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This is an excerpt from an Aug. '08 Chesapeake release, I haven't found any more recent statements regarding the percentage of GIP that is considered recoverable from the Haynesville Shale in NW. LA.
From that gas in place, we estimate that we will recover about 52bcf per square mile through the drilling of 8 wells per sqare mile. This would result in per well avg recoveries of about 29% of the gas in place,
Skip, was this based on fractured vertical completions which I suspect based on the number of wells per section?
I appreciate you posting Chesapeake's Data indicating their estimated recovery to be obtained via Louisiana well spacing and their reservoir management approach. I will try and file these numbers away for future reference, as having worked in the North Louisiana Haynesville Shale, it always sparks my attention.
However; I am not comfortable using the 'best guesses' from one company in one play as a means of estimating the amount of producible reserves obtainable from a different company/drilling approach, in a play that has many unique aspects. Chesapeake has absolutely know way of knowing what the ultimate recovery percentage of their North Louisiana Haynesville Shale will be. Exploiting gas shales via synthetic fractures is still in its infancy. It would be rather arrogant to think that one could predict how these wells will respond to time, depletion, or changes in saturations. The fractures may not even exist 15 years down the road.
Thanks, Skip, I thought about that 80 acre spacing after my time to edit had passed. Still would rather get the average 6.5 B out of a vertical rather than having to do the laterals. But you do what you gotta to get the gas!
The biggest asset the Burke-Phillips has is the natural fracture system. Under high pressure, that should add reasonably to the recoverability, not to mention the added storage for the OGIP. However, the ultimate recovery will be impacted by decrease in fracture space and connectivity as the pressure declines during production. Wells that are artificially fractured in place of a natural system do not have the added storage "space" that natural fractures provide. Artificial fractures are filled as frac fluid is withdrawn by the hydrocarbons being released across the "new" fracture faces. After that initial flush, most of the wells experience a rapid decline in pressure and production. They may then produce for years at a low rate. Those wells fortunate enough to be frac'd into low porosity stringers and natural fracture systems will perform better for a longer period of time. I do hope they frac the vertical in the Burke-Phillips as that will at least, within the frac radius, provide added fractures with propant to help hold open the fractures as pressure declines and hopefully allow for better overall drainage.
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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