I have excerpted pdf files from the original Range 10/30/13 presentation using the "print to PDF" selection under the Print command and "printing" the individual pages.
I have included the three zones - Marcellus, Utica, and Upper Devonian (Burkett) and a map of Butler County.
I thought that this would be of interest to the Butler County participants here.
If you want to have all of the files open at the same time, right click the pdf files and save them all together. Then, open them all from that location.
I attached two images so that you can see where I'm going. Use the jpg files for higher resolution.
Phil
Tags:
Phil.....Thanks for all of the information.......I am having trouble following your example above. Could you give an actual (made up ) example.....maybe I could understand the equation better then.....many thanks in advance, ....Gary
Todd,
If a unit is done “correctly” that is Number of wells = Unit size (acres)/80 acres and no one is stealing from your unit and your unit is not stealing from someone else's unit then unit size does not matter. However, in practice, strange unit formations and well placements can certainly affect individual land owners inside AND outside the unit.
That is based on a typical well draining 80 acres. Longer laterals do not help the individual land owner because the unit grows in proportion to the length of the wells. The trend to closer spacings does seem to help the landowner as more gas/acre can be extracted.
The Rex and Range multipliers come directly from the presentations. For example in the most recent Range presentation November 18, 2013 page 42. The GIP numbers would represent wellhead Mcf regardless of the composition. So this graph shows the upside from wellhead Mcf for a typical Marcellus Wet well in the Range lease-hold area. Rex’s wells have very little condensate and less NGLs (and less total volume).
Phil
Todd,
The time placement of wells would certainly matter. I'm in that situation right now. I'm 80 acres in a 624 acre unit with two producing Marcellus Wet wells. So the cash flow to each landowner is not what It would be if all 7 or perhaps 8 wells that the acreage could handle had been drilled at the same time. But I'm in no hurry, the only chance for ethane recovery is years away.
Phil
Todd,
I wish you an expedited pipeline!
The wells went on line early October. The first check and report should come near the end of this month. I can report then.
So CHK drilled a UD (burkett? Rhinestreet?) well on your unit? Have they talked about other shales? How many UD wells would they put on your unit?
My main computer died - I may be without some resources for a day or two.
Keep us updated!
Regards,
Phil
Todd,
UD, Marcellus, Utica...I wish you many facies!
This is Forward township, Butler County, Pa. I signed with Phillips in 2008 and then they were bought by XTO. So now I'm XTO. That is good because they came in here and built their own cryogenic plant, pipelines, compressors etc. In fact, the compressor is running on this branch of the gathering system. I was told that they literally want to "suck" these wet wells, otherwise the subcomponents might fractionate in the vertical portion of the well.
XTO being a part of Exxon has no reason to tout their results from this tiny patch that they occupy in Butler County, PA so things like IP are not published if indeed they even measure such things. Anyway, the need to boost stock prices makes me somewhat suspicious of other companies numbers.
My home computer is going to the repair center today - power supply I think. No "crash" just would not turn on.
Phil
Gary,
Take a location where Range says the Marcellus has 100 billion cubic feet of dry Gas In Place per square mile. Since gas is priced in 1000 cubic feet quanties we want to divide that number by 1000 so we have 100 million thousand cubic feet per square mile. Assume that 30% of that can be extracted so there is 30 million thousand cubic feet/sq mile that can come to the surface. For $4.00 /thousand cubic feet of gas, that means there is $120 million dollars of extractable gas in a cubic mile. Most people have acreage (not mileage) so to convert that number to per acre we divide by 640 which yields $187,500.00 dollars per acre. If you have a 15% royalty then $28,125.00 per acre of that is yours if there are no deductions.
I assumed dry gas so there would be limited deductions.
For Range wet gas multiply by 1.8 but also multiply by 0.82 to account for about 18% deduction (compression, cryogenic, transportation etc) so:
Range customer = $41,512.50 per acre
and:
Rex customer = $34,593.75 per acre assuming the GIP in place for either scenario is 100 billion cubic feet per square mile.
Multiply those numbers by your acreage and there you are.
If you are in a stacked play area CONGRATULATIONS - keep calculating!
If you calculate these numbers from the EURs in the Range and Rex reports you get numbers as much as twice as high. I really don't know what to believe but I do think the calculation from GIP (above) is conservative.
Phil
Philip you da man! your mistaken post has graduated to "Featured Discussion" status. Congrats and thanks for some great info!
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