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Natural Gas Report: Haynesville, World

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Oil and Gas Investor
Oil and Gas Investor

In early April, the No. 2 U.S. rig count was the Haynesville’s 77, second only to the mighty Permian Basin, according to Enverus’ count.

In 2016, the count had dropped to as few as 24. The intersection of new well productivity and iron count was met in 2015, as new-well results began to improve from about 4 MMcf/d to some 12 MMcf/d today, per the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA).

While productivity could be attributed to producers reining in their focus to the core as gas prices fell to average some $2, overall Haynesville output grew, though, from 6 Bcf/d to now more than 14 Bcf/d.

Comstock Resources Inc. reported in February having brought online two 15,000-ft laterals with IPs between 41 MMcf/d and 48 MMcf/d.

Oil and Gas Investor May 2022 Natural Gas Report - Haynesville World - Bill Way Southwestern Energy headshot
Oil and Gas Investor May 2022 Natural Gas Report - Haynesville World - Bill Way Southwestern Energy headshot

“Adding dry-gas Haynesville to its wet-gas Marcellus provides ‘optionality that clearly differentiates Southwestern from its peers.’” —Bill Way, Southwestern Energy

Haynesville operators’ combined 14 Bcf/d is enough alone to supply the 13 Bcf/d that U.S. LNG exporters are shipping—nearly all of it from the Gulf Coast. The Haynesville and Marcellus’ combined 50 Bcf/d is as much as all U.S. gas production totaled 20 years ago.

“The play has exceeded my expectations,” said Rob Turnham, who was president and COO of one of the Haynesville’s original producers, Goodrich Petroleum Corp., which was sold in December. “Completion methodology is recovering a higher percentage of the gas in place than originally thought.”

It was expected that more gas would be surfaced with more proppant and water per foot, along with tighter cluster and stage-interval spacing.

“But our original estimate [in 2008] was 2 Bcf per 1,000 ft of completed lateral versus the 2.5 Bcf we were achieving when we sold the company,” he said.

Goodrich was bought by privately held EnCap Investments LP-backed Paloma Partners VI Holdings LLC for $480 million in cash and debt assumption.

Oil and Gas Investor May 2022 Natural Gas Report - Haynesville World - Rob Turnham headshot
Oil and Gas Investor May 2022 Natural Gas Report - Haynesville World - Rob Turnham headshot

“The play has exceeded my expectations.”—Rob Turnham

Also buying into the Haynesville is Marcellus-focused Southwestern Energy Co., which was the founder of the Fayetteville Shale play in 2004. It added the Haynesville last year, signing a deal in June for Indigo Natural Resources. It followed that by picking up GEP Haynesville LLC in November.

Southwestern president and CEO Bill Way told investors this February that, soon after its deals, gas fundamentals “strengthened materially, improving the economic value of the transactions.

“Our strategic entry into Haynesville was well-timed,” he said. Adding dry-gas Haynesville to its wet-gas Marcellus provides “optionality that clearly differentiates Southwestern from its peers.”