Do I also see San Augustine County in the green spot?
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Dorothy,
I'm not sure I understand what you are asking. If you will make clear what you want to know I am sure that someone will try to give you an answer.
jf
I'm thinking that Dorothy is referring to the "blob" map contained in Keith's discussion.
http://www.gohaynesvilleshale.com/forum/topics/haynesville-shale-pa...
I believe the word you need is "sweet" spot.
I see. If that is what she is talking about... the answer is yes... for a large part of the county. It won't be true for the entire county, though, because there is a southern 'edge' already somewhat defined.
Can someone pop up a map of this so called sweet spot and which part of San Augustine we are talking about? (including the southern part jffree1 spoke of) Also where exactly is the pipeline and show that on a map.. forgive me I have not been around for a long time and would like to catch up.. Thanks! :-)
Here is both PDF and PPT of the AOI (area of interest) slide with the "blob" area blown up on page 2 of each. Grainy to say the least but one can get the gist of the counties and pipelines.
Also added a PDF from DI that is centred on San Augustine County - red "veins" are gas pipelines.
Hope this helps
Yes Rock Man this helps, thank you! I had seen this looking at some other things but thought the area that looks like a sideways tooth had a sweet spot within it. I didn't realize you guys were talking about the entire area. cheers!
This is closer to what I was looking for to be exact. Hope this helps others looking closer into the SA area. :-)
You can add this map to your collection. It would fit in the white box on that EnCana map. The blue line is just a line drawn from the most southerly HA well in Sabine Co. to the most southerly HA well in San Augustine Co. I added the IP of a few wells so you can see how much they change as you move south.
There has been no drilling south of Hwy. 103 west of Zap Minerals #1H until you get west of Norwood where the bottom hole location of the BSI Unit A47 #1H is just south of the hwy. It had an IP of 16.750 MMcfd and is among the top five producers in East Texas (6.49 Bcf). There is a lot of open territory between Zap and A47 that is just not proved yet.
Also Jffree for what its worth the Zap total take was like only 1000' If my memory serves me.
It has grossed 380,372 mcf in about 3 1/2 years. Needless to say... all the mineral owners in that area were disappointed. But (always, right?) it was a very short lateral, ~2500' I think, and I've heard conflicting stories on what happened to the well. One says that they had mechanical issues and gave up. The other says EOG frac'd a stage or two and quit because it was pitiful. Discerning the truth, in this instance, is way beyond my meager abilities.
A little more on the Zap well.
Only stimulated 1328' of horizontal - plugged off the 2300+' beyond 17,078' for whatever reason.
97% production decline in first 12 months - don't think I have ever seen a well drop that fast. But starting point (almost 3.2 MMCF per day for first month) is pretty good for such a short stimulated section.
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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