How many wells would a PA well pad have?
How many laterals does a single well have?
If a well pad diagram showed 6 laterals 1H, 2H, 3H etc. are they single or separate wells?
If these laterals are from a single well head, is production then measured as the sum of all laterals passing through the well head?
What would typical production be from a single average marcellus lateral? As an example, If it was 5, would 3 laterals all producing 5 separately equal 15 for the well production of that month?
Any answers appreciated.
Tags:
Farmhouse-- I'll take a stab at your questions:
#wells/pad 6
#laterals/well 1
Q, well pad diagram showed 6 laterals - single or separate? Ans. Separate
Production measured from one well with one lateral
Production per well average ~~ 5 Mmcf/d with one lateral
Also, this wiki page on pad drilling might help.
--TomPresently in PA one Operator has 16 wells on one pad. There is some talk of multiple laterals from a single well bore. This is a practice that has been done in Austin Chalk and over areas. There are
wells now being tested at much higher flow rates but the gas transmission system can't handle the
volume. Honestly PA this is going to be such a good thing for us. We need to keep our govt. to take care and be responsiblw witht the everance taxes that will come.
Cheers
That Wikimarcellus page has a serious piece of misinformation, or at least misleading information. It says, "Typically the land required for a well pad is rectangular--usually about one half mile wide by two miles long with the pad itself positioned in the center of the rectangle." In fact, the land area of one half by two miles is known as the spacing unit, unit, or pool. The majority of that area will remain undisturbed at the surface. The pad is the working surface area that must be cleared, leveled, and surfaced for the drilling rig, trucks, and other equipment needed to drill and complete the wells. Typically the pad is just a few acres.
Rural-- The 5 million cubic feet of natural gas per day (Mmcf/d) is an average per well, but actual production is quite variable and depends upon many factors. For example, wells in northeastern Pennsylvania tend to be more productive than ones in the east central part of the state. In the northeast such as Bradford or Tioga counties, a great well could produce 10 Mmcf/d or more. Whereas production in east central Pennsylvania might range between 1.5 and 4.0 Mmcf/d.
5.0 Mmcf/d is a good average number for Pennsylvania with the understanding that there is a wide variation between wells in actual flow rate.
Incidentally, 5 Mmcf equals approximately 5,000 Mmbtu or exactly 5,000 Mcf . Here's a good calculator to use.
--Tom
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