Tulsa firm reports two Canadian County wells with 1,200 barrels of oil a day🔥
Two Canadian County wells drilled by Citizen Energy III LLC on a single...
Two Canadian County wells drilled by Citizen Energy III LLC on a single pad produced more than 1,200 barrels of oil combined a day.
The Tulsa energy company filed completion reports showing the Darrow Trust 3hl-7-18, located at 7 10N 5W, a site about 2 miles southwest of the city of Mustang was completed in April of this year. It had production of 644 barrels of oil a day and 3,875 Mcf of natural gas from a drilled depth of 16,742 feet into the Mississippian formation. The well also had a Dec. 31, 2021 spud date according to its completion report.
The sister well, the Darrow Trust 1hl-7-6, also completed in April produced 567 barrels of oil a day and 3,665 Mcf of natural gas from a depth of 17,451 feet. It was spudded Dec. 29, 2021 according to the filed completion report.
Citizen Energy also completed the Reuter Trust 2hl-8-17 well at 8 11N 8W, a site near El Reno and the production was 169 barrels of oil a day and 1,534 Mcf of natural gas from 20,434 feet in the Woodford formation. The spud date was April of 2020 according to the completion report.
Beachwood Helix Says Two Deals Valued at $863 Million Failed to Close👎
Two deals valued at $863 million,...
Two deals valued at $863 million, announced in May by energy marketplace Beachwood Helix Corp., have been scuttled, Beachwood president and founder Joshua Robbins said.
On July 18, Robbins said one of the deals did not close as planned because the investors behind the oil company “backed out of the deal, terminating over eight months’ worth of effort and hard work to get this closed.”
Robbins added it was “heartbreaking to receive commitments from multiple oil companies only to have the deals fall apart as investors/boards make short term decisions on long term assets. This has been a tough month to work through.”
Devon Closes $865 Million Cash Acquisition of RimRock Oil and Gas
Devon Energy Corp....
Devon Energy Corp. wrapped up its previously announced purchase of RimRock Oil and Gas LP on July 21, described by Devon as a “bolt-on” acquisition in the Williston Basin.
Oklahoma City-based Devon had entered into a definitive purchase agreement to acquire the leasehold interest and related assets of RimRock, a Warburg Pincus portfolio company in the Williston Basin, for cash consideration of $865 million in early June.
The RimRock bolt-on acquisition adds a contiguous position of 38,000 net acres (88% working interest) directly offsetting and overlapping Devon’s existing position. Production from the acquired assets is expected to increase to an average of 20,000 boe/d over the next year.
Conditions may start to become a little more conducive for tropical development toward the end of July, at which point a tropical wave crossing the central Atlantic may be worth watching, according to Dr. Ryan Truchelut, chief meteorologist at WeatherTiger.
The Atlantic hurricane season runs from June 1 through Nov. 30. The peak of the season is Sept. 10, with the most activity happening between mid-August and mid-October, according to the Hurricane Center. The next named storm in the Atlantic basin will be Danielle.
Southeast New Mexico’s Permian Basin shaken by more earthquakes
One of the latest earthquakes to shake the Permian Basin happened Thursday morning in...
One of the latest earthquakes to shake the Permian Basin happened Thursday morning in Carlsbad, New Mexico.
It occurred as researchers expanded their investigation of oil and gas drilling in the large shale area that is believed to be the cause of increased earthquakes—much like what occurred in Oklahoma a few years ago.
The Carlsbad earthquake measured 4.7 magnitude and hit about 7:35 a.m. with an epicenter about 35 miles south of White City according to the U.S. Geological Survey. Nearly an hour later, a 3.0 magnitude quarter shook the area. The two quakes followed a 12:43 a.m. quake that registered 3.1 magnitude as well as two late Wednesday night quakes that measured 3.0 magnitude.
The Texas Tribune recently reported more than 200 earthquakes of 3.0 magnitude or greater shook Texas in 2021, more than double the 98 recorded in 2020.