Someone recently pointed out that the NDIC decision some years ago to make the standard drilling unit 1280 acres was absolutely a stoke of genius. On top of that, the NDIC seems to have a handle on managing conflicts over "who owns what" when deciding to whom a certain permit might be awarded.
This is not atypical. I just looked at the geography of the area immediately around a well that came off the confidential list today:
- to the north: eleven wells within one mile, all of them producing; eight of them relatively new;
- on the same pad as the new well coming off confidential list today: four wells; this was the first of the four wells to come off the confidential list
- to the south, about a half-mile away: a brand new permitted 6-well pad; none of these wells spudded yet;
- to the south, about a mile away: an older producing middle Bakken well
- Total: about 17 wells along a 2-mile stretch, and the area is clearly "under-developed"
At less than $60, operators are still focused on Tier 1 middle Bakken with some operators also targeting more upper bench Three Forks wells. But if WTI were to move higher, there would be more movement into Tier 2 areas. The upper bench Three Forks lags well behind where it could be and "we" haven't even started with the lower benches in Tier 1 to say nothing of Tier 2.
And every well fracked before 2012 will have to be re-fracked at some point.
I find it amazing what operators are doing with 40 - 60 active rigs (the actual number of active rigs, depends on the definition of active rigs).
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