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As Carla Petroleum is not recognized by the state as an "opertaor", the company is likely a land company acting as third party bidder for a currently undisclosed company or they are a speculator hoping to flip the lease in the first year.
CARLA PETROLEUM, INC. | Business Corporation (Non-Louisiana) | DALLAS | Active |
Business: | CARLA PETROLEUM, INC. |
Charter Number: | 34688862 F |
Registration Date: | 9/23/1998 |
Domicile Address | |
16990 DALLAS PARKWAY, STE. 126 | |
DALLAS, TX 75248 |
Mailing Address | |
16990 DALLAS PARKWAY, SUITE 126 | |
DALLAS, TX 75248 |
Principal Business Office | |
16990 DALLAS PARKWAY, SUITE 126 | |
DALLAS, TX 75248 | |
Registered Office in Louisiana | |
401 MARKET ST., STE. 600 | |
SHREVEPORT, LA 71101-3239 | |
Principal Business Establishment in Louisiana | |
400 TRAVIS ST., STE. 506 | |
SHREVEPORT, LA 71101 |
Status | |
Status: | Active |
Annual Report Status: | In Good Standing |
Qualified: | 9/23/1998 |
Last Report Filed: | 10/21/2010 |
Type: | Business Corporation (Non-Louisiana) |
Registered Agent(s) |
|
Officer(s) | Additional Officers: No |
|
I will display my ignorance, which is great. But first, as one hard of hearing, I must have misunderstood my neighbors when they told of the lease bonus. For my error, I apologize.
Second, if a landowner chooses not to lease, how does that decision impact drilling on the land of near neighbors? I was under the impression, perhaps mistaken, that a decision not to lease was simply a decision to participate in the play in a different manner? I do not want to deflect the benefits for anyone but I do not want a well in the backyard of my home. If I were to lease, would it be possible to specify that I do not want any activity near my home?
Thank you for any insight you might offer.
Cocodrie Man,
I'm sorry for not getting back to you sooner. I saw where you posted but did not see the post. If that makes any sense.
Yes, you can put a clause in your lease that there are to be no operations on your property. That is generally not a problem unless you own a lot of acreage.
WH, I'm simply here to get as much info as I can about the chalk and/or shale. Who's leasing, how much they are paying, etc. So I don't see a problem expanding the thread beyond central Louisiana.
For your information, I have followed the Austin Chalk since the blow out in the Lorman well 35 years ago. One of the problems with drilling the Chalk in this area is that it is so naturally fractured that it steals mud. As an example, I scouted the Tusc wells that were drilled in the area and I know which wells they had to convoy pre-mixed mud to when they were drilling in Chalk because of natural fractures. That mud, once it enters the formation, then sets up quickly and you have problems bringing the well in and producing it. In my opinion that is part of the current problem with the Deshotels well. To compound the mud problem in that well they cemented the liner in. That should not have been done. They should have done an open hole completion as soon as they reached total depth and tried to clear as much of the mud as they could as soon as they could. That did not happen because they waited on completion crews that were tied up on other projects during the Thanksgiving/Christmas/New Years holidays. Now they are having problems even acidizing. The longer they waited for their completion crews the more the mud that entered the formation had the tendency to setup. I hope someone in the industry learns quickly how to drill, complete and produce this formation because this could be the largest onshore oil discovery of the last 50 years. And yes, I do get testy when someone questions whether I should be here or not.
Abington,
Let me see if I can clarify somethings. First, you have to look at the strata that we are talking about like they are a layer cake. Starting with the strata that is the most shallow it would be the Austin Chalk, its also known as the Selma Chalk, then Eutaw, which I'm assuming is also known as Tuscaloosa Marine Shale, then Tuscaloosa. These strata refer to the location of their out crops. That means where they actually come to the surface of the earth. In the case of Austin/Selma Chalk it comes to the surface in both Austin Texas and Selma Alabama. Eutaw comes to the surface in Eutaw Alabama and Tuscaloosa surfaces at Tuscaloosa Alabama. If you drive up I-20 toward Tuscaloosa first you will see a white formation, boulders on the side of the highway, before you get to Eutaw. That is the Austin/Selma Chalk. Now if you draw an arc on a map that connects Austin Texas and Selma Alabama then you see that this arc follows the curve of the Gulf of Mexico. So at one time all of these strata were under water in the Gulf and came to the surface of the earth at these locations. As over burden (sediment) buried each of these strata they formed, collected and trapped oil and gas. That is what we now see in the drilling and exploration in this area. There are other forces and geology at work here but this is the short version. I have followed and studied this for 35+ years and I'm here for the information that you state in the last part of your post. The knowledge of who is making a move in the area, what they are offering and where they are offering it is of GREAT interest to me. The Chalk will be the play of the century in onshore oil exploration and production in the US. That is, if the industry can learn how to drill, complete and produce it without damaging the formation. Its much easier to drill through Chalk on the way to Tuscaloosa than to drill in it for production. I hope this answers some of your questions. And thanks for the info about the leasing activity.
Thanks for the explanation. I always wondered how they were named...very interesting.
Received another phone call today from a fellow landowner who said he was in touch with two other brokers who wanted to move in. The clerk's office in the courthouse in Avoyelles has been busier than usual with land men, but nothing like the courthouses in desoto or caddo.
The firm that offered 200 an acre is a smaller company out of OK, and said they drill themselves, as they are not a broker.
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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