北米德兰:EOG 在 SE Dawson Stepout 开采 Dean 油井

EOG Resources 还没有宣布道森县是其新的“秘密资产”所在地。在本周的投资银行会议上,该公司保持沉默。

根据德克萨斯铁路委员会 (RRC) 的数据,EOG Resources Inc. 位于德克萨斯州道森县东南部的新 Dean 地层油井在新油田上线的第一个月就生产了 35,217 桶石油。

Panther M#1H 单元于 2021 年 8 月完工,但一直关闭至今年 3 月。根据 RRC 的数据,除了石油之外,该单元 3 月份的第一个月天然气产量为 1300 万立方英尺。

深度约为 9,000 英尺。RRC 文件未显示完整的水平段长度或 IP。RRC GIS 查看器显示水平段长度约为 2.5 英里。

该油井位于 EOG 勘探地点的外围,该勘探地点位于道森西南部。

该运营商尚未公开评论其在米德兰盆地最北部的工作,但在五月份告诉投资者,它正在进行“秘密开采”,但并未透露开采的具体位置。

“技术已经进化了”

6 月 17 日,在摩根大通能源投资会议上,摩根大通证券分析师阿伦·贾亚拉姆 (Arun Jayaram) 向 EOG 首席运营官杰夫·莱茨尔 (Jeff Leitzell) 询问了这一新的、未透露名称的交易。

“通常情况下,我们不会真正拉开帷幕,直到我们真正到达评估点,”莱茨尔说。

不过,他确实证实,EOG 正在美国寻找多种机会“我们要么只是从技术角度进行评估,而实际上不必投入大量资金,要么我们正在分配少量资金用于勘探。”

他补充道,除了未开发的地区,“我们还在寻找未被发现的机会”。

在勘探与生产史上,美国本土 48 个州的大部分岩石都曾被钻探过,这些钻孔留下了记录和其他数据。在本世纪,大量岩石都曾被水平钻孔观测过。

“但事实是,许多 [致密岩层] 是在 10 [年] 或 15 年前,也许是 20 [年] 或 30 年前钻穿的,而且技术已经发展到可以进入其中并钻水平井,并使用那种技术进行开采,并且可以获得绝对可观的回报,”Leitzell 说。

就拥有美国潜在客户而言,EOG“处于绝对有利的位置。我认为这可能是我们公司历史上最强大的潜在客户组合”,他说。

不是沃尔夫坎普

同样瞄准道森县迪恩地层的还有SM 能源公司

总裁兼首席执行官 Herb Vogel 在五月份告诉投资者,“SM 在道森西南部租赁权下的 Dean 背后的 Wolfcamp A 具有良好的勘探前景”。

但“我们会说我们并没有计算这个。”

在 SM 的初始测试中,其中一个垂直井最初是在 Dean 下方钻探,以查看下方地层,例如 Wolfcamp。它被封回,并在 Dean 开凿了一个水平井。

沃格尔说:“如果我们对沃尔夫坎普 A 区的热成熟度因某种原因高于我们的预期感到惊讶,那将是好消息。”

“但我们确实指望这更像是一个迁移石油的游戏。”

其中,水平井开采出从米德兰盆地北部其他区域渗入迪恩砂岩的石油。

SM 公司于今年早些时候对新油田进行了四口井测试。数据仍以保密状态保存在 RRC 文件中。

去年夏天,该运营商从位于米德兰的Reliance Energy公司手中获得了道森的租赁权(称之为克朗代克地区),以 9,350 万美元的价格获得了 20,750 净英亩的土地。

从历史上看,道森东南部的产出物主要来自迪恩上方的斯普拉贝里。然而,根据科罗拉多矿业学院 2018 年的一份报告,道森西南部历来产出物主要来自迪恩。

不是加拿大

Leitzell 表示,EOG 也在寻找海外勘探机会。该公司已在特立尼达岛近海开展业务,并正在澳大利亚近海进行勘探。

“我们非常兴奋。我们认为国际上会有很多机会,”他说。

“我们总部有一个国际团队,他们一直在探索。我认为他们拥有一份我们从未见过的潜在客户名单。”

不过他说,加拿大现在并不有趣。

“我们真正看到的是,加拿大的服务和其他事物的总体成本结构实际上很难与[下 48 个州] 的投资组合竞争。”

原文链接/HartEnergy

Northern Midland: EOG Brings on Dean Oil Well in SE Dawson Stepout

EOG Resources has not stated yet that Dawson County is the location of its new “stealth play.” It remained mum in an investment-banking conference this week.

EOG Resources Inc.’s new Dean formation well in a southeastern Dawson County, Texas, stepout produced 35,217 bbl in its first month online in the new play, according to Texas Railroad Commission (RRC) data.

The Panther Unit M #1H had been completed in August of 2021 but was shut in until this March. In addition to oil, its first-month gas production in March was 13 MMcf, according to the RRC.

Depth is approximately 9,000 ft. The RRC files did not indicate a completed lateral length or an IP. An RRC GIS viewer indicates the lateral is some 2.5 miles.

The well is a stepout from where EOG had been exploring, which was in southwestern Dawson.

The operator has not publicly commented on its work in the far northern Midland Basin, but told investors in May it is working on a “stealth play” without identifying the play’s location.

‘Technology has evolved’

J.P. Morgan Securities analyst Arun Jayaram asked Jeff Leitzell, EOG’s COO, about the new, unidentified play on June 17 at a J.P. Morgan energy investment conference.

“Normally we don't really pull back the curtain until we actually get to a point of appraisal,” Leitzell said.

He did confirm, however, that EOG is looking into multiple opportunities across the U.S. “where we are [either] just appraising it from a technical aspect and you really don't have to put a lot of dollars into it, or … we are allocating small amounts of capital for exploration.”

On top of unexploited areas, “we're also looking for bypassed opportunities,” he added.

Much of the rock in the Lower 48 has already been drilled throughout the history of E&P, and there is log and other data from those holes. And in this century, a great deal of rock has been looked at with horizontal holes.

“But the thing is, a lot of [the tight-rock formations] were drilled through 10 [years] or 15 years ago—maybe 20 [years] or 30 years ago—and technology has evolved so much that you can go in and you can drill horizontal wells in these and exploit [them with] that technology and you can get just absolutely outstanding returns,” Leitzell said.

In terms of having U.S. prospects, EOG is “in an absolute great place. I think it is probably the most robust prospect portfolio we've had in the history of the company,” he said.

Not Wolfcamp

Also targeting the Dean formation in Dawson County is SM Energy.

Herb Vogel, president and CEO, told investors in May that “there's prospectivity in the Wolfcamp A” underlying Dean in SM’s leasehold in southwestern Dawson.

But “I would say we are not counting that.”

Among SM’s initial tests, the vertical in one was initially drilled below the Dean to take a look at underlying formations, such as the Wolfcamp. It was plugged back and a lateral was kicked off in Dean.

“If we're surprised that thermal maturity [in Wolfcamp A] is higher for some reason there than we expect it to be, that would be great news,” Vogel said.

“But we're really counting on this being more of a migrated-oil play.”

In that, laterals tap oil that soaked into the Dean sandstone from other zones in the northern Midland Basin.

SM’s four-well test of the new play was drilled earlier this year. Data remains in confidential status in RRC files.

The operator picked up the Dawson leasehold—it calls it its Klondike area—last summer from Midland-based Reliance Energy, gaining 20,750 net acres for $93.5 million.

Historically, production from southeastern Dawson targeted the Spraberry, overlying Dean. In southwestern Dawson, though, production has historically been from Dean, according to a 2018 report at the Colorado School of Mines.

Not Canada

Leitzell said EOG is looking at exploration opportunities abroad as well. It already operates offshore Trinidad and is exploring offshore Australia.

“We're extremely excited. We think there's going to be a lot of opportunity internationally,” he said.

“We have an international group in our headquarters that's constantly exploring. And I think they've got a prospect list about as robust as we've ever seen.”

Canada isn’t interesting right now, though, he said.

“What we've really seen is … the overall cost structure—how services and other things work in Canada—can be tough to actually compete with the [Lower 48’s] portfolio.”