Updates
November 16, 2022: Williams, Sempra partner in the Haynesville.
April 19, 2019: Haynesville sets natural gas production record.
February 11, 2019: huge, huge update here. Short blurb at that link but another link there will take me to archive (password required).
October 18, 2017: roaring back to life -- the WSJ.
May 16, 2017: Haynesville experiencing a resurgence as takeaway is bottled up in the northeast.
Later, 7:38 a.m. Central Time: USGS, one word: wow. My understanding is reserves are based on current technology (definitely) and current pricing (?). Here's the assessment, data points:
the assessment included two formations:
- Bossier Formation: along the coast, stretching from Texas-Mexico border to Louisiana-Mississippi state line, from the coast ot about 150 miles inland
- Haynesville Formation: inland in Texas; along the southern coast of Louisiana, extending up about a third of the state, and extending well into Mississippi, Alabama, and even a bit of the Florida panhandle (where we will never see drilling)
- last assessment, 2010, Jurassic and Cretaceous rocks of the Gulf Coast
- Bossier: 9 tcf
- Haynesville: 61 tcf
- new assessment, 2017, released last week
- "amazing what a little more knowledge can yield"
- updated geologic maps
- expanded production history
- greater understanding
- (by the way, one dedicated reader tells me the same thing is happening in the Utica and that USGS has not yet updated how fast things are moving in that formation)
- long known that the two formations contain oil and gas ,but it wasn't until 2008 that production of the continuous resources really got underway
- 2017 assessment:
- Bossier:
- natural gas assessment ranges from 37 tcf to 224 tcf; the mean - 109 tcf;
- oil assessment ranges from 1 billion to 5 billion bbls; the mean - 3 billion bbls;
- natural gas liquids assessment ranges from 424 million bbls to 2 billion bbls; the mean -- 1 billion bbls
- Haynesville:
- natural gas assessment ranges from 96 tcf to 341 tcf; the mean - 196 tcf;
- oil assessment ranges from 286 million to 2.5 billion bbls; the mean - 1 billion bbls;
- natural gas liquids assessment ranges from 304 million bbls to 1.7 billion bbls; the mean -- 1 billion bbls
- the Barnett; the Barnett -- twice as large as originally expected;
- total US
- another post on total US
- Marcellus and Utica, defying experts, October, 2016 ; the Utica;
- the Bakken: 6.7 tcf natural gas and NGLs
- European numbers, 2016
Original Post
RBN Energy: update on Haynesville natural gas shale play. Data points:
- straddles the northeast Texas-Louisiana border; back in the news
- 9,000 square miles of surface area -- extends up to southwest Arkansas
- reserves: 75 trillion cubic feet BUT last Thursday, USGS upped the reserve estimates:
- 304 tcf of natural gas; 1.9 billion bbls of crude oil -- recovery rate unknown
- rig counts have doubled in the past six months
- rig counts up more than 200% in last 12 months
- concentrated in two counties: De Soto Parish, LA; and, San Augustine County, TX
- Exco Resources: divesting Eagle Ford assets to concentrate on Haynesville
- "perpetual has-been status"? not likely
- natural gas at $3
- improving technologies
- LNG export demand ramping up
- location, location, location
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