http://www.ohio.com/blogs/drilling/ohio-utica-shale-1.291290/ohio-s...
The data appears to show that the Utica shale will be dominated by natural gas more than oil. The oil volumes were lower than had been projected, and that’s likely a disappointment to analysts and energy companies.
"It’s shaping up largely as a natural-gas play," said Tom Stewart, executive vice president of the Ohio Oil and Gas Association. "I’m not disappointed or discouraged by the numbers. … But this is a process that takes time to develop."
It is possible that large quantities of oil may still be found in sections of the Utica shale in Ohio, he said.
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Your math matches mine except I am at 20% and in Tuscarawas county.
20 to 30 million barrels in place. That does not mean recoverable. Very important distinction.
Increases in recovery techniques is not something that can be extrapolated. You have to make assessments based on the information you have at the time.
Let's take EVEP at their word and call it 30 million per section. Low end of recoverable is ~1.2%. High end is 5% which absolutely nobody thinks is safe to estimate. Let's call it 3%. 900,000 bbls, give or take. On 160 acre spacing you get four wells into that section. Let's say your net cost is $8,000,000 per well. You'd be looking at a long term profit of ~$13,000,000 per section. That's pretty good, especially if you could get to a scenario where well costs (and transportation costs) are controlled.
What would the bbls/acre foot be? What thickness is EVEP using?
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