Posted on 12/08/2013 2:38:58 PM PST by tightoil67
An Encana Corp. rig explores for oil south of Farmington. The company has drilled about 30 wells in the area.
Encana Corp. plans to pour $250 million to $450 million into drilling oil wells on New Mexicos side of the San Juan Basin next year, the company says.
The Canadian company has aggressively pursued San Juan Basin oil, drilling about 30 wells to date. The drilling is concentrated near Huerfano, N.M., southeast of Farmington.
Our strategy really is to shift our portfolio more towards oil, so were really focusing on areas where we can do that, and the San Juans one of those, said Doug Hock, a Denver-based spokesman for the company.
(Excerpt) Read more at durangoherald.com ...
The San Juan historically has been one of the nations most productive natural-gas basins, but with prices low for that commodity and high for oil, drillers are finding oil in some previously overlooked areas.
Improved techniques for horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, have made such drilling possible.
Encanas activities have been a boon to some Farmington-area companies. Encana forged deals with local production companies, most notably Dugan Production Corp., that held decades-old leases in the area. Aztec Well Servicing Co. has benefited as Encanas drilling contractor.
Other companies, including WPX Energy and Bill Barrett Corp., have dipped a toe in the emerging oil play, but Encana has been by far the most aggressive.
The booming oil activity south of the border stands in contrast to slowly proceeding development in the Colorado portion of the San Juan Basin.
The geology of the basin is thought to be more oily in the south, while the northern end of the basin in Colorado leans more heavily toward natural gas. At current prices, oil is far more valuable than natural gas, and drilling activity appears to be following the more oily geology.
La Plata County has approved only 37 applications to drill this year, on pace to fall well short of 2012s total of 71. The vast majority were for conventional coal-bed methane wells.
A few wells in La Plata County are searching for oil. Swift Energy Co. permitted two wells in the spring. The first well, south of Hesperus, is exploring for oil in the Niobrara formation. The second permit is for a nearby well that has not yet been drilled.
Swift has leased more than 70,000 acres in the area.
Huntington Energy has permitted three wells in La Plata County targeting the Mancos formation. The Oklahoma City-based company did not return a call seeking comment.
For the moment, the oil boom remains confined to New Mexicos portion of the basin. La Plata County oil production fell 4.6 percent in 2012 to 34,412 barrels.
With the Huntington and Swift explorations still in early phases, La Plata County still could see more oil production.
Oil drilling and investment = real jobs that contribute to real growth as opposed to the paper swappers who create nothing but bubbles and volatility.
I lived there in the 1950s and in the 1970s. Quite a gas boom back then. Things really died down in the 1980s then it boomed again a few years later.
In the last few years, I’ve noticed many of the gas wells glycol reboilers (which I used to make) replaced with oil well pumps.
Interesting rig pictured on the link — it appears these wells aren’t going particularly deep.
“Oil drilling and investment = real jobs that contribute to real growth as opposed to the paper swappers who create nothing but bubbles and volatility.”
These new jobs do not cost on damn penny of the taxpayers money!!!!!!!!!!! They add money to the local economy, and add money to the state and federal government!!!!!!
Totally agree!
Drill ready jobs, that don’t cost the tax payers a dime.
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