Is it ignorant?
On average there are 2000-3000 wellheads coming online each year in the Bakken and each one is estimated to average around 500,000 barrels or so, total capacity. Within two years of production, those wells are producing less than 500 barrels a day, some say more like 200.
If you have such productive wells, why not invest in that company? Seems like they are well above the margins of the industry and the exception, not the rule.
When I was with Cyclone, we (rig eight) were the highest payzone rig in the world for Continental Resources. The area we were drilling was in Epping, North Dakota...but to invest in Continental because of this alone would be a crap shoot.
There are ground water problems well documented all over, from Pennsylvania to Alberta, I could link for days, but honestly, conventional wells that are subject to injection also provide similar results, so it isn't just fracking by any means...
Yeah, agree to disagree...I'd rather stay on topic
How do you check broken casing, thousands of feet down and guarantee that nothing happens, I bet on the chance, that you can't, with geology in mind.
Wireline (an electric cord wrapped in plastic sheathing and armor). They use tools such as MSC (multiple sensory calipers), URS (Ultrasonic Radial Scanner), CCL (Casing Collar Locator) in tandem on a tool string. Using sensory calipers to determine the structural quality of the interior of the casing, sound to determine the quality of the cement bond between the casing and annulus/formation and a magnetic field on the CCL that verifies depth through depiction (on a graph called a log) every time the magnets flip like a light switch when passing the thicker steel collar between each ~30ft joint of casing
We conducted a "squeeze job" last week on a well where the wireline log had revealed a poor cement bond with the casing. We attach our wireline to a CCL to verify depth of the problem area and a one-foot perforation gun. Then explosives in the gun are detonated creating holes in the casing where concrete is pumped into the cavity.
I also agree that there is probably more oil out there in the Bakken and reserves will be updated, they have in reality, but they wan't to hold nuts in a vice on the high yield bond market.
Def plausible...I agree
Will Saudi drop their production? They seem to realize that oil usage is dropping globally. Do they realize that we are now at the point that oil is becoming another un-used mineral like vast amounts of remaining coal? So, if that is case, maybe they want to pump everything they can, as evidence by the Oil Minister's recent comments. Is it coincidence that China is stuffing their reserves while also closing two multi billion dollar pipelines with Russia that subverts the gold standard onto the yuan?
That maybe the real story, oil is going back to the gold standard, whether we like it or not and several players [BRICS] and China/Russia are making that leap. Saudi is still on the US Dollar and maybe they are realizing they are about to be screwed when the bond market takes eventual notice.....
Agreed with all of the above. Working in the bakken, I'm more attuned to shale production process/costs so further research into global plays and their risk considerations are needed before I invest any hard earned money
And....I thought we are in the period of revamping? But yes I agree, global oil is probably less of gamble although I wouldn't want to be a bond trader at the moment, for any fiat devalue.