See RRC's October 29, 2013 Presentation that shows the GIP (Gas In Place) for the Utica/Point Pleasant, Upper Devonian and Marcellus Shales and all 3 combined equaling 250-300 Bcf/sq mile! :))
http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=101196&p=irol-prese...
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Doesn't look real promising for Beaver County just yet. All dry gas in the northern part. Prices are gonna have to go up for them to pick up again, I'm afraid.
Todd,
Try 30% EUR
Alan W. Farquharson - Senior Vice President for Reservoir Engineering and Economics
For the resource potential that we're out, excluding the tighter spacing, we are probably in the 25% to 35% range, probably in the low-30s to the 35%. Then, as we added in the infill potential, we think that gets us up into the low- to mid-40s.
From:
http://seekingalpha.com/article/1789792-range-resources-management-...
I thought it was 15% until I read Transcript for 3qtr released today.
Jason,
That could be why maps didn't come out until now. Notice that Dec 31 2013 date on 'em
oops, date on those GIP maps is Dec 2012 not 2013.
Those numbers are going higher. As recent as June 2013 RRC had 8.7 Bcfe well numbers, as of July that's changed to 12.3 Bcfe. They have good data as far as Marcellus and UD now. Probably will update GIP map numbers (fine tune) in December for those two.
Now on that Utica/PP I expect those to change big time. But not for at least 2-3 years. Not even drilling new test well until 2014 sometime. It's all a HBP and infrastructure build now.
Marcellus is going to pay for all this and at a profit to boot. In 3-5 years they'll be able to produce dry gas from Utica/PP and dry areas, along with wet gas from UD. Only producing enough liquids to get best pricing. No more glut of liquids.
Now I wonder how much it would cost to expand these Cryogenic deethanizer's into a full blown LNG plant?
Tim,
My estimates were conservative for the Utica only to help everyone's perspective as to the magnitude of the gas in place. I believe Mr. Farquharson's comments are results of Marcellus production. However, hopefully, the higher extraction will apply to the Utica as well in the present and near future. In addition, of course, the percentages will continue to increase as technology advances! Also, there are most likely more economically producible shale reservoirs in the future.
Tim,
From your statement:
"Notice that Dec 31 2013 date on 'em"...
Here's the copy and paste from the bottom of the GIS slides:
"Note: Townships where Range holds ~3,000 or more acres (as of 12/31/2012), and estimated as prospective, are highlighted. GIP – Range estimates."
Hence, their statement just refers to Township acreage information and not GIS information. Hopefully, the GIS information is more up to date!
Guess I need to learn to read these reports better. I got all sad when I read it. Thanks for the replies.
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