Thursday, May 22, 2014

Random Look At The EN-Freda And EN-Leo Wells In Alkali Creek

Updates

May 15, 2019: production data has been updated.

September 14, 2016: production data has been updated in all entries below. Several EN-Leo wells have been added. In addition, a screenshot of what the area looks like now:



November 30, 2015: add six more EN-Freda wells:
  • 32320, 583, EN-Freda-154-94-2635H-8, t9/16; cum 114K 3/19;
  • 32321, 1,026, EN-Freda-154-94-2635H-9, t9/16; cum 269K 3/19;
  • 32322, 1,638, EN-Freda-154-94-2635H-10, t9/16; cum 219K 3/19;
  • 32323, 938, EN-Freda-154-94-2635H-11, Alkali Creek, t9/16; cum 203K 3/19;
  • 32324, 1,324, EN-Freda-154-94-2635H-12, t9/16; cum 257K 3/19;
  • 32325, AB/67 (no typo), EN-Freda-LW-154-94-2635H-1, t9/16; cum 5K 7/17;

July 26, 2015: in the original post the IPs and the cumulative productions have been update for these two 5-well pads. Notice that one of them was taken off line 5/15 (# 25462); a sundry form about this time suggested that Hess was putting an NGL stripping unit on the pad; whether that has anything to do with taking the well off-line, I don't know)

September 22, 2014: a reader provided this update:
In your comments on Vern Whitten's recent photos, you noted on slide 18 of the "Bakken Sights and Progress" series, "42 tanks; 5 donkeys; one small rig; one large rig -- all on one pad."

This is the 12-well Hess pad in NWNW 26-154-94 from which Hess is drilling the EN-Freda wells and three EN-Leo wells.  On May 22, 2014,  you posted a "Random Look At The Freda Wells in Alkali Creek" piece; this an August 9 photo of the pad and wells you discussed.

Since your posting Hess completed the EN-Leo H-2 and H-3 wells on this pad in May:
  • 26841, 1,080, EN-Leo 154-94-2324H-2, 36 stages, 3.5 million lbs, t6/14; cum 292K 3/19;
  • 26842, 1,108, EN-Leo 154-94-2324H-3, t5/14; cum 268K 3/19; off-line for much of May - July, 2016;
In the photo, the five donkeys from left to right are the EN-Leo H-1, EN-Freda H-1 and H-2 wells, which all began producing the end of last year; followed by the EN-Leo H-3 and H-2 which were completed this May.  Since your posting Hess has also almost finished drilling the string of EN-Freda H-3 through H-7 wells; these five well are sited north to south.  I would expect this third batch of wells to be completed the next two - three months.

The large rig on the pad is the Nabors B5, which was drilling the EN-Freda H-5 well when the photo was taken August 9.
An update of the area, screenshot taken September 22, 2014:





Original Post

For background, re-visit an earlier post, March 18, 2014. The reader who sent me this note (the full note is at the link) noted the fast pace of drilling in the Bakken, or more correctly, the rapid increase in well density. I think that's one of the hallmarks of the Bakken, perhaps something not seen before in the oil industry, how fast things moved along, especially when one considers how "new" unconventional / tight oil drilling was when this all began. There really is a sense of urgency in the Bakken. The reader's note:
Last April Hess made plans for a 12-well pad in NWNW 26-154-94.  They planned to drill three EN-Leo wells in sections 23-24 and nine EN-Freda wells in sections 26-35 from this pad. (Supporting documentation was provided.)
Hess obtained three permits and completed the 25462, EN-Leo H-1 well November 14, cum 53K 1/14; the 25463, EN-Freda H-1 well November 24, cum 78K 1/14; and the 25464, EN-Freda H-2 well December 6, cum 57K 1/14. The EN-Freda H-1 is a Three Forks well, the other two are Middle Bakken wells.
Since then Hess completed drilling the 26841, EN-Leo H-2 well from this pad, and has almost finished drilling the 26842, EN-Leo H-3.  On February 12 Hess got permits to drill four more EN-Leo wells, 27671-74, from a new pad in NENE 24-154-94. 
So, how are the EN-Freda and EN-Leo wells coming along?
  • 31718, 2,443, EN-Leo E-154-94-2423H-10, Alkali Creek, t12/17; cum 87K 3/19;
  • 31717, 1,393, EN-Leo E-154-94-2423H-11, Alkali Creek, t6/15; cum 328K 3/19; a huge well;
  • 27674, 1,393, EN-Leo E-154-94-2423H-4, 35 stages, 2.4 million lbs; t6/15; cum 230K 3/19;
  • 27673, 1,040, EN-Leo E-154-94-2423H-5, t6/15; cum 171K 3/19;
  • 27672, 1,176, EN-Leo E-154-94-2423H-6, t6/15; cum 231K 3/19;
  • 27671, 1,062, EN-Leo E-154-94-2423H-7, t6/15; cum 197K 3/19;
  • 31422, 1,894, EN-Leo E-154-94-2423H-8, t12/17; cum 160K 3/19;
  • 31421, 2,153, EN-Leo E-154-94-2423H-9, Alkali Creek, t12/17; cum 246K 3/19;
  • 25462, 1,155, EN-Leo 154-94-2324H-1, 34 stages, 2.3 million lbs sand, t11/13; cum 205K 3/19; (sited in same quadrant as the Freda wells); taken off line 5/15;
  • 25463, 1,542, EN-Freda 154-94-2635H-1, t12/13; cum 386K 3/19;
  • 25464, 1,288, EN-Freda 154-94-2635H-2, 34 stages; 2.4 million lbs, all sand; middle Bakken, background gas averaged 678 units, peaking at 1,498 (relatively low, according to the geologist writing the reort); t12/13; cum 256K 3/19;
  • 26842, 1,108, EN-Leo-154-94-2324H-3, t5/14; cum 268K 3/19;
  • 26841, 1,080, EN-Leo-154-94-2324H-2, t6/14; cum 292K 3/19;
  • 28324, 1,414, EN-Freda 154-94-2635H-3, t2/15; cum 347K 3/19;
  • 28325, 1,273, EN-Freda 154-94-2635H-4, t2/15; cum 232K 3/19;
  • 28326, 1,587, EN-Freda 154-94-2635H-5, t1/15; cum 301K 3/19;
  • 28327, 1,442, EN-Freda 154-94-2635H-6, t1/15; cum 230K 3/19;
  • 28328, 1,368, EN-Freda 154-94-2635H-7, t1/15; cum 294K 3/19;
The first EN-Freda well has produced almost 110,000 bbls of oil in less than five months.

************************************

25463:

PoolDateDaysBBLS OilRunsBBLS WaterMCF ProdMCF SoldVent/Flare
BAKKEN3-2014261359213543276416515255513960
BAKKEN2-2014271599216007193619768150304738
BAKKEN1-2014312169121780481726709226884021
BAKKEN12-20133140612404179521612994589315406
BAKKEN11-20137157361525663331552314705818

Look how incredibly active this little area is. The distance between the two wells farthest apart is 0.22 miles, less than 1,200 feet. Note also the four permitted sites in the far upper left hand corner:



*****************************************
A Note to the Granddaughters
Sunset Blvd. and Mulholland Drive

I'm in my "Sunset Blvd." phase. I've watched it each night for the past several nights, and with the special edition DVD, all the special features. Tonight, while watching it for the fourth time, it dawned on me -- the "aha" moment. David Lynch's "Mulholland Drive" was the "modern" version or a "remake" of "Sunset Blvd."

Both movies have the same theme.

But the "aha" moment came during one of the special features when the narrator mentioned Nancy Olson playing the part of Betty.

Betty! That was the name of a very important / peculiar character in "Mulholland Drive" And that led to googling: "Is 'Mulholland Dr.' based on 'Sunset Drive'?" The very first hit: Sunset Blvd. Connection -- Lost on Mulholland Drive.

Fantastic!

******************

July 19, 2015: I'm watching "Mulholland Drive" again and making some free associations. Then it hit. Remember, David Lynch is known for taking a single idea and running with it. Camilla is an unusual name for a character in any movie (quick: name another movie in which "Camilla" is a lead character).

Now, pair Camilla with Diane.

The movie opens with a horrendous car crash, though of course, Camilla walks away.

"Mulholland Drive was released in 2001. Obviously the idea and writing had to occur some years earlier

Princess Di was killed in a horrendous car crash in 1997. She did not walk away but her legend certainly lives on. [In Mulholland Drive, Diane kills herself at the end of the movie.]

Most reviewers agree that one of the two women (Camilla/Diane) is very afraid of failure and sees herself in the other woman.

The number one celebrity story for the years following Di's death was the Princess Di story, including the issue of whether she was the victim of a "hit man" (who orchestrated the car crash in Paris).

A bit of trivia: quick, who played the character of Princess Di in the movie Diana, released in 2013?

Yup: Naomi Watts.

Naomi Watts played "Betty/Diane" in Mulholland Drive.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.