What would a Chesapeake Energy merger mean for massive OKC campus?

UPDATE: Chesapeake Energy has officially announced a merger with Southwestern Energy. You can read more about the details, and where the new company's headquarters will be located, here.

With Chesapeake Energy Corp. and Southwestern Energy Co. in Spring, Texas, reportedly in merger talks, a question arises about something important to Oklahoma City, if not to the negotiations themselves, since it amounts to a tiny fraction of what would be a $17 billion deal.

It's Chesapeake's property, which the county assessor says is worth a mere $140 million — or, as someone once said of the office buildings involved with another billion-dollar energy company merger, an amount equal to "an accounting error."

The property concern would be in addition to lost jobs and Chesapeake's philanthropic contributions, among other issues. Chesapeake said it ended 2022 with about 1,200 employees (its latest number), with 59% corporate staff, or about 700, and the rest in the field. It's not clear whether all of its corporate staff is in OKC.

If Chesapeake were to move to Texas, what would become of its 1.5 million square feet of buildings in Oklahoma City? It would not be pretty, like the multiple Georgian-style, red brick office buildings that dominate Chesapeake's corporate campus at NW 63 and Western Avenue.

It would be an ugly blow to the metro-area office market, especially in north OKC, although not all of Chesapeake's space is office space.

But first: a merger? More than that, actually, if it comes to pass.

Chesapeake-Southwestern merger 'could reshape the U.S. natural gas industry'

Chicago-based Zacks Equity Research reviewed the background of the reported deal, first disclosed last fall by Reuters, which reported it as imminent last Friday, relying on an anonymous source. Chesapeake declined to comment to The Oklahoman.

Zacks said Chesapeake approached Southwestern with an eye toward acquiring it.

"The move is significant as it represents Chesapeake’s continued focus on natural gas, especially in light of the increasing global demand for liquefied natural gas shipments from the U.S. Gulf Coast," Zacks said.

Chesapeake-Southwestern merger would create the largest natural gas producer in the United States

A Southwestern Energy well pad
A Southwestern Energy well pad

Zacks said the merger would create the largest energy exploration and production company concentrating on natural gas in the United States.

"The consolidation serves not only as a growth strategy for Chesapeake but also as a milestone in its post-bankruptcy resurgence, following its reemergence in 2021 with a renewed focus on natural gas over oil," Zacks said. "An essential element of the merger lies in the geographical proximity and operational alignment of the two companies."