专栏:特拉华州的 Harkey Sand

特拉华盆地的 Harkey Mills 砂岩产量与邻居 Bone Spring 和 Wolfcamp 相当。

Harkey Mills 砂岩正在为北部特拉华盆地运营商的投资组合增加新井库存,显示其产量与其地层邻居 Bone Spring 和 Wolfcamp 一样多产。

马歇尔·D·戴维斯 (Marshall D. Davis) 2014 年的硕士论文正是基于这一点,他表示,位于第二和第三骨泉之间、沃尔夫坎普之上的“低位海底扇沉积物”的侧向沉积可以追溯到十多年前。在哈基号上。

“我喜欢 Harkey,”Coterra Energy 董事长、首席执行官兼总裁汤姆·乔登 (Tom Jorden) 今年春天对证券分析师表示。他补充说,德克萨斯州卡尔伯森县的租赁权的开发方法是“可变的”。“这不是一个‘适合所有人的尺寸’。”因此,在脸盆周围,它会有所不同。

“但在我们的很多位置上,它与 Wolfcamp 的竞争非常好。”

Coterra 正在登陆 Harkey 油井,并继续研究如何开发该油井。“我们的节目中有很多哈基,”他说。“我想我们会继续这样做。这取决于你在哪里。有些地方就在 Wolfcamp 的顶部;有些地方比沃尔夫坎普还要低一些。

“但它是盆地中最好的着陆区之一。” 我会直率地说。”

戴维斯在德克萨斯大学阿灵顿分校学习期间撰写了论文“伦纳德时代的石油地质学,哈基米尔斯砂岩:新墨西哥州东南部埃迪县和利县二叠纪骨泉地层的新水平目标”。当时他在巴斯家族的 Bopco LP 工作,并在他的研究中引用了该公司的数据。2017年,埃克森美孚以66亿美元的现金和股票收购了Bopco,获得了275,000英亩的土地,其中250,000英亩位于二叠纪盆地。

Davis 报告称,埃迪县 Harkey 的四个水平井在三年内生产了 176,000 桶石油和 708 Mcf。

至于干扰,乔登在最近的其他电话会议中告诉分析师,“当谈到沃尔夫坎普和哈基时,我们通常将其视为一个石油系统。”

这样,就会有一些沟通。“但我们并不认为这是降低整体油井产能的一个因素。”

迄今为止的调查结果是,“拥有两个着陆区不会中断或阻碍您从钻孔间距单元中整体恢复。” 因此,我们不认为这对 Wolfcamp/Harkey 来说是一个重大问题。”

Enverus 分析师艾琳·福克纳 (Erin Faulkner) 在 4 月份报道称,Coterra 的 2022 年 Harkey/Wolfcamp 测试包括在 Harkey 进行的 4 项测试,间距为 1,320 英尺,以及在上 Wolfcamp 进行的 8 项测试,间距为 700 英尺。

“公司对结果感到满意,并预计未来 Wolfcamp/Harkey 共同开发 10,100 英尺长的支管项目将在六个月内以 75 美元(石油)和 3.50 美元(天然气)的价格支付。”

她补充说,预计将于今年晚些时候上线的 Coterra 测试包括九口 Wolfcamp 井和四口 Harkey 井。

乔丹告诉分析师,“与沃尔夫坎普相比,哈基非常出色。” 我的意思是,他们并驾齐驱。”

他补充道,“如果你必须在真正优秀的 Wolfcamp A 和 Harkey 之间做出选择,这就像问你最喜欢哪个孩子一样。这真是一个艰难的选择。”

总体而言,Harkey 可能会为 Coterra 的顶级库存增加约五年。“卡基太棒了,”乔丹说。“哈基与我们最好的着陆区并肩而立。我们认为未来几年我们还有很多事情要做。”

据报道,Earthstone Energy 也登陆哈基。新墨西哥州利县的两口油井在 7,500 英尺深的分支井上线后的前 24 天内,平均每日产量约为 1,600 桶油当量,含油率为 87%。它预计在首次生产后四个月内付款。

Caza Petroleum 首席运营官兰迪·尼克森 (Randy Nickerson) 于 2019 年告诉 Hart Energy,埃迪县的 Harkey 石油饱和度比其他地区略高一些。

“我认为你会看到那将是人们开始建造的新长凳。上面有一些古老的井,可能会让人们望而却步,但这是一个相当不错的区域。”

戴维斯对 625 口老直井的分析发现,“最好的储层岩石出现在靠近斜坡扇的浊积岩水道沉积物的顶部。”净厚度高达 80 英尺;孔隙率至少8%。

原文链接/hartenergy

Column: The Delaware’s Harkey Sand

The Delaware Basin’s Harkey Mills sandstone is producing on a par with neighbors Bone Spring and Wolfcamp.

The Harkey Mills sandstone is adding new-well inventory to northern Delaware Basin operators’ portfolios, showing production just as prolific as its stratigraphic neighbors, the Bone Spring and Wolfcamp.

Sitting between the second and third Bone Spring, overlying the Wolfcamp, the “low-stand submarine fan deposit” has seen laterals dating back more than a decade, according to Marshall D. Davis, whose master’s thesis in 2014 was based on the Harkey.

“We love the Harkey,” Tom Jorden, Coterra Energy chairman, CEO and president, told securities analysts this spring. The development approach to it in its Culberson County, Texas, leasehold is “variable,” he added. “It’s not a ‘one size fits all.’ So, around the basin, it’s going to vary.

“But in a lot of our position, it competes very nicely with Wolfcamp.”

Coterra is landing Harkey wells as it continues to examine how to develop it. “We’ve got a lot of Harkey in our program,” he said. “I think we’ll continue with that. And it depends on where you are. There are places where it’s right on top of the Wolfcamp; there are places where it’s a little lower than the Wolfcamp.

“But it’s one of the best landing zones in the basin. I’ll say that flat out.”

Davis wrote his thesis, “Petroleum Geology of the Leonardian Age, Harkey Mills Sandstone: A New Horizontal Target in the Permian Bone Spring Formation, Eddy and Lea Counties, Southeast New Mexico,” while studying at the University of Texas at Arlington. He was working at the Bass family’s Bopco LP at the time and cited its data in his research. Exxon Mobil purchased Bopco for $6.6 billion in cash and stock in 2017, gaining 275,000 acres, with 250,000 of those in the Permian.

Davis reported that four horizontals in the Harkey in Eddy County produced 176,000 bbl of oil and 708 Mcf combined during three years online.

As to interference, Jorden told analysts in other, recent calls that “when it comes to the Wolfcamp and Harkey, we generally see that as one petroleum system.”

Thus, there will be some communication. “But we do not see that as a factor that degrades overall well productivity.”

Findings to date are that “having the two landing zones does not interrupt or impede your overall recovery out of that drilling spacing unit. So, we don’t see that as a significant issue for the Wolfcamp/Harkey.”

Erin Faulkner, an Enverus analyst, reported in April that Coterra’s 2022 Harkey/Wolfcamp test consisted of four in Harkey on 1,320-foot spacing with eight in the upper Wolfcamp on 700-foot spacing.

“The company was pleased with the results and anticipates that future Wolfcamp/Harkey co-developments with 10,100-foot laterals will pay out in six months at $75 [oil] and $3.50 [gas].”

A Coterra test that’s expected to come online later this year consists of nine Wolfcamp wells and four Harkey, she added.

Jorden told analysts that “the Harkey is excellent compared to the Wolfcamp. I mean, they’re neck and neck.”

He added, “If you had to choose between really great Wolfcamp A or Harkey, it’d be like asking which one of your kids you like best. It’s a really tough choice.”

Overall, the Harkey may add about five years to Coterra’s top-tier inventory. “Harkey is terrific,” Jorden said. “… Harkey stands shoulder to shoulder with the best of our landing zones. And we think we have a lot to do in the upcoming years.”

Earthstone Energy is also landing in Harkey, it reported. Two wells in Lea County, N.M., averaged some 1,600 boe/d each, 87% oil, in their first 24 days online from 7,500-foot laterals. It expected payout within four months from first production.

Randy Nickerson, Caza Petroleum’s COO, told Hart Energy in 2019 that Eddy County’s Harkey “is a little more highly oil saturated than the other [zones].

“I think you’re going to see that’s going to be a new bench out there that people are going to start building. There are some older wells on it that maybe discourage people, but it’s a pretty good zone.”

Davis’ analysis of 625 old, vertical wells found “the best reservoir rock occurs within the apex of turbidite channel deposits proximal to the slope fan.” Net thickness is up to 80 feet; porosity, at least 8%.