- 18012, 3,304, Newfield, Sand Creek Federal 1-23H, Keene, Three Forks; tested 2/11; 26,777 bbls in first 15 days
For various reasons, the company will report a 24-hour flowback that is often as much as three times (3X) that of the "official" (NDIC) initial production (IP) number.
If the 24-hour flowback is extremely high and the IP much lower, it suggests the flowback was obtained with a "wide-open" choke to see what the maximum flow rate "could" be.
On the other hand, the NDIC requires that the IP be what would be produced under "normal production" parameters.
In a recent case, a Fidelity well's 24-hour flowback was reported at over 1,300 boe, which was pretty exciting for a Fidelity well. Unfortunately, the "official" (NDIC) IP was less than 800 boe. That is still a great well (based on IP) but certainly not a standout -- although it was a Three Forks well in a relatively new area.
Now, back to this Newfield well. I did not see any press release from Newfield regarding this well, and we don't know what the 24-hour flowback would have been. But the "official" (NDIC) report shows it to be over 3,304 bbls of oil, and that does not include natural gas which would have increased the boepd. From the NDIC daily activity report:
- #18012 – NEWFIELD PROD., SAND CREEK FEDERAL 1-23H, SWSE 23-153N-96W, MCKENZIE CO -- 3304 bopd, 922 bwpd - Bakken/Three Forks
All things being equal, I trust NDIC numbers more than those from a press release.
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