Tuesday, March 17, 2009

America's Biggest Gas Play Producing Good Flatulence


A consequence of the cheap natural gas environment is reduced drilling. Welcome to the "boom-bust" cycle. However, America's "king of natural gas fields" is still attracting the locusts of the gas industry. See below and click here for the article...
Some natural gas companies have decided to scale back drilling to ride out the economic storm.

However, well results from the Haynesville Shale natural gas deposit have some of the major players in the shale, like Petrohawk Energy Corp. and Chesapeake Energy, investing more money in the play.

"We've scaled back our overall budget," said Joan Dunlap, vice president of investor relations for Petrohawk, "but not in the Haynesville."

Of Petrohawk's approximately $1 billion budget for 2009, between $700 million and $800 million is dedicated to the Haynesville Shale natural gas deposit.
There's a good reason for that investment.

According to the latest data from the Louisiana Department of Natural Resources, the top producing well for the month of December belongs to Petrohawk. The well, in Red River Parish, produced about 713.4 million cubic feet of natural gas that month. That translates to about 23 million cubic feet of natural gas per day.

It's not the only well producing extraordinary numbers.

There are 266 wells permitted to drill in the Haynesville Shale. Forty-four of them are active and producing, according to data from Natural Resources.

Of those 44, eight produced from 100 million to more than 700 million cubic feet of natural gas in December.
[...]
A good well in those fields could produce 2 million to 3 million cubic feet of natural gas a day, Lasseigne said.

"Obviously, the shale wells are up to 10 times better than the typical wells drilled over the last five or six years," he said. "These are phenomenal wells. Even the major players are pleasantly surprised by the quality of these wells."

Even with the current low price of natural gas, which was trading for about $3.85 per mcf Monday, companies still are able to turn a profit.
Check this map for other shale gas plays. It's from 2005 and needs to be updated, especially the Haynesville blot.
- Brewskie

6 comments:

  1. Greating effing posts, one after the other. I was going to start a blog, but you are doing it better anyway. Yeah, oil in Cuba. They can also grow palm oil there. Cuba might have a great future. --B Cole

    ReplyDelete
  2. B. Cole,

    Don't let my work stop you from spreading the word. The more people who are informed, the better. The future is bright.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Really, you do a great job, better than I could.
    Sometimes, it is better to just be a fan. B Cole

    ReplyDelete
  4. B Cole,

    Do whatever you feel like. If you decide to do a blog, just do it at your pace: one or several posts a day, every several days or whatever you feel like. Some good bloggers only post once every week or two; it's not the number of postings, but the quality of the information that counts.

    Good to have you along.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I agree with Benny, very nice blog with solid updates. Your blog has a lot of meaningful info....keep it up.

    ReplyDelete
  6. AndrewRyan,

    Thank you and keep shittin' on those doomers, they deserve every bit of it. The Oil Drum had several doozies today; I think I'll take a dump on them...

    ReplyDelete