's father had died in the Great Depression. Yet they hadn't seen any promising drilling -- ever.

    Well, that was before horizontal fracking came along. Turns out my mom's family's location might not have been in a classical sweet spot, per se . . . but it turned out to be a heck of a location for numerous HA horizontals.

    Oh, lord. If only my mom's family had held on a bit longer. If only.

    But, like, dumb me . . . they didn't listen to my dad's advice.

    Bottom line. Try to keep your land as long as you can. Never sell your land, and you should only lease your minerals. It's good advice . . . unless you really, really need the money.

    Me, I'll go to my grave regretting having sold my land and minerals in Natchitoches Parish. My only rationalization to appease my tough ol' dad . . . would be the fact that I sold my land to my brother, not to a mineral buyer.

    But then, unexpectedly, my brother suddenly died -- way too young, and his widow went along with my cousins to liquidate . . . to grab the instant payday, instead of keeping the land in perpetuity.

    So, I guess I'm a hypocrite, too. I preach what my dad preached . . . but then we both sold, when we should've held on anther decade or two.

    Lesson learned. Hindsight is 20/20.       

     

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    Rock Man

    One needs to remember that the Western Haynesville (aka Bossier) has multiple landing zones / target interval. Not a single zone being targeted. Comstock has already "proven" stacked benches.

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      landowner

      Carolyn Newsom

      Thank you! Great Tutorial!