I heard that ODNR is working on new mapping that moves the wet gas boundary to the eastern 1/3 of Belmont county. The western 2/3 of the county will show as definitely in the wet gas area.
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Permalink Reply by LemmaB on April 5, 2012 at 3:15pm This is great. Now I can see for certain on which side of the "guesstimate" lean condensate line my property falls. Thanks for all your work!
Permalink Reply by Philip Brutz on April 5, 2012 at 3:28pm You are right it is a "guesstimate".
Permalink Reply by Bernie Horabik on April 6, 2012 at 1:44pm I have 100 acres towards the Ohio River. The maps all show dry gas for sure
in the Utica all the way down through Monroe! Why are people in Monroe getting
offer prices North of $5000 an acre if its all dry gas? Is the Marcellus a possibility for
wet gas? There must be some reason companies are still paying big bucks in those areas
because in Pa I leased in January for $1500 becuase the property was in a dry gas area!
I can't understand? If its truly dry gas in Eastern Monroe then I can't understand why
operators are paying so much because in Pa I was shot down because the property was
sitting in a dry gas area.
Permalink Reply by Dan on April 6, 2012 at 2:17pm Hasn't the drilling target been another layer other than the Utica?
Permalink Reply by Philip Brutz on April 6, 2012 at 2:27pm Here is the latest Gulfport Investor presentation that explains the target layers.
http://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/file/get/35533602?profile...
Permalink Reply by Bob on April 6, 2012 at 2:37pm Bernie, Ive heard that the wells at Ormet, Longridge and the whiticer well in Graysville all have shown fair amounts of wet gas and I believe all three are Marcellus wells but transmissions lines are still being laid so It will problely be awhile befor they go on line to get a true reading. Did you lease both the marcellus and utica at your PA properties. Theres also alot of dought about the new ODNR maps.
Permalink Reply by Finnbear on April 6, 2012 at 3:36pm I have heard from multiple sources in the industry that the Whitacre well in Graysville is only producing dry gas.
Permalink Reply by Finnbear on April 10, 2012 at 5:44am I'm beginning to believe that everyone connected to the oil and gas industry will lie repeatedly to protect their interests. There is far more at stake here than we landowners can fathom.
AGREED.
Permalink Reply by Dan on April 22, 2012 at 4:29pm The transfer facility outside of Reader WV has train and tracter preasurized tankers lined up to load or unload and preasurized tanker truck convoys are traveling thru Wheeling from Rt 88 from Marshall County. Hopefully carrying wet.
Permalink Reply by Philip Brutz on April 19, 2012 at 5:26am Anadarko Provides Utica Update
HOUSTON, TX, Apr 19, 2012 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) --Anadarko Petroleum Corporation (NYSE: APC) today provided an update on its drilling program in the Utica Shale play in eastern Ohio after filing the required production history with Ohio Department of Natural Resources. To date, the company has drilled and is producing from three wells in the Utica Shale, the most recent of which has delivered more than 9,500 barrels of light-gravity crude oil during its first 20 days on line.
"Though it is very early in our exploration program, the strong initial results are encouraging," said Bob Daniels, Anadarko Sr. Vice President, Worldwide Exploration. "We expect to begin flowing back our fourth Utica exploration well in the next few days and are currently drilling our fifth exploration well in the play. We plan to continue an active drilling program throughout the year, as we evaluate the liquids-rich potential of our 390,000-acre (gross) position in the Utica Shale."
Anadarko's Brookfield A-3H well in Noble County has produced approximately 9,500 barrels of oil and approximately 12 million cubic feet (MMcf) of high-BTU (British thermal units) natural gas during its first 20 days on line. The Spencer A-1H and Spencer A-5H wells, located in Guernsey County, have cumulatively produced a combined 20,000 barrels of light-gravity crude oil and 37 MMcf of liquids-rich natural gas in just under two months on line. All three horizontal wells were drilled to a vertical depth of approximately 6,500 feet and a lateral length of about 5,000 feet with 16- to 19-stage completions.
Permalink Reply by BrianH on June 7, 2012 at 3:44pm
Jeff replied to Petroleum Attorney 1976's discussion 'FYI- Mineral Owners in the State of Ohio (Utica Shale area's)'
dean alan wohnhas replied to John W. Howard, CPL's discussion 'the Marcellus Shale - Its History and Importance to Both Appalachia and America'
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