Cana Woodford Shale (AKA Anadarko Woodford) - Oil & Gas Discussion archives

oops, another sign of old age!

Continental Resources (CLR) issued an operational update on the company’s Woodford Shale development program for the third quarter of 2011. The company disclosed results on eight wells recently completed on its leasehold.

MMcfpd - million cubic feet of natural gas per day

Bopd - Barrels of oil per day

Larry go back to pages 5 and 6 on this comment wall and we discussed payments in Okla. and a copy of the law is included in our discussion’

I talked to CR today and they sold the first oil on our well in Dewey County on July 2nd. They said it would take 5-10 months before we were issued the first check. I thought that in Oklahoma they had only 6 months to pay. Does anyone know?

Thanks for remining me where I had read that. I will forward to my sisters who were also wondering. I guess I can consider it a savings account. Ha

We have minerals in the Saratoga in Dewey County. My understanding was six months as well. I’ll ask my husband - he used to be an oil and gas attorney in Oklahoma before we moved to Tennessee.

He said that by law it is six months - but that doesn’t mean they will.

Thanks Linda. I thought it was 6 months. Of course they said they pay interest but at todays rates that would not be much. Oh well first check should be a good one. Larry

Just wondering if anyone knows what mineral rights in Logan county are leasing for?

Leon do you have a specific location? Section, township and range would help narrow it down.

Thanks Michael. Sect 2 & 11, t-16, r-3. Sect 12, t-16, r-2.

Does anyone have better/detailed info on 34/35 11N9W. CD 201101926 is all I have. Cimarex was initial, then Continental protested and Cimarex withdrew.

sorry it is north and west

Here are some comments from Devon about their third quarter.

Third-quarter production from the Cana-Woodford Shale increased 71 percent compared to the year-ago quarter. Net production averaged a record 200 million cubic feet of natural gas equivalent per day in the quarter, including 8,100 barrels per day of liquids. The company’s Cana-Woodford gas processing facility remains on schedule to be fully operational in the fourth quarter.

KEY OPERATING STATISTICS BY REGION

    Quarter Ended September 30, 2011  

                 Avg. Prod        Operated Rigs       Gross Wells    

                     (MBOED)      Sept 30, 2011        Drilled

Barnett Shale 216.3 12 78

Canadian Oilsands 35.6 1 7

Cana-Woodford Shale 33.3 17 58

Granite Wash 16.4 4 18

Gulf Coast / East Tx 69.5 5 19

Lloydminster 40.0 4 79

Permian Basin 49.9 19 65

Rocky Mountains 64.5 1 26

Other 135.3 7 27

       Total                660.8            70               377

Leon, Nothing yet in your sections. I did see a Pooling Application for Osage Exp. in 5-16n/3w won’t know lease terms until pooling order final. Final Orders: sec1-19n/4w $250/ac. 3/16 royality, sec4-19n/3w $300/ac

3/16 royality.

Looks like Devon has their gas plant back online.

Moving now to the Cana Woodford Shale in Western Oklahoma. Reconstruction of our Cana gas processing plant is now complete. We began processing gas in late October and are currently running about 138 million cubic feet per day through the facility. Ramp-up will continue over the next several weeks as we expect to reach the plant’s [indiscernible] capacity of 200 million a day in September.

We have also started work on a planned expansion at Cana. This will increase the capacity of the Cana plant to 350 million a day with liquids extraction capacity of more than 30,000 barrels per day. The expansion allows us to keep pace with our growing Cana Woodford Shale volumes and roughly doubles our liquids extraction capacity in Cana. We expect the increase in capacity to be operational in the fourth quarter of next year.

On the drilling front, we ended the quarter – the third quarter with 17 operated rigs running in the Cana, 6 rigs fewer than in the previous quarter. We have achieved drilling efficiencies that allow us to now maintain the pace of our Cana program with fewer rigs. Accordingly, we made the decision in third quarter to release 2 rigs. In addition, while awaiting the recommissioning of our Cana plant, we elected to sublease 4 additional rigs to another company for the remainder of the year. With the Cana plant coming back online, we are confident in achieving our year-end exit rate target of 275 million cubic feet equivalent per day, net to Devon’s interest.

In spite of the planned operation or interruption, excuse me, our third quarter net Cana production increased 6% over the second quarter to a record 200 million cubic feet equivalent per day including more than 8,100 barrels per day of liquids.

Leon, Sorry I didn’t get back to you. I assume your Township is north are ranges east or west?

Oklahoma Woodford

Third quarter 2011 production in the Anadarko Woodford was 7,164 Boepd, a 78 percent increase over production of 4,031 Boepd in the second quarter of 2011. The Company’s production was 1,377 Boepd in the third quarter of 2010. The Company participated in completing 31 gross (13.5 net) wells during the third quarter of 2011. Of these wells, 15 gross (10.3 net) were Company-operated completions.

Continental successfully completed and is flowing back the Lyle 1-30H (99% WI) in Grady County, with initial oil and gas production expected to start shortly. The Lyle is an offset to and confirmation test for the Lambakis 1-11H (98% WI). The Company expects to announce initial test production results on the Lyle 1-30H by year end.

The Lambakis 1-11H flowed 5.4 MMcfpd of natural gas and 160 Bopd in its initial one-day test period, as announced in August 2011. Continental projects it has an estimated ultimate recovery (EUR) of more than 8 Bcfe, or 1.33 million Boe, due to its high liquids production. The Lambakis is especially significant due to its location 25 miles south of previously known horizontal Woodford production.

The Company is preparing to spud the Tom’s 1-21XH (82% WI) in Blaine County, which will be the first multiple-unit spaced well drilled in Oklahoma. The horizontal section of the Tom’s well is planned to be twice the length of previous Anadarko Woodford wells drilled in the play. Continental expects longer laterals will have a significant, positive impact on well productivity and economics in the Anadarko Woodford. The Company expects to complete the Tom’s well in the first quarter of 2012.

Using 3-D seismic, Continental has already identified 48 potential multi-unit drilling opportunities in the play and continues to acquire 3-D seismic over additional prospective areas.

Third quarter production in the Arkoma Woodford was 4,099 Boepd, compared with 3,236 Boepd in the second quarter of 2011. The Company participated in completing three gross (1.6 net) wells in the Arkoma, including the Ward 1-33H (88% WI), which flowed at 4.7 MMcfpd in its initial test period.

Continental currently has 14 operated rigs in the Oklahoma Woodford, with 11 in the Northwest Cana portion of the Anadarko Woodford, two in Southeast Cana, and one in the Arkoma Woodford.

The Company has 330,540 net acres leased in the Oklahoma Woodford, including 275,605 net acres in the Anadarko portion of the play, where it continues to acquire acreage.

Anyone got any idea where the pond is being built? I found the below information online from a Sept 2 article.

Huge pond planned

Devon Energy Corp. is making plans to build a 500,000-barrel pond near Geary or Calumet to store produced water, which is water that comes out of the ground after wells are drilled or fractured.

Such large-scale water recycling is unprecedented in Oklahoma, so state regulators had to create a set of new rules for the Devon project.

Jim Heinze, operations engineering manager for Devon’s Mid-Continent area, said the company is looking to apply some of the lessons it learned in the Barnett Shale, a more mature basin in Texas.

He said typical storage ponds for produced water are 50,000 gallons or less, but a larger pond will allow Devon to serve multiple wells at the same time.

“We’re trying to reduce the impact that we have on the environment,” he said.

Devon spokesman Chip Minty said the company recognizes that water is a resource that must be preserved, so it pioneered efforts to conserve water in the Barnett Shale.

Devon saw the opportunity to do the same thing in 2008, he said, but it took time for the Oklahoma Corporation Commission to develop rules for what the company wanted to do.

Heinze said Devon will dig a pond that is almost as long as two football fields on each side. It will be about 10 feet deep, enough that rain won’t cause it to overflow.

Devon also will use a 60-mil liner to prevent produced water from leaking into the ground.

Heinze said Devon will use a pipeline system to move the water to and from the company’s wells, a move that will reduce truck traffic in its operating area.

One mile south of Highway 270 and Karns road. The Legal Description is the NW/4 of Section 13-13N-10W. That is what I was told anyway.