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Friday, January 29, 2010

Areas of High Density

With Eco-Pads, in-fills, multiple wells/pad, dual laterals, etc., "we" are now moving from 640-acre (one section) and 1280-acre (two section) spacing in the Bakken in North Dakota. Many wells are now being placed on the same pad, or on abutting pads, etc., and it will be interesting to follow the IPs of wells put close to each other.

This page will be linked from the "wells to watch" page.

The Sanish

6-153-91 --> 1-153-92Whiting: six wells, north-south line; 1.4 miles -- six wells
17603, long lateral
18297
18399
17133, long lateral
18392
Sections 21, 22, 27, 28, 33, 34-154-91
17080
18507
18244
17612
18530
18559
18213
17092
17872
18298
Parshall

Sections 3, 11, 12 - 153-91 --> sections 7, 8 - 153-90
17907, WLL,
17023, WLL, 2,669, section 11  (I assume a Middle Bakken well)
17605, WLL, 933, Braaflat 21-11TFH (TF = Three Forks Sanish)
17794, WLL, 2,054, Littlefield 11-12H
18635, WLL, xxxx, Littlefield 21-12H, confidential
17391, WLL, 2,400, Littlefield 11-7H
18549, WLL, xxxx, Littlefield 21-7H, confidential
18171, EOG, xxxx, Lucille 22-06H, producing
17127, EOG, 1,714, Wayzetta 11-08H
Discussion:

17023/17605: both in section 11, running parallel to each other; lateral separation 850 feet; I assume they are in different formations, so their vertical separation could be much less since the Middle Bakken and the Three Forks Sanish are within a couple hundred of feet of each other. I would not consider these "dual laterals" that CLR has talked about; CLR opines that "dual laterals" could increase the EUR of a well by another 400,000 barrels.


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