For those members concerned with faults in the area of their minerals, this is a good example of how an operator will attempt to configure drilling units so that development may go forward. IMO, any concern for the unit size in excess of 640 acres should be offset by the ability to drill economic length laterals without having to drill through a fault. As much as this makes sense to those who understand the basics of drilling HS, the Office of Conservation has not seemed inclined to approve this type of reconfiguration. IMO, mineral owners in the vicinity of faults should support the efforts of operators to draw units that make geological sense, encourage development and provide for more successful completions and production.
http://assets.dnr.la.gov/cons/hearings/2011/02FEB/11-79-81ap0001.pdf
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From a layman's viewpoint, I think "larger" units make a lot of us nervous. I understand why units might need to be "shaped" but why necessarily larger, and how much larger? Will parts of units just be left out altogether. What does this mean for existing units and can leasing companies arbitrarily drop leases?
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Posted by Char on May 29, 2025 at 14:42 — 4 Comments
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