There is an article out today that mentions what I believe to be about buell well in harrison county.

 

"Take the example of what may be the most productive well in Ohio history. State Sen. Jimmy Stewart, R-Albany, said he heard a rural Harrison County well was pumping 15 million cubic feet of gas daily.

A spokeswoman for Chesapeake Energy, the Oklahoma-based owner, said the well in question is still being evaluated, and he couldn't confirm the numbers."

 

The link to article is http://www.thenews-messenger.com/article/20110423/NEWS01/104230305/...

 

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No, it depends on what they have leased around the original unit, and how the surface conditions allow access.

Surface Location = where the well pipe comes out of the ground - this is where the drilling rig starts the well.

Entry Point = where the well bore enters the target formation, this is generally somewhere along the curve that transitions the well from vertical to horizontal.

Target Point = the bottom of the well which is at the far end of the horizontal leg - this point is mapped on the surface but is actually thousands of feet below in the target formation

Assuming a 17% gross royalty how do you estimate what the per acre royalty is for this well?

Rough numbers would be dry gas ($4 per 1,000cf) would be worth $4,000 per million cubic feet and wet is roughly $75 barrel. So 9 million cf dry is 36k a day + 105k a day for the 1,400 barrel of wet for 180k a day total. Divide that by the 177 acres for 1,016 per acre production X your 17% would be a payout of $172 per acre per day or 30k per day for the whole lot. Again keep in mind that no one knows much about these published numbers. They were much lower when they announced earlier and then went way up for their wall street press release but regaurdless it is somewhere in between which is very good
So everyone who has acreage inside the unit makes $172.00 a day , per acre?
yes if those production rates hold up and you have 1 acre in this plot you would get 172 per day
And the Buell Well is pumping 15 million cubic feet a day?!?

last report is 9 million cubic feet of dry a day and 1,400 barrels of wet a day but those numbers will more than likely drop quick once they let it flow

$172/day/acre is only true if they can actually bring that much to market each day.  Maybe they will only be able to actually sell and market a portion of that amount, depends on demand and infrastructure.

Regardless, it is one heckuva good thing!

 

If the infrastructure cannot accept the full capacity of the well or the demand is not there for the products coming out of it, it will only serve to flatten the decline curve and give the royalty recipient a more even payment for a longer period of time.
true but they Ches already negotiated deal with local refinery to take wet gas via tanker until they get ample pipelines in. They will find a way to deal the liquids due to much higher margins but may slow dry gas down until ample pipelines and market can handle which is why there is such a buzz in our area right now, its all around the wet
Word on the street is that refinery does not have the capacity to handle much more than it is now.

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