There is an article out today that mentions what I believe to be about buell well in harrison county.
"Take the example of what may be the most productive well in Ohio history. State Sen. Jimmy Stewart, R-Albany, said he heard a rural Harrison County well was pumping 15 million cubic feet of gas daily.
A spokeswoman for Chesapeake Energy, the Oklahoma-based owner, said the well in question is still being evaluated, and he couldn't confirm the numbers."
The link to article is http://www.thenews-messenger.com/article/20110423/NEWS01/104230305/...
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ODNR has all sorts of great info available to anyone with an internet connection.
Start with this page:
http://www.dnr.state.oh.us/mineral/oil/tabid/10371/default.aspx
On it you will see an Oil and Gas Well Locator link and an Oil and Gas Well Search link.
The Locator gets you to a map where you can drill down to an individual well and find the permit number. Make note of that 5-digit number, the county, and the township.
Go to the Search page and
Click to Search OIL AND GAS WELL DATABASE
On the page that comes up, click on Reports. Next click on Completions. On the page that comes up, look at the column under Reset. On the line where it says County, click on the little blue down arrow at the right side of the white box under Reset. In the drop down box that opens, click on =Equal. Click in the next white box to the right and select the county name. repeat this process for the Township and again for the Permit Number. Next click on the white box that says Report. You should pull up the permit info for the well you found on the map. At the bottom of what comes up for that well will be Link to Well Image(s). Under this will be a .TIF file which contains the info I posted earlier. The .TIF file will open with your picture viewing software. I usually save this file as a .pdf if I want to refer back to it later as the .pdf format is easier to read.
You can also access more info on the Reports page so play around with it some.
Finnbear
Finnbear, I believe that you must also take into consideration that production for any well is dependent upon what volume the infrastructure can handle. Just because the well can produce up to say 15 million cu ft per day doesn't mean that is what will be sold each day. Maybe the transmission pipeline can only accept 4 million cu ft per day or less/more. Just a thought.
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