Hi,

Here's an example. Some wells do not have any data while others show when the well was flared.
Some show gas units found at different strata depth.
I've seen the last numbers in the latteral much higher at 2095u while many just list 1000u in latteral.
When viewing this information on the ODNR site do these numbers show if one well is better then the other?
It appears I cannot copy the page, I have to link the whole document.
The information I'm talking about starts on page 2.
http://www.dnr.state.oh.us/mineral/oil/MRMImages/18/1/234396.pdf

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Kathleen,

The units referred to on the completion report are qualitative in nature.  As the units go up the gas concentration is higher.   In mud drilled wells, units can be dependent on things such as drilling rate, formation quality, or crossing a fracture.  They are a first indicator of pay quality but not a final indicator of well production capability.  In this case, the lateral average of >1000u doesn't tell you much more than the lateral is in the pay and it's higher than other values from the vertical section.

Thanks. That's interesting.
I've never seen these reports placed on this site.
Just so people know, this type of report is on every well if they have a completion report.

Kathleen -

The first thing that I noticed was the word "Preliminary" handwritten at the top of the page. I'd guess that this well was drilled but has not yet been fraced, flared or put into production ready status. As Sylvester correctly indicates, units of gas recorded by the mud loggers are qualitative, and probably measured the methane component only. If the gas phase were further broken down to measure ethane, propane, butanes and heavier phases, a presentation of the phases by depth can sometimes indicate if the hole is in the wet gas or oil window.

The report gives surface coordinates, a legal description of the well pad, and summarizes the casing/cementing used during well construction. It also gives a basic description of the drilling fluid, which was a water based gelled mud with shale chemical inhibitor and ground up walnut hulls (nut plug) to reduce or prevent mud seepage losses while drilling. Gas is much less soluble in water based drilling fluid than it is in oil based fluids; this supports Sylvester's comment about qualitative vs quantitative readings,

Brian 

Hi Brian,

That well was fracked before the stamp date and was done right about the time it was dated by the analyst. To my knowledge it was never flared.
Something else I don't understand, is why do some drillers offer up this info why others do not?
Gulfport so far from my research does not while CHK does. So far I've only looked at the Boy Scout wells, Wagner and I think Kinsley. The rest I've looked up,are CHK wells and they all,have this info.
I'm also noticing some wells have a lot more information submitted to the ODNR then others.

Kathleen-

The regulators all have a minimum amount of required data for each completion form; some operators provide the minimum data, some don't. I've seen the civil servants in the regulatory agency reject these forms until their requirements were met.

In my last job, I reviewed and quality controlled these forms until they were ready to submit. We added some more information, including a simple wellbore schematic, to make the form even more useful.

Brian 

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