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Huge Jump In Production After Neighboring Well Fracked -- CLR -- Elm Tree -- June 5, 2017

Updates

August 27, 2017: production updated. 

Original Post 

On February 17, 2017, I wrote:
I just checked FracFocus and yes, indeed, #30336 was fracked in January, 2017. Pretty cool.

Monthly Production Data for #30336 (updated since original post):
PoolDateDaysBBLS OilRunsBBLS WaterMCF ProdMCF SoldVent/Flare
BAKKEN8-2017301561515598115112677025832906
BAKKEN7-20173116241163461339726694253411330
BAKKEN6-20173020962209961600036023311364861
BAKKEN5-20173125314251101982937093338923174
BAKKEN4-2017181581915646136412143521217203
BAKKEN3-2017005050000
BAKKEN2-2017214709654336282502825
BAKKEN1-20170000000


What about the older, previously producing well, #18224 (API: 33-053-03040)? This is the production prior to #30336 being fracked and the production following that well being fracked:
  • 18224, 960, CLR, Hendrickson 1-36H, Elm Tree, t12/09; cum 705K 7/18;
Monthly Production Data (#18224):
PoolDateDaysBBLS OilRunsBBLS WaterMCF ProdMCF SoldVent/Flare
BAKKEN8-20173118525189421392628888250863567
BAKKEN7-20173112330121681338219280176501430
BAKKEN6-2017301693616845174952589524705950
BAKKEN5-201731221862233822567391032588512971
BAKKEN4-20172016275158402838122993162266611
BAKKEN3-20170000000
BAKKEN2-20170000000
BAKKEN1-20170000000
BAKKEN12-20160000000
BAKKEN11-201626413165200
BAKKEN10-201618227420442501971183842
BAKKEN9-201624217922102433522308569
BAKKEN8-2016313126327137346683733439
BAKKEN7-201631300126773174554399793
BAKKEN6-2016302975294331742123071679
BAKKEN5-2016313154333137349014226179


That's a huge production jump. Let's see if the well was re-fracked at the same time as #30366. FracFocus does not show any data that this well was re-fracked. In addition, there is no sundry form showing this well to have been re-fracked.

If, indeed, this well was not re-fracked, the jump in production is quite extraordinary after coming back on line. 

CLR's Anna Wells Have Been Fracked; Still On SI/NC Status; Should Have Results Soon -- June 5, 2017

The "previous note" below was posted April 25, 2017. In that note, I suggested that one should watch the status of #23279 -- when it comes off-line, that might suggest neighboring wells were about to be fracked.

Now, tonight, I notice that #23279 went off-line 12/16, and is now back on line as of April, 2017 (most recent data). It was on-line for 2 days in April, 2017, and produced 607 bbls of oil. The other wells (#30157, #30156, #30155, #30154, #32969, #32968, #32967, #32966) are still listed as SI/NC, but they all show one to three days of very minimal production, something I often see in wells that have just been fracked but not yet "brought up to speed" or tested.

That suggests the wells have been fracked. 

So, where else can we check? Yup. FracFocus. And there we have it. I only checked one well, but FracFocus shows that #30157 was indeed fracked (2/25/17 - 3/18/17). How cool is that?

Note to self: this is simply a random note posted as an update. This post will not be updated.

*******************
Previous Note Regarding CLR's Anna Well Pad In Last Chance Oil Field

Random update on some wells that a reader was interested in some months ago.

The "original note":
  • February 15, 2017: CLR's Anna well pad; a reader asked about them; all wells are SI/NC, but sundry form suggests CLR planned to complete them 1/17, but no evidence yet that is occurring. #30157, #30156, #30155, #30154, #32969, #32968, #32967, #32966. Watch for #23279 coming off-line -- that will be hint that wells are about to be fracked. [Update, #23279 came off-line 1/17.]
As noted above, #23279 is now off-line, suggesting that the CLR Anna well pad could soon be completed. Just a hunch.

Note to self: this is simply a random note posted as an update. This post will not be updated.

The Incredible Statoil Skarston Wells Have Been Updated -- June 5, 2017

About half of the Skarston wells that were taken off line 12/16 are back on-line; about half are still off-line. Incredible production continues for those back on-line.

Oops! We Did It Again! June 5, 2017

See this post of May 23, 2017 -- the Brits monitor terrorism but don't do much about it.

Now, both MI5 and Scotland Yard admit they "had" the London Bridge jihadist in their grasp but let him go.



Seven New Permits; 50 Active Rigs -- June 5, 2017

Active rigs:

$47.446/5/201706/05/201606/05/201506/05/201406/05/2013
Active Rigs502582194191

Seven new permits:
  • Operators: MRO (5), Lime Rock Resources (2)
  • Fields: Antelope (McKenzie), Reunion Bay (McKenzie), Stanley (Mountrail), Alger (Mountrail)
  • Comments: the five MRO permits are all in NWNW 30-152-93; the two Lime Rock permits are in Lot 1 18-155-91
Three permits renewed:
  • XTO: three Lawlar permits, McKenzie County

Why I Love To Blog -- Reason #45 -- June 5, 2017

Updates

Later, 7:56 p.m. Central Time: BusinessInsider has the same story. AAA premiums could surge as much as 30%.   

Original Post

This is really, really interesting. I happened to catch this "consideration" when reading an article on Tesla over at SeekingAlpha just a couple of days ago. A contributor to SeekingAlpha predicted this would happen, and here it is, from Jalopnik: AAA raises insurance rates on Tesla vehicles because repairs are so costly.
National insurer AAA said it’s raising rates for Tesla Model S and X vehicles, due to a high frequency of claims and costly repairs.
Tesla decried the move in near Trumpian-fashion as being based on an analysis that’s “not reflective of reality.” AAA based its analysis off data from the Highway Loss Data Institute, Automotive News reports, and said premiums for some Tesla vehicles could spike as much as 30 percent.
Other insurers, like State Farm and Geico, wouldn’t tell the publication if Tesla owners would see an increase in rates, but said that claims data is a significant factor in calculating a rate.
Ouch:
The issue appears to boil down to how the Institute analyzed the Model S and X. The News says the S is classified as a “large luxury vehicle,” placing it among the Volvo XC70, Audi A6 and BMW 5 series. The Institute says that the Model S and X were both involved in more than 40 percent more claims than the average vehicle in their class.
Tesla says this is bogus, and compares the S and X “to cars that are not remotely peers, including even a Volvo station wagon.”
Ouch. If the vehicles were compared to similar brands, Tesla claimed its crash data wouldn’t be nearly as high.
From the linked SeekingAlpha article above:
Insurance Problems:
Due to its quality problems and high repair costs, Tesla also has an insurance problem. We predict that Tesla cars will end up having some of the highest insurance costs. These costs drive up the cost of ownership and further drive down the desirability and resale value of older Tesla cars.
And then that article links to this SeekingAlpha article: Tesla May Face Negative Growth In 2017 As Insurance Troubles Mount And China EV Sales Suffer.

Over time, many (most?) SeekingAlpha articles are archived and require a subscription to access. 

EOG Update -- Part 3 -- Filloon -- June 5, 2017

Part 3: link at SeekingAlpha.

Summary 
  • EOG continues to use the latest technologies to improve well results, and its most recent Delaware producers are some of the best in the country
  • While Chevron has underperformed its peers with respect to production, Concho's results have been very good
  • EOG might have ruined the curve, so to speak, with its most recent wells outperforming but Concho looks to be an interesting investment going forward
  • Delaware well results seem to show its geology is better than Midland, and acreage valuations should grow at a faster pace than in the east
Whether EOG Resources s the Apple  of unconventional oil is a question pondered by IBD in a recent article. It continues to use the latest and greatest technologies, and set the pace for the competition.
EOG uses many technologies. It would be difficult to cover all of the known (and unknown) ways it increases production in one article, but we are covering EOG's production from this core area. This should better show how much upside other operators have, if it can duplicate results. The beauty of the unconventional oil industry is its ability to replicate and improve. Many have said these results have topped out. This has been the case for years, and those have only been proven wrong.
This post appeared on the very day that EOG reported some incredible wells with high-intensity fracks in the Bakken

Active Rigs Remain Stable At 50 In North Dakota -- June 5, 2017

Active rigs:

$47.106/5/201706/05/201606/05/201506/05/201406/05/2013
Active Rigs502582194191

RBN Energy: growing opportunities for distributing US refined products in Mexico. For those "tracking" the US energy revolution and how it will play out in Mexico, this is a great article. Archived.

Note: Tesoro will change its name to Andeavor on August 1, 2017.

Five High-Intensity Fracks Reported Over The Weekend -- A Reader Suspected This -- June 5, 2017

I will come back to this later when I have a bit more time, but here's the "raw" data. This is quite spectacular. Four EOG wells and one CLR well:
  • 31756, 1,163, CLR, Maryland 5-16H, Catwalk, 38 stages, 17 million lbs; TD, 23,027 feet, t12/16; cum 80K 4/17;
  • 32512, 1,505, EOG, Mandaree 30-0706H, Squaw Creek, 37 stages, 17 million lbs sand; TD, 20,495 feet, t12/16; cum 157K 4/17; (19004)
  • 32513, 1,910, EOG, Mandaree 24-0706H, Squaw Creek, 44 stages, 28 million lbs sand; TD, 20,483 feet, t12/16; cum 228K 4/17; 19004)
  • 28435, 871, EOG, Fertile 55-0333H, Parshall, Fertile 55-0333H, frack data not yet available, t12/16; cum 60K 4/17;
  • 32514, 1,355, EOG, Mandaree 31-0706H, Squaw Creek, 46 stages, 29 million lbs; TD, 20,914 feet, t12/16; cum 247K 4/16; (19004)
I track high-intensity fracks here.

I can't say for sure, but it's possible this was the previous record for sand in the Bakken:
  • 31403, 1,447, EOG, West Clark 117-0136H, Clarks Creek, 36 stages, 27.65 million lbs t5/16; cum 201K 1/17; 18,217 feet; 

Huge Amount Of News Today -- Mostly International / National -- Not Sure How To Capture It All -- June 5, 2017

But first this breakfast note: we lived overseas for thirteen years, much of that time in close proximity to Belgium. Over the years, I've tasted a lot of waffles, including "real" Belgian waffles. But I have to say my favorite waffles are the little Mickey Mouse waffles I have almost every day, that I make from Bisquick, using the recipe on the box. Sophia and I make about 14 at a time, freeze them, and they last about ten days.

Now that we have that out of the way, back to all the news hitting the airwaves today.

The big story is the diplomatic tiff in the Mideast. That took me by complete surprise; clearly out of left field as they say. I have some initial thoughts but am waiting for a more in-depth story from the WSJ to get a better understanding of what's going on and what it might mean. No links for now; story everywhere.

Coal? The other big story of the day comes from John Kemp, London-based Reuters analyst, who notes that natural gas prices tumble as power producers switch back to coal. I thought coal was dead.

Donald Trump continues to tweet that after terrorist events in London, the city's Muslim mayor said "there is no reason to be alarmed." The question that folks are missing: was the Muslim mayor reassuring Londoners in general, or was he reassuring the families and co-conspirators of the terrorists need not be alarmed.

Back to Qatar. Time to get out the maps. Saudi Arabia says it will shut down sea, airspace, and land crossings with Qatar.

Air conditioning: BBC link here. Climate change. Air conditioning "changed" the US. Now, it's about to change the world. At the very end of a very long article:
Then there's the electricity that powers air conditioning - often made by burning gas or coal - and the coolants air conditioners use, many of which are powerful greenhouse gases when they leak.
Air conditioning technology is getting cleaner and greener.
But demand is growing so quickly that - even if the optimists are right about possible efficiency gains - there will be an eightfold increase in energy consumption by 2050. That's worrying news for climate change. When will we get inventions to control the outdoor weather, too?
Summer electric grid reliability in very, very good shape -- EIA. Graphic at link. Worth a quick look.

Saudi's official selling price for Asian-bound crude oil for July may have been set too high -- traders. Platts.  Saudi Aramco raised the OSP by 35 to 95 cents/bbl compared to the June OSP. 

Saudi predicts success: at Platts -- Saudi's Falih says that we will see impact of cuts in July, 2017. 

Libya: at Bloomberg -- Libya's rapid increase in oil production is heading toward a hard ceiling.
Wood Mackenzie says Libya's ability to pump more oil will son reach a limit -- and won't be enough to upset an oversupplied market.

The drawdown: