Sunday, March 27, 2022

Murex' Borstad Wells In West Tioga -- March 27, 2022

Updates

March 30, 2022:  from a reader; the reader's thoughts and my thoughts --

  • Patterson 280 rigging is coming down today
  • all wells drilled to depth
  • the rig was a walking rig
    • back and forth, the rig drilled the four wells to KOP
    • once KOP reached in all four wells, rig walked back to complete the laterals
  • some of this is fact; some conjectural; explains everything

Original Post

From a reader:

If you want to solve a real head scratcher figure out why Patterson 280 has been on the Murex Borstad 3 well pad all winter. I may be wrong but the way the rig is oriented on location leads me to believe they could still be on the first hole.

I drive past it at least 2x per day and there is little activity and there's always pipe in the derrick like they're tripping.

I'll come back to this one later. I don't have any news, but I need to spend some time on it. Later, some data:

The wells:

  • 38598, conf, Murex, Sheldon Mark 34-22H-A 3MB, Tioga, no production data,
  • 38599, conf, Murex, Borstad 34-10H-A 2MB, West Tioga,
  • 38600, conf, Murex, Sheldon Mark 34-22H-A 2MB, Tioga,
  • #38601, conf, Murex, Borstad 34-10H-1 1MB, West Tioga, no production data,

Patterson 280:

  • November 30, 2021: --
  • December 20, 2021: 38598, Murex, Sheldon Mark 34-22H-1-3MB -- first day;
  • December 27, 2021: 38601, Murex, Borstad 34-10H-A 1MB
  • December 30, 2022: 38600, Murex, Sheldon Mark 34-22H-A 2MB,
  • January 18, 2022: 38600, Murex, Sheldon Mark 22-10H-A-2MB,
  • February 28, 2022: 38599, Murex, Borstad 34-10H-A-2MB,
  • March 25, 2022: 38601, Murex, Borstad 34-10H-A-1MB,
  • --, 38598, Murex, Sheldon Mark 34-22H-A 3MB, Tioga

Energy News Over The Weekend -- March 27, 2022

Focus on fracking: weekly edition posted.

Oil: slumps

  • Brent: drops 3.3%; down almost $4.00; trading at $116.70
  • WTI: drops 3.5%; down almost $4.00; trading at $110, but did drop below $110, briefly

Diesel: rationing looms

The myth of spare capacity: link to Financial Times -- "you can't just turn on the taps." Bottlenecks hit hopes of US oil output surge. An article about a shortage of sand, and almost everything else connected with fracking.

Russia implodes: China's Sinopec bows out of Russian petchem, gas projects. Link here.

Xi will tread carefully: XI's gamble on Putin may be the most dangerous and short-sighted of his nine years in power. Link here. I disagree. The EU leaders have been incredibly un-helpful throough all of this. 

Russia: will likely default on April 4. The early $117 million interest payment was "peanuts" according to the $2.2 billion coming due. Link here.

Tesla: to halt Shanghai factory production; Covid curbs. Link here.

For The Archives -- What Folks Are Saying -- March 27, 2022

Locator: 10001ZEIHAN.

There have really been some great articles over the past few days -- March, 2022 -- the first month of the Russian-Ukraine war -- prior to the war, in the energy sector, major changes were occurring -- then the invasion -- wow -- a new world order -- we're living through it ... so these for the archives. And, then coming out of the pandemic.

One. "The geopolitical playbook worked (nearly) perfectly." ZeroHedge. Link here

One month ago, Deutsche Bank's Jim Reid published one of his trademark "Charts of the Day" which showed the historical playbook for how geopolitical events play out in markets, and which Reid says that in retrospect, he "might have retracted" if he could, as he had the lowest confidence in one or two weeks after publishing. But as it turned out, that playbook worked remarkably well with the S&P 500 now back above levels from the point where the US warned of an imminent Russian invasion of Ukraine late on Friday 11th February. This marked the start of the escalations and a geopolitical-induced market sell-off.

Two. Peter Zeihan, now being quoted by everyone everywhere.

Even before the invasion of Ukraine, the five-decade growth of post-WWII globalization was in retreat, with myriad unintended consequences, and opportunities as well.

Author and advisor to CEOs and C-Suites Peter Zeihan has been watching it all play out, supplying a rich vein of geopolitical insights in books like The Accidental Superpower, The Absent Superpower and Disunited Nations. Zeihan has been a regular speaker at our Chief Executive leadership events, sharing his knack for mapping big-picture perspective to pragmatic business advice.

This June, he’ll publish The End of the World Is Just The Beginning, his take on, as he puts it “what happens with the major economic sectors post globalization”—a world where countries and regions make their own goods, grow their own food, secure their own energy and “do it all with populations that are both shrinking and aging.”

from The WashingtonPost

Ukraine war ends the world as we know it.

Three. The psychologist who coined the phrase, "Great Resignation" reveals how he saw it coming ... and whoo-hoo, the professor teaches at ... drum roll .... Texas A&M ... link here to businessinsider.

Who we are as an employee and as a worker is very central to who we are.

Four. The Great Resignation. The wiki entry

Resignation, also known as the Big Quit and the Great Reshuffle, is an ongoing economic trend in which employees have voluntarily resigned from their jobs en masse, beginning in early 2021, primarily in the United States.

Possible causes include wage stagnation amid rising cost of living, economic freedom provided by COVID-19 stimulus payments, long-lasting job dissatisfaction, and safety concerns of the COVID-19 pandemic. Some economists have described the Great Resignation as akin to a general strike.

The term was coined by Anthony Klotz, a professor of management at Mays Business School at Texas A&M University, who predicted the mass exodus in May 2021. 

Five. The great resignation is beginning too reverse course. Money from the stimulus payments has run out. Link to Barron's.

Initial Indications: Ukraine War Will Result In Increased Interest In Bitcoin -- March 27, 2022

Of course, "Bitcoin" is a metonym for cryptocurrency.

From Collin McLelland:

Re-posting from ZeroHedge via oilprice.com:

The fourth-largest oil company in the world is now considering taking its gas-to-bitcoin pilot to four countries. 
The largest U.S. oil producer Exxon Mobil is considering expanding its North Dakota bitcoin mining pilot program to further reduce the volume of natural gas it routinely burns off or flares into the atmosphere.

People familiar with the matter told [Bloomberg] that the oil giant has an agreement with Crusoe Energy Systems to redirect gas that would otherwise be wasted from an oil well pad to mobile bitcoin mines. The report said the pilot project launched in January 2021 in North Dakota’s Bakken and expanded in July; now, it consumes up to 18 million cubic feet of gas per month that Exxon couldn’t otherwise monetize.

Exxon is now considering similar pilot projects in Alaska, the Qua Iboe Terminal in Nigeria, Argentina’s Vaca Muerta shale field, Guyana and Germany, one of the people told Bloomberg.

I Don't Trust The Source At All -- But Makes For Interesting Reading -- Marh 27, 2022

Breaking: Mariupol is now 85% destroyed. Putin did not even have to use tactical nuclear weapons to accomplish this. But I'm curious: how was the 85% figure arrived at?  

Note: this may sound counter-intuitive, but for the US, the longer the Russia-Ukraine war lasts, regardless of outcome, the better for the US. China will also benefit. Biggest loser, of course, Russia, but the EU won't be far behind.  Oh, and then this, the longer the war lasts, the better for the Biden administration but, I think that's a given. The Biden administration has already convince Americans that the timeline for inflation, supply chain shortages, high cost of gasoline shifted to before the invasion.

Now, back to the original post.

This article at The New Yorker should be read alongside Peter Zeihan's analyses. Archived.

From the lede of the linked article:

Vladimir Putin’s Russia, ancient in many ways, has been notably modern in the centralized management of money. Elvira Nabiullina, the longtime governor of the Russian Central Bank was Europe’s 2017 “Central Banker of the Year,” according to the Banker magazine. Russia’s treasury recoups about twenty per cent of its G.D.P. as tax revenue, a figure far exceeding most other petrostates and on par with the United States. Moscow enjoys both fiscal and trade surpluses, and its debt load is low.

Every attempt to make sense of Putin’s ambitions in Ukraine has seemed obscured in an incense haze of past tsars, imperial designs, and Russian military history. But, to practitioners of economic statecraft, the situation is as clear as looking in a mirror. “It’s a pretty solid, talented group of technocrats there,” one senior Biden Administration official told me, of Russia’s central bankers. In any economic crisis, “we expected that they would respond smartly.”

What modern Russian economists have done is assemble an immense stockpile of foreign currency and gold: six hundred and thirty billion dollars, thirteen per cent of it in renminbi, twenty-two per cent of it in gold, and much of the balance in the major currencies of the economic West—euros, dollars, yen, pounds. The Russian currency stockpile eventually grew so vast that some Western financial analysts described it as “Fortress Russia”—if Russia were to be isolated in the event of a war, and the value of the ruble were to degrade, the foreign currencies could be used to stabilize the Russian economy and prevent a crisis.

In the medium term, at least, these reserves seemed to provide an economic buffer for Putin. Even if Europe were to cut off all imports of Russian energy, depriving Moscow of its main source of revenue, one analyst at the Atlantic Council told the Times, the reserves would allow Moscow to fill the gap for “several years.”

The proficiency of the Russian bankers posed a particular challenge to their Western counterparts. Authoritarian regimes are supposed to have the advantage of long-term planning, since their policies do not need to change with elections. If Russia, like China, was managing its economy as expertly as we could, then where was the advantage? When the G-7 gathered in Cornwall, in June, 2021, for its first in-person summit since the pandemic, President Biden tried to summon a sense of renewed post-Trump urgency, of liberal democracies uniting against authoritarianism, but there were still more basic doubts about the efficacy of the Western system. “We’ve been reflecting a lot on this discussion in the G-7, on how strong are democracies,” a senior E.U. official told me. “Sometimes, the feeling is that democracies are having a bit more challenges—sometimes, they’re cumbersome, and slower.”

Among the American delegation in the room was a figure who surely flew below the radar of Russian intelligence: a forty-six-year-old North Carolinian named Daleep Singh, who had recently been appointed as Biden’s deputy national-security adviser for international economics. Singh, who spent part of his early career at Goldman Sachs, had made his name as a market technician, having joined the markets room in the Obama Treasury Department, and then spent part of the Trump years as the vice-president for markets at the New York Fed. Singh had watched, with some skepticism, the growing esteem in which Russia was held on Wall Street, which hinged on the idea of its economic foresight. “I grew up in financial markets. I often hear from people in financial markets,” Singh told me last week. “And one of the myths I felt like they held—and it was kind of perpetrated by the Russian government—was that it had built an economic fortress around its economy, and that it was due to years and years of genius planning by Putin himself.”

The two great surprises of the first month of the war have been the strength of the Ukrainian resistance and the severity of the Western sanctions, which seem likely to prevent Russia from accessing its currency reserves. The effects of economic sanctions are just now beginning to be seen, but Sergei Guriev, a professor of economics at Sciences Po, in Paris, told me that he foresaw “Soviet stagnation, Soviet decline.” (There was a slight Soviet ambience this week, as viral videos showed Russians fighting over sugar in grocery stores, and a Russian government minister appeared on television to urge the public not to panic-buy essentials such as buckwheat.) If Russia’s misestimation of the Ukrainians was psychological, then its misestimation of Western sanctions was political and technical. The sanctions have a complex architecture—based on rules, economic levers, and the responses of Western companies and investors—but they also have an architect, a former Obama official told me. “The architect of these sanctions was Daleep Singh.”

Singh’s generation of liberals—those who graduated college around the time of 9/11—have returned to power from a very tense, four-year hiatus with two entangled challenges: to embody a return to sober order, after the mania of Donald Trump, and to pursue a bolder and more expansive response to the pressures of inequality and authoritarianism, problems that have come to seem far more acute since the Obama years. Singh himself has a slight throwback quality, to the manner of late-twentieth-century American liberalism—the casual language and formal suits, the Sorkinesque quickness, the tendency to talk about human mechanisms with the simplicity of economic graphs. When it came to sanctions, he had a characteristic mission: to expand on an Obama-era project. Run that scene again, but different this time.

The precedent had taken place in 2014, in the debate about how to sanction Russia after its invasion of Crimea. Beyond freezing the assets of certain oligarchs close to Putin, the Obama Administration designed its sanctions to keep a few large and influential Russian corporations (mostly banks and energy companies) from accessing Western debt. The choice was designed to exploit a specific vulnerability, one that Singh helped identify: in 2014, many of the most important Russian entities were in the midst of a debt binge, and were overexposed. In terms of potential severity, Edward Fishman, a leading Obama Administration sanctions official, told me that the 2014 sanctions had been a “two out of ten.” Still, combined with a bigger bust in the oil market, they caused some trouble. The Russian economy, which had been growing for several years, contracted in 2015. The ruble crashed, and inflation surpassed twelve per cent in the year after the invasion. And yet Putin’s power was largely undisturbed. If anything, the sanctions’ larger effect was to convince the Kremlin that it needed to build its stockpile. “We saw Russia in economic and fiscal vulnerability,” the senior Biden Administration official said. “We saw Russia respond with the central-bank tool, really kind of building up their reserves with the idea that if the U.S. comes after us again, we’ll need an even stronger central-bank backstop.”

Singh started thinking seriously about potential sanctions on Russia in early November, when U.S. intelligence assessments began to warn of a likely invasion of Ukraine. “We put our heads together and figured out where do we have strengths and where do our strengths intersect with Russian vulnerability—where is there an asymmetry,” Singh told me. One area was Russia’s access to Western technologies, such as microchips and software. Another potential vulnerability was the dependence of Russian banks on capital from overseas. Each of these moves exploited certain American advantages, but they did nothing to undermine the reserves Putin had built to make the Russian economy “sanction-proof.” So Singh turned to another point of asymmetry: the currency trade. “It’s true that the global economy has gotten increasingly multipolar over time—you could see that just as a percentage of world G.D.P.,” Singh said. But, when it came to the currency in which countries bought and sold things, saved money, and borrowed money, the dollar’s share was between sixty and eighty per cent. In the world of global finance, Singh said, “the dollar is still the operating system.”

Much, much more at the linked article. A keeper. 

The bottom, bottom line: the longer the war goes on in Ukraine, the worst things get for Russia's economy. Putin was counting on the protections noted above, but these protections would work only if:

  • the war was short;
  • he did not resort to biochemical weapons;
  • he did not resort to tactical nuclear weapons;

The 2024 Presidential Nominee Leaderboard -- March 27, 2022

Re-posting: this post from November 5, 2021, presidential nominee leaderboard;

Democratic leaderboard for the 2024 presidential election is starting to take shape:

  • VP Kamala Harris
  • Senator Joe Manchin
  • Tom Steyer (yes, he's back -- this was the #1 story on the Yahoo!Finance page today)
  • Beto (as heir to the RFK political machine he has the Texas Irish vote locked up)
  • AOC / Ill-Hand Omar -- with a half-brain each, they hope 0.5 + 0.5 = 1 (see first comment)

Likewise, the GOP leaderboard for the 2024 presidential election is also starting to take shape:

  • Ed Durr (NJ GOP senator (state, not federal)

Re-Posted In Its Entirety -- March 27, 2022

Updates

March 27, 2022a reader notes that this story is being reported absolutely nowhere --

Just checked the Earth Justice website and they still don’t mention the new policy 😎. 
Methinks they’ve been blindsided. 
Manchin is Chairman of Energy. I’m seeing a seismic shift. Bakken blinder disclaimer applies. 

Original Post

A reader suggested this two-word subject heading: FERC Greta. I wish I had thought of that.


Link here. Very confusing, I don't understand the changes yet, but it sounds good for now. I can't wait to hear the White House explanation why the Keystone XL is now not only necessary but environmentally safe. Rumors are they are going to rename the Keystone XL pipeline the Greta Turnberg Memorial Pipeline to expedite the approval process. 

But meanwhile, back to the linked story:

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has rolled back sweeping new policies for large natural gas projects, including a framework for assessing how pipelines and other facilities contribute to climate change, weeks after prominent lawmakers panned the changes.

In a decision issued unanimously at the commission’s monthly meeting yesterday, FERC will revert back to its long-standing method for reviewing natural gas pipeline applications — while opening changes announced in February to feedback rather than applying them.

The commission also signed off on three new natural gas pipelines, one of which will pump more natural gas into New York state in a project described by utilities as essential for reliable gas service. immediately.

Three words in close proximity that warm the cockles of my heart: pipelines ... pump .. immediately.

Honestly, I Just Don't Get It -- March 27, 2022

Link here.

There are several story lines here, but I will post only one for now:

Okay, one more story line:

  • why is this even a headline story that billionaires (individuals, not corporations) should have a minimum 20% income tax actually paid?
  • why do some folks feel the need to carry the water for billionaires like Mark, Jeff, Warren, and the Koch Bros?
  • for me, this is a no-brainer;
  • the bigger question is why has it taken so long (and, of course, it will never be passed)
    • and, if it's passed, the billionaires' lobbyists will make sure there are loopholes written into the legislation
  • it can't be that hard to write this law:
    • if your name shows up on Forbes annual list of four-hundred richest people in the US, that individual must write a check within 30 days for 20% of year-over-year appreciation, but also qualify for a tax refund if year-over-year net worth drops (and, yes, I understand the concept of unrealized gains)
      • RMDs are exactly the same thing, but for poor people RMDs are a tax on unrealized gains.
      • if one does not understand that, one is not preparing his/her own taxes, or at least looked at an "8606" or looked at the IRS publication regarding RMDs
      • RMDs are taxed at same rate as income, and RMDs are based on the value of one's IRA, regardless of gains or losses, so in effect, RMDs are even worse than you think; you can't even take advantage of a loss.
    • no extensions; no appeals; no tax preparer involvement; 
    • a three-year sunset law to allow opportunity to re-tweak 
  • if I'm a $50,000 / year journalist, I would be writing stories about RMDs and not about taxes on billionaires
  • I honestly don't get it. 

Con Edison Will Roll Back Supply Charges -- New Yorkers Experience Sticker Shock -- March 27, 2022

One of my favorite recurring posts is "ISO NE." New York is not part of "NE" but it's close enough.

Now, today, a reader alerted me to this: mainstream media is finally taking note.

Google: coned February prices electricity, and then click on "NEWS":

August a/c in NYC

Reminder: FERC just approved three new natural gas pipelines, one of them for New York state.

ISO NE: By the way, speaking of ISO NE, today, when electricity prices should be approaching zero for New England with all its renewable energy, it's still a fairly pricey $60 / MWH. At 3:00 a.m, electricity in ISO NE was priced at a minus $50.28. Of course, that's when all the wind turbines are actually working, but the three Tesla owners are the only ones using electricity.

*************************
The Energy Transition Is Dead

Tracked here

*************************
Sunday Morning Breakfast

From Trader Joe's: Chocolate Brooklyn Babka.

Wiki entry here.

Houston entry here.

Photo and more reviews here. Exactly what I purchased this past week, along with organic naan crackers:


For the record, I won't be buying this babka any time soon. It's just too chocolaty. Is that possible?

On the other hand, the only "white" cracker I will ever buy again is Trader Joe's Organic Naan Crackers. Even better than oyster crackers.

Doritos: Inelastic Demand -- March 27, 2022

With war (such as the Ukraine-Russian war), Americans learn geography (for the first time).

With surging inflation, Americans finally start to understand the concepts of elastic demand and inelastic demand.

Doritos? It turns out that "Americans and Doritos" (singular) is an "inelastic demand" issue. Link here.

Gasoline? "More" inelastic" than originally thought. See latest figures from GasBuddy.

So, best examples of elastic demand:

  • Christmas trees in July
  • newspaper subscriptions
  • one-ply toilet paper
  • used AMC Gremlins
  • Brussels sprouts 
  • two-day-old "best-buy-date" fish
  • light beer

Later: I don't know if this from a reader was in response to this post on inelastic demand or not:

Tiny Tim’s “Tiptoe thru the tulips” was a #1 song in 1968. The song was also a hit for several artists 50 years prior. Shoot me. 

But, I told the reader that I would use this as an example of "inelastic demand." At least in 1968. No matter how high Virgin Records or Tower Records priced that "45," it was going to sell. I doubt the same held true of any of his albums.

Wow, it goes against my better judgment to even post this. If nothing else, the alliteration works:

Tiptoe Through The Tulips, Tiny Tim

For Some, Geography Never Was Their Strong Suit -- March 27, 2022

I can't even imaging how this happened?  Link here.

  • where did they find the "source" map in the first place?
  • these slides are reviewed by dozens of smart folks before they are released;
  • certainly someone on the board should have noticed
  • perhaps instead of higher a new VP for ESG, Antero might consider hiring a VP for geography

My hunch: this presentation was meant to be released April Fool's Day.

Alternative hunch: Antero's graphic designer is a graduate of Texas A&M.

The good news: it's not as bad as it looks. The graphic designer did not move state borders, nor did he/she move Oklahoma per se. Rather, the graphic designer simply labeled AR with OK

  • this probably occurred while studying his/her NCAA brackets a few weeks ago; or
  • after a celebrator 3-martini lunch

For Investors In The Bakken -- March 27, 2022

See "observations regarding wells coming off confidential list this next week" at this link.

  • Bakken operators earnings, 1Q22:
    • earnings and free cash flow should be huge, based on price of oil;
    • those earnings and free cash flow will not be as great as they could be;
    • those earnings and free cash flow could actually be less than expected:
    • very few operators are completing their wells
      • this could affect companies like NOG
    • unable to complete wells due to lack of workers
    • unwilling to complete wells with such high fracking sand costs, other costs
    • interestingly, this "completion issue" may have something to do with focus
      • a lot of DUCs have been completed; running up against two-year deadline
      • frack resources moved to older DUCs; newer wells will have to wait
      • might there be other reasons newer wells are not being completed?
    • unwilling to even add rigs because unable to complete wells
      • however, less rigs = less CAPEX
    • the calendar:
      • January is a tough month to produce in the Bakken
      • February is probably worse (and it's a short month)
      • March: road restrictions start to kick in
    • any good news:
      • EIA predicts huge jump in shale production in April, but might this be the Permian, and not the Bakken?

Observations Regarding Wells Coming Off Confidential List This Next Week -- March 27, 2022

See initial production data for wells coming off the confidential list this next week at this link.

  • rigs don't matter: don't take this out of context
    • I think I recall CLR had only five rigs on the active rig list last week; needs to be fact-checked; most observers expected CLR to have at least eight active rigs in North Dakota by now, if not nine
  • if it weren't for CLR, would we even be talking about the Bakken today?
    • of the 17 wells coming off confidential list:
      • CLR: 8
      • Ovintiv: 4
      • Petroshale: 3
      • Hess: 2
  • of the 17 wells coming off the confidential list, those reporting production:
      • Petroshale: 3 (and two of the wells look mediocre at best)
      • Hess: 2 (nice to very nice wells)
      • CLR: 1 ( a mediocre well at best)
  • operations
    • even CLR not getting their wells fracked
    • there is no use adding rigs to drill more wells, when one can't even get exiting wells completed -- CLR
    • except for CLR, and maybe two or three others, producers aren't able to frack
  • pad drilling;
    • the only reason there are seventeen wells even coming off the confidential list: pad drilling
    • without pad drilling, all of eight wells might be coming off confidential list this next week

Initial Production Data For Wells Coming Off Confidential List This Next Week -- March 27, 2022

 The wells:

  • 38518, conf, CLR, Thorp Federal 8-28H, Little Knife, no production data,  
  • 37015, conf, CLR, LCU Ralph 2-27H, Long Creek, no production data, 
  • 38548, conf, Ovintiv, Wisness State 152-96-16-21-6H, Westberg, no production data, 
  • 38526, conf, CLR, Thorp Federal 9-28HSL1, Little Knife, no production data, 
  • 38545, conf, Ovintiv, Wisness State 152-96-16-21-14H, Westberg, no production data, 
  • 38546, conf, Ovintiv, Wisness State 152-96-16-21-5H, Westberg, no production data, 
  • 36100, conf, CLR, Gordon Federal 8-5H1, Haystack Butte,
DateOil RunsMCF Sold
1-20221817332540
12-20211504924860
11-20212135830649
10-202144426447
  • 38547, conf, Ovintiv, Wisness State 152-96-16-21-21H, Westberg, no production data, 
  • 38293, conf, CLR, Springfield 11-8HSL, Brooklyn, no production data, 
  • 37860, conf, CLR, Clear Creek Federal 10-35H2, Westberg, no production data, 
  • 38295, conf, CLR, Rolf Federal 11-17HSL, Brooklyn, no production data, 
  • 37711, conf, Hess, EN-Johnson A-155-94-2932H-9, Alkali Creek,
DateOil RunsMCF Sold
1-20221713035459
12-20212280933021
11-20213842158066
10-20215053050721
9-202165408625
  • 36893, conf, Petroshale, Crockett Federal 1TFH, Bear Den,
DateOil RunsMCF Sold
1-2022125520
  • 38296, conf, CLR, Rolf Federal 10-17H1, Brooklyn, no production data, 
  • 37706, conf, Hess, EN-Johnson-155-94-2017H-8, Manitou,
DateOil RunsMCF Sold
1-20221114715772
12-20211320120248
11-20211702832836
10-20213075852509
9-2021380712984
  • 36894, conf, Petroshale, Boone Federal 1MBH, Bear Den,
DateOil RunsMCF Sold
1-202254720
12-202116640
  • 36889, conf, Petroshale, Clark Federal 2TFH, Bear Den,
DateOil RunsMCF Sold
1-202267410
12-202142820

Wells Coming Off The Confidential List This Next Week -- March 27, 2022

Monday, April 4, 2022: 7 for the month, 7 for the quarter, 166 for the year
38518, conf, CLR, Thorp Federal 8-28H,
37015, conf, CLR, LCU Ralph 2-27H,

Sunday, April 3, 2022: 5 for the month, 5 for the quarter, 164 for the year
38548, conf, Ovintiv, Wisness State 152-96-16-21-6H,
38526, conf, CLR, Thorp Federal 9-28HSL1,

Saturday, April 2, 2022: 3 for the month, 3 for the quarter, 162 for the year
38545, conf, Ovintiv, Wisness State 152-96-16-21-14H,

Friday, April 1, 2022: 2 for the month, 2 for the quarter, 161 for the year
38546, conf, Ovintiv, Wisness State 152-96-16-21-5H,
36100, conf, CLR, Gordon Federal 8-5H1,

Thursday, March 31, 2022: 47 for the month, 156 for the quarter, 159 for the year
None.

Wednesday, March 30, 2022: 50 for the month, 159 for the quarter, 159 for the year
38547, conf, Ovintiv, Wisness State 152-96-16-21-21H,
38293, conf, CLR, Springfield 11-8HSL,

Tuesday, March 29, 2022: 48 for the month, 157 for the quarter, 157 for the year
37860, conf, CLR, Clear Creek Federal 10-35H2,

Monday, March 28, 2022: 47 for the month, 156 for the quarter, 156 for the year
38295, conf, CLR, Rolf Federal 11-17HSL,
37711, conf, Hess, EN-Johnson A-155-94-2932H-9,
36893, conf, Petroshale, Crockett Federal 1TFH,

Sunday, March 27, 2022: 44 for the month, 153 for the quarter, 153 for the year
38296, conf, CLR, Rolf Federal 10-17H1,
37706, conf, Hess, EN-Johnson-155-94-2017H-8,
36894, conf, Petroshale, Boone Federal 1MBH,

Saturday, March 26, 2022: 41 for the month, 150 for the quarter, 150 for the year 
36889, conf, Petroshale, Clark Federal 2TFH,

New Wells Reporting 2Q22

Locator: 22330A.

Thursday, June 30, 2022:

  • 38178, drl/IA,  Hess, AN-Norby-152-94-0409H-9, Antelope, t--; cum 180K 7/22; off line, 10/22; cum 197K 10/22;
  • 37144, loc/A, Hess, BL-Olson-155-96-0310H-4, Beaver Lodge, t--; cum 112K 7/22; cum 139K 2/23;

Wednesday, June 29, 2022: 40 for the month, 178 for the quarter, 337 for the year 

  • 38600, drl/A, Murex, Sheldon Mark 34-22H-A 2MB, Tioga, t--; cum 12K 10/22; cum 58K 2/23;

Tuesday, June 28, 2022: 39 for the month, 177 for the quarter, 336 for the year 

  • 38659, drl/A, CLR, LCU Reckitt Federal 9-22H1X, Long Creek, completed; minimal production; U; one month production, t--; cum 25K 2/23:

Monday, June 27, 2022: 38 for the month, 176 for the quarter, 335 for the year 

  • None.

Sunday, June 26, 2022: 38 for the month, 176 for the quarter, 335 for the year

  • 38601, drl/A, Murex, Borstad 34-10H-1 1MB, West Tioga, t--; cum 42K 10/22; cum 113K 2/23;
  • 38179, AL/A, Hess, AN-Norby-152-94-0409H-8, Antelope, t--; cum 71K 7/22; cum 239K 2/23;
  • 38003, loc/A, Hess, CA-E Burdick-155-95-2932H-8, Capa, t--; cum 118K 7/22; cum 150K 2/23;

Saturday, June 25, 2022: 35 for the month, 173 for the quarter, 332 for the year

  • 38660, drl/A, CLR, LCU Reckitt 10-22H1X, Long Creek, U, t--; cum 38K 2/23;

Friday, June 24, 2022: 34 for the month, 172 for the quarter, 331 for the year

  • None.

Thursday, June 23, 2022: 34 for the month, 172 for the quarter, 331 for the year

  • 38599, F/A, Murex, Borstad 34-10H-A 2MB, West Tioga, t--; cum 28K 10/22; cum 111K 2/23/
  • 38180, AL/A, Hess, AN-Norby-152-94-0409H-7, Antelope, t--; cum 75K 7/22; cum 249K 2/23;
  • 37142, loc/A, Hess, BL-Olson-LW-155-96-0310H-1, Beaver Lodge, t--; cum 140K 7/22; cum 139K 2/23;

Wednesday, June 22, 2022: 31 for the month, 169 for the quarter, 329 for the year

  • 38661, drl/A, CLR, LCU Reckitt 12-22HX,  Long Creek, U, t--; cum 41K 2/23;

Tuesday, June 21, 2022: 30 for the month, 168 for the quarter, 328 for the year

  • None.

Monday, June 20, 2022: 30 for the month, 168 for the quarter, 328 for the year

  • None.

Sunday, June 19, 2022: 30 for the month, 168 for the quarter, 328 for the year

  • 38662, drl/A, CLR, LCU Reckitt 12-22H1X, Long Creek, U, t--; cum 57K 2/23;
  • 38658, drl/A, CLR, LCU Ralph 11-27HX, Long  Creek, U, t--; cum 46K 2/23;
  • 38598, drl/A, Murex, Sheldon Mark 34-22H-A 3MB, Tioga, t--; cum 12K 10/22; cum 61K 2/23;

Saturday, June 18, 2022: 27 for the month, 165 for the quarter, 325 for the year

  • 38436, drl/A, WPX, Wounded Face 14-15HEL, McGregory Buttes, t--; cum 93K 10/22; cum 167K 2/23;
  • 37330, loc/A, Petro-Hunt, Lovdahl 158-94-32C-29-3H, Tioga, now reporting; t--; cum 61K 10/22; cum 89K 2/23;

Friday, June 17, 2022: 25 for the month, 163 for the quarter, 323 for the year

  • 37329, loc/A, Petro-Hunt, Lovdahl 158-94-32C-29-2H, Tioga, now reporting; t--; cum 47K 10/22; cum 69K 2/23;

Thursday, June 16, 2022: 24 for the month, 162 for the quarter, 322 for the year

  • 38435, drl/A, WPX, Wounded Face 14-15HW, McGregory Buttes, t--; cum 86K 10/22; cum 178K 2/23;

Wednesday, June 15, 2022: 23 for the month, 161 for the quarter, 321 for the year

  • 38434, conf, WPX, Wounded Face 14-15HB, McGregory Buttes, t--; cum 96K 10/22;

Tuesday, June 14, 2022: 22 for the month, 160 for the quarter, 320 for the year

  • 38433, conf, WPX, Wounded Face 14-15HX, McGregory Buttes, t--; cum 88K 10/22;

Monday, June 13, 2022: 21 for the month, 159 for the quarter, 319 for the year

  • 38432, conf, WPX, Wounded Face 14-15HC, McGregory Buttes, t--; cum 97K 10/22;
  • 37188, drl/A, Zavanna, Edgar 10-3 6TFH, Poe,  followed here; t--; cum 141K 10/22; cum 162K 2/23;
  • 37010, loc/A, CLR, LU Reckitt Federal 2-22H, t--; cum minimal production; off line;

Sunday, June 12, 2022: 19 for the month, 156 for the quarter, 316 for the year

  • 37186, conf, Zavanna, Edgar 10-3 4TFH, Poe,  followed here; t--; cum 144K 10/22;

Saturday, June 11, 2022: 18 for the month, 155 for the quarter, 315 for the year

  • 38477, conf, WPX, Hall 14-15HIL, McGregory Buttes, t--; cum 57K 10/22;
  • 38134, conf, CLR, Dennis FIU 8-8H, Cedar Coulee,

Friday, June 10, 2022: 16 for the month, 153 for the quarter, 313 for the year

  • 38643, conf, Ballard Petroleum Holdings, Smalls 31-8,
  • 38478, conf, WPX, Hall 14-15HZ, McGregory Buttes, t--; cum 100K 10/22;
  • 36866, drl/A, CLR, LCU Truman 10-23H1, Long Creek, U, t--; cum 222K 2/23;

Thursday, June 9, 2022: 13 for the month, 150 for the quarter, 310 for the year

  • 38479, conf, WPX, Hall 14-15HD, McGregory Buttes, t--; cum 89K 10/22;
  • 38133, conf, CLR, Flint Chips FIU 8-5H, Cedar Coulee,

Wednesday, June 8, 2022: 11 for the month, 148 for the quarter, 308 for the year 

  • 38480, conf,  WPX, Hall 14-15HY, McGregory Buttes, t--; cum 115K 11/22; see this post.
  • 38132, conf,  CLR, Dennis FIU 7-8H1,
  • 37187, conf,  Zavanna, Edgar 10-3 5H, Poe,  followed here;

Tuesday, June 7, 2022: 8 for the month, 145 for the quarter, 305 for the year

  • 38131, conf,  CLR, Flint Chips FIU 7-5H1,

Monday, June 6, 2022: 7 for the month, 144 for the quarter, 304 for the year

Sunday, June 5, 2022: 6 for the month, 143 for the quarter, 303 for the year

  • 38130, conf, CLR, Dennis FIU 16-8HSL,

Saturday, June 4, 2022: 5 for the month, 142 for the quarter, 302 for the year

  • 38129, conf, CLR, Dennis FIU 15-8HSL1, 

Friday, June 3, 2022: 4 for the month, 141 for the quarter, 301 for the year

  • 37553, loc/A, Whiting, Lacey 13-10-2H, Sanish, t--; cum 203K 10/22; cum 238K 2/23;

Thursday, June 2, 2022: 3 for the month, 140 for the quarter, 300 for the year

  • 38578, AL/A, Slawson, Rainmaker Federal 8-25-36TFH/Lightning Federal 4-24-13TFH, Big Bend, producing; t--; cum 64K 10/22; cum 97K 2/23;

Wednesday, June 1, 2022: 2 for the month, 139 for the quarter, 299 for the year

  • 37896, conf, Iron Oil Operating, Boxcar 1-4-16H, Boxcar Butte, t--; cum 52K 10/22;
  • 38577, conf, Slawson, Lightning Federal 4-24-13TFH, Big Bend, producing; t--; cum 62K 10/22;

Tuesday, May 31, 2022: 72 for the month, 137 for the quarter, 297 for the year

  • None.

Monday, May 30, 2022: 72 for the month, 137 for the quarter, 297 for the year

  • 38576, conf, Slawson, Howitzer 4-25H, Big Bend, producing; t--; cum 59K 10/22;

Sunday, May 29, 2022: 71 for the month, 136 for the quarter, 296 for the year

  • 37100, conf, Zavanna, James 3-10 5H, Poe, first production, 12/21; t-- ; cum 120K 3/22;

Saturday, May 28, 2022: 70 for the month, 135 for the quarter, 295 for the year

  • 36512, PNC/NC, Crescent Point Energy, CPEUSC Narcisse 3-8-5-158N-99W-MBH, Ellisville, no production data,

Friday, May 27, 2022: 69 for the month, 134 for the quarter, 294 for the year

  • 37844, conf, Hess, EN-Hegland-156-94-3229H-2, Manitou, first production, 11/21; t--; cum 75K 3/22;
  • 37099, conf, Zavanna, James 3-10 4H, Poe, first production, 12/21; t--; cum 100K 3/22;
  • 36513, PNC/NC, Crescent Point Energy, CPEUSC Austin 4-17-20-158N-99W-MBH, Ellisville, no production data,

Thursday, May 26, 2022: 66 for the month, 131 for the quarter, 291 for the year

  • 37098, conf, Zavanna, James 3-10 2H, Poe, first production, 12/21; t--; cum 140K 3/22;
  • 36514, conf, Crescent Point Energy, CPEUSC Narcisse 4-8-5-158N-99W-MBH, Ellisville, t--; cum 6K over 12 days;

Wednesday, May 25, 2022: 64 for the month, 129 for the quarter, 289 for the year

  • 36515, PNC/NC-->PNC/A, Crescent Point Energy, CPEUSC Austin 5-17-20-158N-99W-MBH, Ellisville, t--; cum 6K over first 12 days;

Tuesday, May 24, 2022: 63 for the month, 128 for the quarter, 288 for the year

  • 38657, conf, CLR, LCU Ralph 10-27HIX, Long Creek, no production datta,
  • 38609, conf-->drl/A, CLR, Bang 12-4H, Cedar Coulee, t--; cum 90K 10/22;
  • 36517, PNC/NC, Crescent Point Energy, CPEUSC Narcisse 5-8-5-158N-99W-MBH, Ellisville, t--; cum 6K over 12 days;

Monday, May 23, 2022: 60 for the month, 125 for the quarter, 285 for the year

  • 38622, conf, Summit Carbon Solutions, Archie Erickson 2, wildcat, carbon capture, not oil and gas;
  • 37183, conf, Zavanna, Edgar 10-3 1H, Poe, Poe,  followed here; first production, 12/21; t--; cum 90K 3/22;
  • 36518, PNC/NC, Crescent Point Energy, CPEUSC Austin 6-17-20-158N-99W-MBH, Ellisville, t--; cum 2K over first five days;

Sunday, May 22, 2022: 57 for the month, 122 for the quarter, 282 for the year

  • 38630, DRY, Eagle Operating, Willy Miranda-State 16-4, Foreman Butte, no production data,
  • 38608, drl/A, CLR, Bang 11-4H1, Cedar Coulee, t--; cum 116K 11/22; parent well with huge jump in production;
  • 36516, PNC/NC, Crescent Point Energy, CPEUSC Narccisse 6-8-5-158N-99W-MBH-LL, Ellisville, no production data,

Saturday, May 21, 2022: 54 for the month, 119 for the quarter, 279 for the year

  • None.

Friday, May 20, 2022: 54 for the month, 119 for the quarter, 279 for the year

  • 38607, drl/A, CLR, Bang 10-4H, Cedar Coulee, no production data, t--; cum 194K 2/23;
  • 38606, drl/A, CLR, Bang 9-4H1, Cedar Coulee, no production data, t--; cum 161K 2/23;
  • 38594, conf, Summit Carbon Solutions, Milton Flemmer, wildcat, Mercer County;
  • 36519, PNC/NC, Crescent Point Energy, CPEUSC Austin 7-17-20-158N-99W-MBH-LL, Ellisville, no production data,
  • 35410, loc/NC, Crescent Point Energy, CPEUSC Austin 2-17-20-158N-99W-LL-MBH, Ellisville, no production data,
  • 28832, conf, Petro-Hunt, Mongoose 149-102-8D-5-2H, Charbonneau, no production data,
  • 28830, PNC/A, Petro-Hunt, Mongoose 149-102-8D-5-3H, Charbonneau, no production data, t--; cum 105K 2/23;

Thursday, May 19, 2022: 47 for the month, 112 for the quarter, 272 for the year

  • None.

Wednesday, May 18, 2022: 47 for the month, 112 for the quarter, 272 for the year

  • None.

Tuesday, May 17, 2022: 47 for the month, 112 for the quarter, 272 for the year

  • 38309, n/d, Hess, EN-Hegland-156-94-3229H-3, Manitou, first production, 11/21; t--; cum 12K 3/22;
  • 35411, n/d, Crescent Point Energy, CPEUSC Narcisse 2-8-5-158N-99W, Ellisville, no production data,

Monday, May 16, 2022: 45 for the month, 110 for the quarter, 270 for the year

  • 37901, conf, CLR, Charolais South Federal 6-10H, Elm Tree, t--; cum 212K 10/22;
  • 37552, conf, Whiting, Lacey 13-10HU, Big Bend, first production, 11/21; t--; cum 105K 3/22;

Sunday, May 15, 2022: 43 for the month, 108 for the quarter, 268 for the year

  • 38570, conf-->F/A, Hunt, Quill 145-93-10-3H 6, Lake Ilo, t--; cum 36K 10/22;
  • 37902, conf-->loc/A, CLR, Charolais South Federal 5-10H1, Elm Tree, t--; cum 182K 10/22; cum 225K 2/23;

Saturday, May 14, 2022: 41 for the month, 106 for the quarter, 266 for the year

  • 38569, conf, Hunt, Quill 145-93-10-3H 5, Lake Ilo, t--; cum 33K 10/22;
  • 37903, conf-->loc/A, CLR, Charolais South Federal 4-10H, Elm Tree, t--; cum 185K 10/22; cum 226K 2/23;
  • 37669, conf-->loc/A, Whiting, Lacey 14-3 3XH, Sanish, first production, 12/21; t--; cum 80K 3/22; cum 176K 10/22;

Friday, May 13, 2022: 38 for the month, 103 for the quarter, 263 for the year

  • 38597, conf-->drl/drl, Ovintiv, Obenour 150-99-33-28-8H, South Tobacco Garden, t--; cum 142K 10/22;,
  • 38568, conf-->F/A, Hunt, Quill 145-93-10-3H 4, Lake llo, t--; cum 30K 10/22;
  • 37904, conf-->loc/A, CLR, Charolais South Federal 3-10H2, Elm Tree, t--; cum 170K 10/22;
  • 34339, conf, Oasis, Borden Federal 5300 14-36 9B, Willow Creek, first production, 11/21; t--; cum 160K 3/22;

Thursday, May 12, 2022: 34 for the month, 99 for the quarter, 259 for the year

  • 38596, conf-->loc/A, Ovintiv, Johnson 150-99-34-27-5HLW, South Tobacco Garden, t--; cum 208K 10/22;
  • 38567, conf, Hunt, Halliday 145-93-15-22H 6, Lake Ilo, no production data,

Wednesday, May 11, 2022: 32 for the month, 97 for the quarter, 257 for the year

  • 38566, conf, Hunt, Halliday 145-93-15-22H 5, Lake Ilo, no production data,
  • 36106, conf, CLR, Gordon Federal 2-5H1, Haystack Butte, first production, 11/21; t--; cum 110K 3/22;
  • 35412, conf, Crescent Point, CPEUSC Austin 3-17-20-158N-99W-MBH, Ellisville, no production data,

Tuesday, May 10, 2022: 29 for the month, 94 for the quarter, 254 for the year

  • 38565, conf, Hunt, Halliday 145-93-15-22H 4, Lake Ilo, no production data,

Monday, May 9, 2022: 28 for the month, 93 for the quarter, 253 for the year

  • 38360, drl-->F/A, CLR, Springfield FIU 10-8H1, Brooklyn, t--; cum 100K 10/22;
  • 38239, drl, Ovintiv, Kramer 150-97-18-19-11HLW, Siverson, no production data ,
  • 37702, loc/A, Whiting, Lacey 43-2H, Sanish, first production, 12/21; t--; cum 84K 3/22;

Sunday, May 8, 2022: 25 for the month, 90 for the quarter, 250 for the year

  • 38240, drl/A, Ovintiv, Kramer 150-97-18-19-1HLW, Siverston, no production data, t--; cum 207K 2/23;
  • 34236, loc/A, Oasis, Borden Federal 5300 34-36 6BX, Camp, first production, 11/21; t--; cum 129K 3/22;
Saturday, May 7, 2022: 23 for the month, 88 for the quarter, 248 for  the year
  • 38361, drl, CLR, Springfield FIU 9-8H, Brooklyn, no production data,
  • 38241, drl, Ovintiv, Kramer 150-97-18-19-12H, Siverston, no production data,
  • 34235, drl/A, Oasis, Borden Federal 5300 34-36 7B, Willow Creek, first production, 11/21; t--; cum 167K 3/22;

Friday, May 6, 2022: 20 for the month, 85 for the quarter, 245 for the year

  • 38362, drl,  CLR, Springfield FIU 8-8H1, Brooklyn, no production data,
  • 38310, F/A, Hess, EN-Zunich-156-94-3328H-9, Manitou, first production, 11/21; t--; cum 129K 3/22;
  • 34336, drl/A, Oasis, Borden Federal 5300 14-36 9B, Willow Creek, first production, 11/21; t--; cum 137K 3/21;

Thursday, May 5, 2022: 17 for the month, 82 for the quarter, 242 for the year

  • 38242, drl, Ovintiv, Kramer 15-97-18-19-12H, Siverston, no production data,
  • 37845, loc/A, Hess, EN-Zunich-156-94-3328H-8, Manitou, nice well, first production, 11/22; t--; cum 122K 3/22;
  • 34234, drl/A, Oasis, Borden Federal 5300 34-36 8B, Willow Creek, nice well, first production, 11/21; t--; cum 164K 3/22;
  • 30259, loc/drl, Hess, EN-Madisyn-LEE-154-94-0705H-1, Alkali Creek, no production data,

Wednesday, May 4, 2022: 13 for the month, 78 for the quarter, 238 for the year

  • 38363, conf, CLR, Springfield FIU 7-8H, Brooklyn, no production data,
  • 38243, drl, Ovintiv, Kramer 150-97-18-19-2H, Siverston, no production data,
  • 37728, loc/A, Enerplus, Seal 151-94-33D-28H, Antelope-Sanish, first production, 11/21; t--; cum 113K 3/22; cum 229K 10/22;
Tuesday, May 3, 2022: 10 for the month, 75 for the quarter, 235 for the year
  • 37668, loc/A, Whiting, Lacey 14-3-2XH, Sanish, first production, 11/21; t--; cum 106K 3/22;
  • 30260, loc/drl, Hess, EN-Madisyn-LE-154-94-0705H-2, Alkali Creek, no production data,

Monday, May 2, 2022: 8 for the month, 73 for the quarter, 233 for the year

  • 37727, loc/A, Enerplus, Otter 151-94-33D-28H, Antelope-Sanish, nice well; first production, 11/21; t--; cum 94K 3/22;
  • 37599, drl/A, Whiting, Littlefield 41-2HU, Sanish, nice well, first production, 11/21; t--; cum 128K 3/22;
  • 30261, loc/drl, Hess, EN-Madisyn-LE-154-94-0705H-3, Alkali Creek, no production data,
Sunday, May 1, 2022: 5 for the month, 70 for the quarter, 230 for the year
  • 38135, drl, CLR, Flint Chips Federal 9-5H1, Cedar Coulee, no production data,
  • 37915, drl/A, Oasis, Fraser Federal 5300 11-35 4BR, Willow Creek, nice well, first production, --; t--; cum 108K 3/22;
  • 37477, loc/A, Liberty Resources, McGinnity E 159-95-31-30-1MBH, Northwest McGregor, nice well, first production, 11/21; t--; cum 110K 3/22;
  • 36104, loc/A, CLR, Gordon Federal 4-5H1, nice well, first production, 11/21; t-- cum 137K 3/22;
  • 30262, loc/drl, Hess, EN-Madisyn-LE-154-94-0705H-4, Alkali Creek, no production data,
Saturday, April 30, 2022: 65 for the month, 65 for the quarter, 225 for the year
  • 38136, conf, CLR, Dennis 9-8H1, Cedar Coulee, no production data,
  • 37914, conf, Oasis, Fraser Federal 5300 11-35 3BR, Willow Creek, big well, first production, 10/21; t--; cum 140K 2/22;
  • 37726, conf, Enerplus, Otter 151-94-33D-28H, Antelope-Sanish, big well; first production, 11/21; t--; cum 150K 2/22;
  • 36523, conf, Hess, BB-State A-151-95-1615H-4, Blue Buttes, big well, first production, 10/21; t--; cum 110K 2/22;

Friday, April 29, 2022: 61 for the month, 61 for the quarter, 220 for the year

  • 38137, conf, CLR, Flint Chips Federal 10-5H, Cedar Coulee, no production data,
  • 37855, conf, Whiting, Lacey 43-2-2XH, Sanish, producing, a nice well,
  • 37703, conf, Whiting, Lacey 43-2XH, Sanish, producing, a nice well,
  • 37495, conf, True Oil, Northern State 31-36, North Branch, no production data,
  • 36522, conf, Hess, BB-State A-151-95-1615H-5, Blue Buttes, a very nice well,
  • 36107, conf, CLR, Gordon Federal 1-5H, Haystack Butte, a nice well;

Thursday, April 28, 2022: 55 for the month, 55 for the quarter, 214 for the yearyear

  • 38138, conf, CLR, Dennis FIU 10-8H, Cedar Coulee, no production data;
  • 37725, conf, Enerplus, Marten 151-94-33C-28H, Antelope-Sanish, another nice well;

Wednesday, April April 27, 2022: 53 for the month, 53 for the quarter, 212 for the year

  • 38139, conf, CLR, Dennis FIU 11-8H1, Cedar Coulee, no production data,
  • 37723, conf, Enerplus, Lynx 151-94-33C-28H, Antelope, very nice well, first production, 11/21; t--; cum 162K 2/22;
  • 35561, conf, Liberty Resources, McGinnit E 159-95-31-30-2MBH, Northwest McGregor, nice well; first production, 11/21; t--; cum 98K 2/22;

Tuesday, April 26, 2022: 50 for the month, 50 for the quarter, 209 for the year

  • 38140, conf, CLR, Dennis FIU 12-8H, Cedar Coulee, no production data,
  • 34135, conf, Oasis, Fraser Federal 5300 32-35 6BX, Camp, first production, 10/21; t--; cum 90K 2/22;

Monday, April 25, 2022: 48 for the month, 48 for the quarter, 207 for the year

  • None.

Sunday, April 24, 2022: 48 for the month, 48 for the quarter, 207 for the year

  • 37916, conf-->drl/A, Oasis, Fraser Federal 5300 32-35 5BR, Willow Creek, first production, 10/21; t--; cum 139K 2/22;
Saturday, April 23, 2022: 47 for the month, 47 for the quarter, 206 for the year
  • 38500, conf, CLR, Whitman FIU 6-34H2, Oakdale, no production data,
  • 37663, conf-->loc/A, Whiting, Lacey 12-1-3H, Sanish, first production; t--; cum 90K 2/22;
  • 36521, conf-->PNC-->A, Hess, BB-State A-151-95-1615H-1, Blue Buttes, first production, 10/21; t--; cum 121K 2/22;

Friday, April 22, 2022: 44 for the month, 44 for the quarter, 203 for the year

  • 38499, conf, CLR, Whitman FIU 5-34H, Oakdale, no production,
  • 38458, conf, Slawson, Machete Federal 1 SLH, Big Bend, no production;
  • 38455, conf, Slawson, Lightning Federal 5-24-13TFH, Big Bend, no production;
  • 37724, conf, Enerplus, Beaver 151-94-33C-28H, Antelope-Sanish, big well, first production, 11/21; t--; cum 138K 2/22;
  • 37722, conf, Enerplus, Sable 151-94-33C-28H, Antelope-Sanish, big well, first production, 11/21; t--; cum 152K 2/22;
  • 37721, loc/A, Enerplus, Ermine 151-94-33C_28H, Antelope-Sanish, big well, first production, 11/21; t--; cum 139K 2/22;
  • 37011, conf, CLR, LCU Foster Federal 12-28HSL1, Long Creek, no production,

Thursday, April 21, 2022: 37 for the month, 37 for the quarter, 196 for the year

  • 38457, conf, Slawson, Cougar Federal 1 SLH, Big Bend, no production;
  • 38454, conf, Slawson, Rainmaker Federal 5-25-36TFH, Big Bend, no production;
  • 36520, PNC/A, Hess, BB-State A-LS-151-95-1615H-1, Blue Buttes, big well, first production, 10/21; t--; cum 133K 2/22;

Wednesday, April 20, 2022: 34 for the month, 34 for the quarter, 193 for the year

  • None.

Tuesday, April 19, 2022: 34 for the month, 34 for the quarter, 193 for the year

  • None.

Monday, April 18, 2022: 34 for the month, 34 for the quarter, 193 for the year

  • 38533, drl, CLR, Whitman FIU 13-34HSL1, Oakdale, no production data,
  • 37013, drl, CLR, LCU Ralph 4-27H, Long Creek, no production data,

Sunday, April 17, 2022: 32 for the month, 32 for the quarter, 191 for the year

  • 38532, drl, CLR, Whitman FIU 12-34H2, Oakdale, no production data,
  • 38493, conf, Sinclair, Grasslands Federal 14-15-1H, Lone Butte, first production, 1/22; t--; cum 41K in 39 days;
Saturday, April 16, 2022: 30 for the month, 30 for the quarter, 189 for the year
  • 38534, drl, Hunt, Quill 145-93-10-3H 3, Lake Ilo, no production data,
  • 37662, conf, Whiting, Lacey 12-1-2H, Sanish, first production, 11/21; t--; cum 102K 2/22;

Friday, April 15, 2022: 28 for the month, 28 for the quarter, 187 for the year

  • 38535, conf, Hunt, Halliday 145-93-15-22H 3, Lake Ilo, no production data,
  • 34222, conf, Oasis, Cliiff 5300 43-35 4B, Willow Creek, producing, a big well;

Thursday, April 14, 2022: 26 for the month, 26 for the quarter, 185 for the year

  • 37266, conf, Oasis, Cliff 5300 43-35 5B, Willow Creek,

Wednesday, April 13, 2022: 25 for the month, 25 for the quarter, 184 for the year

  • None.

Tuesday, April 12, 2022: 25 for the month, 25 for the quarter, 184 for the year

  • 38513, conf, CLR, Thorp Federal 3-28H1, Little Knife, no production data,
  • ***38008, drl/A, Oasis, Cliff 5300 43-35 6B, Willow Creek, t--; cum 383K 1/23;

Monday, April 11, 2022: 23 for the month, 23 for the quarter, 182 for the year

  • 38514, conf, CLR, Thorp Federal 4-28H, Little Knife, no production data,
  • 37014, loc/drl, CLR, LCU Ralph 3-27H1, Long Creek, t--; cum --;
  • ***36105, loc/A, CLR, Gordon Federal 3-5H, Haystack Butte, t--; cum 246K 1/23;

Sunday, April 10, 2022: 20 for the month, 20 for the quarter, 179 for the year

  • 38553, F/A, Crescent Point, CPEUSC Pankake 6-6-7-157N-99W-MBH, Dublin, t--; cum 101K 1/23;
Saturday, April 9, 2022: 19 for the month; 19 for the quarter, 178 for the year
  • 38554, F/A, Crescent Point, CPEUSC Pankake 5-6-7-157N-99W-MBH, Dublin, t--; cum 125K 1/23;
  • 38515, drl/A, CLR, Thorp Federal 5-28H1, Little Knife, t--; cum --; off line;
  • ***37712, loc/A, Hess, EN-Johnson A-LE-155-94-2932H-1, Alkali Creek, t--; cum 216K 1/23;

Friday, April 8, 2022: 16 for the month; 16 for the quarter, 175 for the year

  • 38556, F/A, Crescent Point, CPEUSC Pankake 3-6-7-157N-99W-MBH, Dublin, t--; cum 141K 1/23;
  • 38555, F/A, Crescent Point, CPEUSC Pankake 4-6-7-157N-99W-MBH, Dublin, t--; cum 140K 1/23;
  • 38516, F/IA, CLR, Thorp Federal 6-28H, Little Knife, t--; cum 201K 1/22; off line;

Thursday, April 7, 2022: 13 for the month, 13 for the quarter, 172 for the year

  • 38557, F/A, Crescent Point, CPEUSC Pankake 2-6-7-157N-99W-MBH-LL, Dublin, t--; cum 153K 1/23;
  • ***36103, loc/A, CLR, Gordon Federal 5-5H, Haystack Butte, t--; cum 281K 1/23;

Wednesday, April 6, 2022: 11 for the month, 11 for the quarter, 170 for the year

  • 37601, conf-->loc/A, Whiting, Littlefield 41-2H, Sanish, first production, 11/21; t--; cum 189K 1/23;

Tuesday, April 5, 2022: 10 for the month, 10 for the quarter, 169 for the year

  • 38517,  drl/IA, CLR, Thorp Federal 7-28H1, Little Knife, t--; cum 133K 1/23;
  • ***36102, loc/A, CLR, Gordon Federal 6-5H1, Haystack Butte, t--; cum 233K 1/23;
  • ****36101, loc/A, CLR, Gordon Federal 7-5H, Haystack Butte, t--; cum 233K 1/23;

Monday, April 4, 2022: 7 for the month, 7 for the quarter, 166 for the year

  • 38518,  drl/A, CLR, Thorp Federal 8-28H, Little Knife, t--; cum 19K 1/23;
  • 37015,  loc/drl, CLR, LCU Ralph 2-27H, Long Creek, t--; cum --;

Sunday, April 3, 2022: 5 for the month, 5 for the quarter, 164 for the year

  • 38548,  drl/A, Ovintiv, Wisness State 152-96-16-21-6H, Westberg, t--; cum 44K 2/23;
  • 38526,  drl/IA, CLR, Thorp Federal 9-28HSL1, Little Knife, t--; cum 5K 1/23;
Saturday, April 2, 2022: 3 for the month, 3 for the quarter, 162 for the year
  • 38545,  drl/A, Ovintiv, Wisness State 152-96-16-21-14H, Westberg, t--; cum 183K 1/23;

Friday, April 1, 2022: 2 for the month, 2 for the quarter, 161 for the year

  • 38546,  drl/A, Ovintiv, Wisness State 152-96-16-21-5H, Westberg, t--; cum 196K 1/23;
  • ***36100, PNC/A, CLR, Gordon Federal 8-5H1, Haystack Butte, first production 10/21; nice well; t--; cum 190K 1/23;

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Data for 3Q22: 3Q22

Data for 2Q22: This Page

Data for 2Q22: 2Q22
Data for 1Q22: 1Q22

Data for 4Q21: 4Q21
Data for 3Q21: 3Q21
Data for 2Q21: 2Q21
Data for 1Q21:  1Q21

Data for 4Q20: 4Q20
Data for 3Q20: 3Q20
Data for 2Q20: 2Q20
Data for 1Q20: 1Q20

Data for 4Q19: 4Q19
Data for 3Q19:  3Q19
Data for 2Q19: 2Q19
Data for 1Q19: 1Q19
Data for 4Q18: 4Q18
Data for 3Q18: 3Q18
Data for 2Q18: 2Q18
Data for 1Q18: 1Q18
Data for 4Q17: 4Q17
Data for 3Q17: 3Q17
Data for 4Q16: 4Q16
Data for 3Q16: 3Q16
Data for 2Q16: 2Q16
Data for 1Q16: 1Q16
Data for 4Q15: 4Q15
Data for 3Q15: 3Q15
Data for 2Q15: 2Q15
Data for 1Q15: 1Q15
Data for 4Q14: 4Q14
Data for 3Q14: 3Q14
Data for 2Q14: 2Q14
Data for 1Q14: 1Q14
Data for 4Q13: 4Q13
Data for 3Q13: 3Q13
Data for 2Q13: 2Q13
Data for 1Q13: 1Q13
Data for 4Q12: 4Q12
Data for 3Q12: 3Q12
Data for 2Q12: 2Q12
  Data for 1Q12: 1Q12   
Data for 4Q11: 4Q11 
Data for 3Q11: 3Q11 
Data for 2Q11: 2Q11 
 Data for 1Q11: 1Q11  
 Data for 2H10: 2H10 
Through 1H10: 1H10