- Chesapeake Energy says it is poised to emerge from Chapter 11 bankruptcy this month as a high-volume, low-cost natural gas producer with little drilling planned on its shale oil leases this year.
- The company says it will sell $1B in notes as part of its court-approved reorganization plan to exit bankruptcy under control of its senior lenders, including Franklin Resources.
- Under the plan, which a judge in Texas approved last month, the company will cut $7B in debt.
- Chesapeake also has renegotiated midstream contracts across all of its basins to reduce minimum volume commitments and firm transportation obligations.
- The company says it plans to keep three rigs running in Pennsylvania's Marcellus Shale, 2-3 rigs drilling in the Haynesville Shale of Texas and Louisiana, and one rig drilling in Texas' Eagle Ford Shale 50% of the time.
- Chesapeake's 2021 rig plan contrasts sharply with the 18 rigs the company operated in 2019 before filing for bankruptcy protection last June.
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Sophia Baking Banana Bread During Class Breaks
Sophia Baking Banana Bread During Class Breaks
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