- 18602, 207, Hess, RS-Nelson Farms, Ross, Bakken, one of six on a multi-well pad
- 18200, DRL, Fidelity, Kinnoin 24-13H, Sanish, Bakken
- 18682, 665, Hunt, Cook 24-13H 1, Werner, Bakken
- 18940, 1,488, Oasis, Andre 5501 13-4H, Missouri Ridge, Bakken
- 17743, 533, Petro-Hunt, Focht 3D-4-1H, Nameless, Bakken
- 18870, 1,042, Slawson, Moray Federal 1-10H, Van Hook, Bakken
- 19031, 1,773, BEXP, Boots 13-24 1-H, Painted Woods, Bakken
- 19000, 1,048, Slawson, Goblin 1-26H, Van Hook, Bakken
- 18935, DRL, CLR, Glasoe 3-19H, Dolphin, Bakken
- 18936, DRL, CLR, Raymo 1-30H, Dolphin, Bakken
- 19013, DRL, CLR, Bridger 2-14H, Rattlesnake Point, Bakken
- 18995, 889, Oasis, Manhattan 5792 11-2H, Cottonwood, Bakken
- 18934, NoData, CLR, Raymo 2-30H, Dolphin
This tells me that more and more companies are a) holding leases by production, and able to move elsewhere; and, b) eager to see what else they might hold.
With so much work to do, they also need to get wells drilled to hold their leases. To some extent, much of this is a race against time. And, of course, the producer needs to balance moving a rig a long distance (time and money to hold another lease by production) or stay in the same area (less time and less money) but no advantage, since the lease is already held by production.
There are "no" dry wells in the Bakken. Some may not seem to be profitable (economic) and indeed they may not, but it's not over until the re-fracking crews come in, other formations are considered, etc. I don't have time to look for it now, but I do recall one well with a lousy IP, only to see a much improved production run when sold to a new producer and the well re-worked. There is a lot more to this than just the first production numbers.
oh - oh
ReplyDeleteI got there four minutes late, but class was delayed by five minutes; one minute to spare.
ReplyDeleteIn about an hour I will be back to posting today's events. I see oil held over $88 today.
Good luck to all. Thank you for your patience.