by Richard Zeits
The key argument often used by natural gas bulls is that the dramatic reduction in rig counts in the dry gas producing shales will translate into a rapid drop off in supply and lead to the price recovery toward the $5 level, and possibly higher. The Haynesville shale, where the rig count has declined from the peak of over 180 rigs two years ago to approximately 27 currently, is often presented as the most compelling evidence supporting that argument.
The view has been advocated by several prominent industry CEOs, including Chesapeake's Aubrey McClendon and Ultra Petroleum's (UPL) Michael Woodford. During Ultra's 2Q earnings conference call on August 2, Michael Woodford re-iterated his macro perspective on natural gas: "Capital is being withdrawn from natural gas investment as seen in the rig count reduction and pressure pumping softness. Production lags capital expenditures and the decline in production is imminent. We see $4 gas in 2013 and $5 gas in 2014." With regard to Haynesville specifically, he commented: "We have a view that says: production supply is about to shrink pretty rapidly. I think there are some comments out yesterday, with some companies that announced and talked about the Haynesville, that they would see a 10% per quarter reduction in their production. I think it is plus or minus 40% for the year. If you apply that to the 6 Bcf per day of Haynesville production, it is 2.5 Bcf per day of annual rate reduction, so I think we are about to see a drop off in supply." Michael Woodford was referring to the earnings call remarks by QEP Resources (QEP) the night before.
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I'm not privy to the specific times by specific operators, but at this point, if not an ultra long lateral (7000'+) or in the highest pressure, deepest rock, rig up, drill and rig down can be done in about 33 days
The 255 wells are Waiting On Completion which means they have been drilled but have not been fraced. It's impossible to know or IMO even predict how soon each will be fraced and turned to sales. There will probably always be some wells in this category owing to the vagaries of scheduling and availability of frac crews. As most of the drilling rigs have moved to other plays so to I suspect have the bulk of the frac crew fleet.
How many wells have been drilled in the Haynesville/Bossier Shale? How many units have been formed and drilled? Estimates are fine :)
I think you will find your well answers here, ALongview. I'd have to count the units off one of my spreadsheets. I'll try to do that a little later when I have more time.
http://dnr.louisiana.gov/assets/OC/haynesville_shale/haynesville_mo...
LA HA Units (by my count): 2315
2007: 28
2008: 590
2009: 1128
2010: 513
2011: 53
2012: 3
The well was Waiting On Completion at the 10/25/10 report date. The well was in Completion Operations at the 11/29/2010 report date but not fraced until 2/28 through 3/7/2011. Some times a well file entry will state "turned to sales" to indicate flowing into a pipeline but reporting regs are general. The well can not be reported complete until after the state potential test that is the official Initial Production (IP) data and that report date was 5/5/2011. The first month's production (partial month) was for March 2011 as indicated in the well file. It wasn't 1.5 years from official completion report to first reported production, it was less than 2 months.
Look at the bottom of this section: LEASE\UNIT\WELL PRODUCTION
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