Not that I have heard of, Alicia. There was a state auction tract just to the south on the Sabine-Vernon line recently but it did not draw any bids. Further south into Vernon there are sporadic reports of leasing and there have been some tracts in monthly auctions that have received successful bids. The last time I checked the Zap Minerals well it was still a temporary plug & abandon. In southern Vernon there is a fair amount of development activity that is in the Wilcox zones.
Hello, ShaleGeo, my wife and I have a small lease interest in the #1 ZAP Minerals well near Hornbeck. I have been trying to get an answer regarding the current status of that rig. You say your group decided not to take the well horizontal. Can you elaborate on your statement as to why that decision was made and do you think there will be a time in the near future that the wellsite might be revisited as activity grows around that area? Or do you think it has been permanently abandoned?
Unless Jay drilled that one too, we will need a location by section-township-range or the well name and operator. I keep my boat at Pirate's so I know where Kites is located. A little help with additional information would certainly save me some time and help get you an accurate reply.
Alicia, there is a section. A township. And a range. All are required to complete a location description. It would be written something like this: S14 -4N - 12W. Kites is located in Township 4N - Range 12W. Regardless of the correct section number, there are no producing wells in the township. The few wells listed are all dry and plugged or plugged and abandoned.
ShaleGeo, thanks for your information. Have one more question if you don't mind. In one of the first log reports coming from the ZAP well, was that there was a presence of hydrocarbons. In your opinion, what factors would bring a driller back to the hole and justify drilling a profitable horizontal frac?
An Austin Chalk horizontal well is a complete crapshoot. The rock varies so much in hydrocarbon content as to be totally unpredictable without drilling horizontal. You are lucky to hit a single fracture vertically. Hit in between fractures and you have virtual dry hole. Until you drill horizontal. You can still have a dry hole or a poor producer. Or a motherlode. You just never know. It's risky business. But at the right prices, the chalk is doable since the good wells can payout in three to nine months before they start falling off.
cs,
Its all dependent on faulting. If you have major faulting then you can have as you put it the "motherload". Its seems that there is good faulting along the shelf as the formation "broke" over the Continental shelf. In other areas you have synclines and anticlines that form a fracture system. Those fractures can hold a lot of oil in Austin Chalk and be very productive with both a vertical or horz. well. I think that is what they are looking at in MS with the current drilling.
Unfortunately for the Austin Chalk in West LA, the wells produce a horrendous amount of brine to get rid of. If all that salt water was hydrocarbons, it would be one of the better plays around. As they say, "bummer, dude".
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…
ContinuePosted by Keith Mauck (Site Publisher) on November 20, 2024 at 12:40
386 members
27 members
455 members
440 members
400 members
244 members
149 members
358 members
63 members
119 members
© 2024 Created by Keith Mauck (Site Publisher). Powered by
h2 | h2 | h2 |
---|---|---|
AboutAs exciting as this is, we know that we have a responsibility to do this thing correctly. After all, we want the farm to remain a place where the family can gather for another 80 years and beyond. This site was born out of these desires. Before we started this site, googling "shale' brought up little information. Certainly nothing that was useful as we negotiated a lease. Read More |
Links |
Copyright © 2017 GoHaynesvilleShale.com