I have not seen this many wells permitted at once for any other section.( Not that I could not have missed it.)  This looks like good news for someone.  Is this unusual, or just a sign of whats to come?

Views: 148

Replies to This Discussion

What is the difference between an alternative use well and a regular haynesville well?  I received notice of a public hearing to use an alternative use well in 16N 06w 008.

EXCO, EOG and QEP have been permitting and drilling multiple alternate unit wells for almost a year.  Now EnCana and SWEPI are following suit.  Step out drilling in slowly drawing to a close and production drilling is insuing.  Alternate unit wells are the wells that follow the initial well which is referred to as the Unit Well.

Skip-

Is 8 still the maximum number of HA wells a section can have? Is it possible to have more if they are drilled into another formation?
Keep in mind that a unit may be larger than a section however all Haynesville wells will have 80 acre spacing requirements.  A section (640 acres) would have 8 wells on 80 acre spacing.  As an example, an 800 acre unit would have 10.  Spacing requirements vary depending on the formation being produced.  In areas where the Haynesville and Bossier shales are productive, there could be 8 of each in a 640 acre unit, 16 total.

RSS

Support GoHaynesvilleShale.com

Not a member? Get our email.

Groups



© 2024   Created by Keith Mauck (Site Publisher).   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service