Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2945206192> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 54 of
54
with 100 items per page.
- W2945206192 endingPage "24" @default.
- W2945206192 startingPage "22" @default.
- W2945206192 abstract "The Haynesville Shale might be the greatest comeback story of the US shale revolution. At one point in 2016, there were just 13 active rigs in the dry-gas play that stretches between Louisiana and Texas. That figure has increased fourfold to today and, in April, the Haynesville set a new production record of 10.5 Bcf/D—the strongest output since 2011, per the US Department of Energy (DOE). The resurgence has been led not by the large operators who initially put the Haynesville on the map, but by a group of private equity-backed operators that entered the play within the last few years. Their momentum has been driven by liquefied natural gas (LNG) facilities that began exporting the product from the US Gulf Coast in 2016. Petroleum engineers have also moved the needle by creating a class of horizontal wells that look nothing like what the region has seen before in terms of productivity. “I think that over the past 3 or 4 years, the understanding of optimal frac design and the selection of the targets has evolved quite dramatically,” said Artem Abramov, the head of shale research for Rystad Energy in Oslo. The nearly 300 wells that were brought online in the Haynesville during 2017 have produced a cumulative average of 3.6 Bcf. They continue to generate an average of 8.5 MMcf/D, according to public data compiled by ShaleProfile. This is a marked improvement over 2015 vintage wells that managed only 1.5 MMcf/D after reaching the same cumulative production point. In terms of long-tail production, this is an increase of more than 450%. One of the most critical factors behind the improved recovery is the increased use of proppant in horizontal wells. Thanks to lower prices made possible by the in-basin mine trend taking hold across the US shale sector, operators can afford to place two or three times the amount of sand into Haynesville’s tight-rock system than they were prior to 2016. Abramov remarked that this development has effectively “re-established it as a completely new play.” Too Much of a Good Thing Rig counts have remained steady at around an average of 55 since the start of the year but the region is seeing more completion activity and has become one of the fastest-growing demand centers for hydraulic fracturing crews in the US. As the race to reawaken the sleeping giant continues on, there are concerns that too much production could harm the play’s economic standing. Calgary-based RS Energy Group (RSEG) recently looked at the issue and found that takeaway capacity may hit a wall as early as this summer, possibly curtailing drilling plans for the rest of the year. “It’s not a Haynesville constraint in isolation,” explained Trevor Sloan, an executive director and co-head of research at RSEG. “Rather, Haynesville producers share common routes to coastal demand centers—including LNG facilities—with northeast producers, and the midcontinent for that matter. Potential from all those basins could cause some congestion on routes south.”" @default.
- W2945206192 created "2019-05-29" @default.
- W2945206192 creator A5061546614 @default.
- W2945206192 date "2019-06-01" @default.
- W2945206192 modified "2023-09-25" @default.
- W2945206192 title "New Operators, Well Designs Drive Record Gas Production in Haynesville" @default.
- W2945206192 doi "https://doi.org/10.2118/0619-0022-jpt" @default.
- W2945206192 hasPublicationYear "2019" @default.
- W2945206192 type Work @default.
- W2945206192 sameAs 2945206192 @default.
- W2945206192 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W2945206192 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2945206192 hasAuthorship W2945206192A5061546614 @default.
- W2945206192 hasConcept C127313418 @default.
- W2945206192 hasConcept C127413603 @default.
- W2945206192 hasConcept C151730666 @default.
- W2945206192 hasConcept C153127940 @default.
- W2945206192 hasConcept C16674752 @default.
- W2945206192 hasConcept C166957645 @default.
- W2945206192 hasConcept C173776410 @default.
- W2945206192 hasConcept C205649164 @default.
- W2945206192 hasConcept C548081761 @default.
- W2945206192 hasConcept C68189081 @default.
- W2945206192 hasConceptScore W2945206192C127313418 @default.
- W2945206192 hasConceptScore W2945206192C127413603 @default.
- W2945206192 hasConceptScore W2945206192C151730666 @default.
- W2945206192 hasConceptScore W2945206192C153127940 @default.
- W2945206192 hasConceptScore W2945206192C16674752 @default.
- W2945206192 hasConceptScore W2945206192C166957645 @default.
- W2945206192 hasConceptScore W2945206192C173776410 @default.
- W2945206192 hasConceptScore W2945206192C205649164 @default.
- W2945206192 hasConceptScore W2945206192C548081761 @default.
- W2945206192 hasConceptScore W2945206192C68189081 @default.
- W2945206192 hasIssue "06" @default.
- W2945206192 hasLocation W29452061921 @default.
- W2945206192 hasOpenAccess W2945206192 @default.
- W2945206192 hasPrimaryLocation W29452061921 @default.
- W2945206192 hasRelatedWork W1972519760 @default.
- W2945206192 hasRelatedWork W1984706377 @default.
- W2945206192 hasRelatedWork W1991450372 @default.
- W2945206192 hasRelatedWork W2011662120 @default.
- W2945206192 hasRelatedWork W2022706693 @default.
- W2945206192 hasRelatedWork W2164651121 @default.
- W2945206192 hasRelatedWork W2201315897 @default.
- W2945206192 hasRelatedWork W2208258200 @default.
- W2945206192 hasRelatedWork W2283185939 @default.
- W2945206192 hasRelatedWork W2635376407 @default.
- W2945206192 hasVolume "71" @default.
- W2945206192 isParatext "false" @default.
- W2945206192 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W2945206192 magId "2945206192" @default.
- W2945206192 workType "article" @default.