Hi Charles,
We spoke to a person in the Owners Relation Office for Sanchez Oil and Gas in Houston.
So you are saying a lot of acreage is going to come open. What will that do for the lease price? I would assume that it will remain low or will it move more to the $400 to $1000 an acre that Kirk was forecasting before the drop? Are any majors interested in the TMS? That is what really got the Eagleford prices going.
I think you'll hear the term, "high grading" a lot by the current TMS operators in the near future as leases expire. If any major or mid-major companies have interest in the TMS they could acquire Halcon or Goodrich. I imagine that Encana would be willing to consider a sale. The problem is lack of well control over much of the suspected play area and the amount of acreage that will become available in prospective areas.
Besides variance in rock quality across the play area there remains the looming specter of well cost. I haven't found evidence to support any of the statements about well costs approaching the $10 to $12 million range. The average for the twenty or so wells I can find costs on is ~ $18,275,000.00. Although the cost to drill and complete any horizontal well has come down as drilling declines with the drop in crude prices, those costs will go right back up as the price improves and more rigs go back into the fields. The TMS probably needs a combination of well costs below $12 million and crude prices above $85. That could make development wells sufficiently profitable to cover the near break even costs of drilling lease capture wells.
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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