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Sunday, October 7, 2012

Random Update of CLR's Development of the Three Forks Formation in The Killdeer Area: Provided By a Reader; Did Stimulating a New Well Increase Production at a Neighboring Well?

A reader sent the following information in as a comment. Some folks don't read the comments, but this is an excellent piece of work and needs broader reader exposure, so I am re-posting it here.

One of the reasons it has been difficult to follow development of the Three Forks is because the names of the well may not indicate it is a Three Forks well, though that seems to be changing. (Whiting does a great job with the "TF" and "PH" designation, for example.) The next challenge will be identifying 2nd, 3rd, and 4th benches of the Three Forks. I don't know if CLR's goal to re-define the stratigraphic limits of the Bakken Pool will get to that degree of granularity; if it did, the information might show up in the file reports. Otherwise, our only recourse may be the corporate presentations. 

The following: Continental's effort to develop the TF in the Killdeer area. From west of Killdeer (Roadrunner) to the North Killdeer Mountains a swath about 4 or 5 miles wide the reader found 26 wells producing from the TF.


Continental Three Forks Well Production Through August 2012
From west of Killdeer to North Killdeer Mountains

File Number -- Name -- IP (bbls oil) -- Production Completion Date
  • 16943 Bice 1-29H 516 121,257 5/9/2008
  • 17153 Skachenko 1-31H 456 111,800 11/20/2008
  • 17201 Mittlestadt 1-20H 956 165,118 11/2/2008
  • 17211 Gale 1-32H 240 91,431 8/16/2008
  • 17372 Dolezal 1-5H 426 95,762 8/27/2009
  • 17398 Kukla 1-21H 603 247,500 5/18/2009
  • 18351 Clover 1-3H 1,125 201,168 2/9/2010
  • 17530 Hartman 1-28H 780 157,777 8/11/2010
  • 18636 Bang 2-33T 633 106,078 4/26/2010
  • 18796 Roadrunner 1-15H 761 155,030 8/13/2010
  • 18859 Carson Peak 3-35H 680 274,945 4/10/2011
  • 18860 Morris 2-26H 517 127,687 4/7/2011
  • 19012 Bonneville 2-23H 365 82,290 12/5/2010
  • 19013 Bridger 2-14H 399 97,680 12/4/2010
  • 19020 Meadowlark 3-6H 744 60,921 4/24/2011
  • 19023 Skachenko 2-31H 726 76,845 4/24/2011
  • 19156 Brandvik 2-25H 282 162,272 10/1/2010
  • 19968 Pletan 2-18H 757 107,378 7/18/2011
  • 20208 Hawkinson 2-27H 960 166,619 9/7/2011
  • 20212 Whitman 3-34H 482 64,165 9/6/2011
  • 20547 Kukla 2-16H 744 45,108 3/8/2012
  • 20548 Candee 2-29H 356 55,313 3/28/2012
  • 20806 Dvirnak 2-7H 744 85,606 11/21/2011
  • 20809 Pletan 4-18H 1,294 65,939 11/18/2011
  • 21583 Roadrunner 3-15H 1,087 20,140 6/26/2012
  • 21584 Clover 3-10H 1,081 39,139 6/26/2012
Total: 2,984,970 bbls.

Just short of 3 million barrels.

On a side note go to the Mittlestat 1-20H (17201) well file and you can see that for 7 months prior to June the well did not exceed 2,000 barrels per month. 30 days in June 1,771. Then,  wow: 31 days in July 12,548; then 31 days in August 6,997.

No indication of any down time for clean out or refrac therefore the only thing it appears to me going on the area was the completion of the (21569) Mittlestat 2-20H which comes off confidential this week. Somehow the frac job from the second well must have stimulated the first well. Without plugging it from migrating sand.

I am now curious to see if the second well might be a lower bench TF well. Across the gravel road to the south is the Bice 1-29H and the 2-29H. The second Bice well was drilled into the MB and maybe had some impact on production from the first but I don't think very much, not 6- or 7-fold. It was shut down during the completion and frac of Bice 2 to do some testing for communication between formations.

2 comments:

  1. I took a look at the well file for #21584. Nearly 30,00 barrels production in August alone!!! That's an incredible number!!

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    Replies
    1. You are correct; some of these wells are incredible. Also, some of these wells do not have a horrendous decline that is generally so typical.

      It was very nice that someone took the time to sort out the TF wells in the Killdeer area and then shared their results.

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