CLR, Investor and Analyst Day, September, 2014
The Presentation Is At This Site
Related Posts:
Slides 13 - 17: The Lower Three Forks
Slides 20 - 21: Updated Bakken OOIP
Slides 25 - 34: Update on Density Pilot Projects
Slide 27: what explains the Hawkinson phenomenon?
Slides 41 - 44: Enhanced completion testing
Zeits: first look at the presentation
Zeits: How long will the Bakken last?
The 2013 USGS Survey
The Rolfstad Presentation, 2013: a pdf
The Bentek Study, 2012
The Presentation Is At This Site
Related Posts:
Slides 13 - 17: The Lower Three Forks
Slides 20 - 21: Updated Bakken OOIP
Slides 25 - 34: Update on Density Pilot Projects
Slide 27: what explains the Hawkinson phenomenon?
Slides 41 - 44: Enhanced completion testing
Zeits: first look at the presentation
Zeits: How long will the Bakken last?
The 2013 USGS Survey
The Rolfstad Presentation, 2013: a pdf
The Bentek Study, 2012
Slide 5: CLR's Bakken and SCOOP
- SCOOP: 655K boe; 57% oil; 30% ror
- Bakken: 603K boe; 85% oil; 45% ror
- ror based on $90 oil / $4 gas
Slide 8: recovery factor has increased with density drilling
- recovery factor of ~ 15%
- evidence from Hawkinson simulation suggests as high as 20%+
- 62 - 96 billion barrel of oil (note oil, not "boe")
- enhanced completions: ~ 25% uplift in production
- potential EUR uplift
The "new" CLR estimates puts the Bakken back on par with (or better than) the Permian. Obviously if accurate, the Eagle Ford will also have to be "re-calculated."
Don did the math:
- 96 billion bbls of recoverable oil / 1 million bbls/day = 96,000 days
- 96,000 days / 365 days = 263 years but at 2 million bbls/day (Bentek), only 130 years of drilling
Somewhere some data points are missing.
Again, see "welcome/disclaimer" with regard to the "tenor"of the blog (general quality of the blog). I have no formal background or training in oil and gas industry. Do not make any financial/investment decisions based on anything you read at this site or think you may have read at this site.
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The Energizer Bunny
200 years of production from the Bakken? Some may scoff, but just a few years ago the Permian was considered an old, dying field. From wiki: The first production well, Seabird Oil Company of Delaware No. 1-B J.C. Caldwelll in 1948. 1948? That was almost 70 years ago, and now it is obvious the Permian is going to go another 7 decades.
Today, from The San Antonio Business Journal:
The study also found that the Permian Basin, which extends south of Lubbock to just south of Midland and Odessa and westward into New Mexico, had the largest rig count of any region in the world. The region sustains more than 546,000 jobs.
Just to be clear on the 62-90. The 62 is their 50% estimate (base case). 90 is the highside (10% chance). They did not list their downside. I would just base everything off of 62. That's dramatic enough.
ReplyDeleteYou are absolutely correct.
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