Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Drilling Productivity Report, July 2015
The
productivity of natural gas wells in the Marcellus Shale and the
neighboring Utica Shale is steadily increasing because of ongoing
improvements in precision and efficiency of horizontal drilling and
hydraulic fracturing occurring in those regions. Since January 2012,
natural gas production in the Marcellus and Utica regions has accounted
for 85% of the increase in natural gas production reported in EIA's Drilling Productivity Report (DPR) and has driven recent growth in total U.S. natural gas production.
The
DPR provides a month-ahead projection of both oil and natural gas
production for the seven most significant shale formations in the United
States. Although the DPR regions are grouped according to the name of
the predominant shale formation, the report analyzes all drilling and
production within each geographic area. In practice, this means natural
gas production activity in the Marcellus region, which includes
Pennsylvania and West Virginia, encompasses not only the Marcellus
formation, but also portions of the Utica shale and conventional
formations that lay beneath those states. The Utica DPR region, which
includes resources that lay beneath Ohio, includes production from the
bulk of the Utica formation as well as production from the Point
Pleasant shale formation and (to a lesser extent) conventional
resources.
The DPR identifies trends in total production and rig
productivity, expressed as new-well gas production per rig. The July
edition of the DPR noted that average new-well gas production per rig in
the Marcellus region was 3.2 million cubic feet of natural gas per day
(MMcf/d) in January 2012. In July 2015, new-well gas production per rig
increased to 8.3 MMcf/d. This trend corresponded with an overall
increase in the amount of natural gas produced in the Marcellus region
during the same period. The DPR also indicates that the Marcellus region
produced an estimated 6.3 billion cubic feet of natural gas per day
(Bcf/d) in January 2012, increasing to 16.5 Bcf/d in July 2015.
The
Utica region also experienced significant gains in rig productivity and
production. In January 2012, new-well gas production per rig in the
Utica region averaged 0.31 MMcf/d. July 2015 new-well gas production per
rig is 6.9 MMcf/d. The DPR also indicates that the region's total
natural gas production increased rapidly over the same period:
production in July 2015 was almost 18 times higher than in January 2013
(2.6 Bcf/d and 0.15 Bcf/d, respectively).
Increases in natural gas production from these regions occurred because of many factors, including:
- Greater use of advanced drilling techniques
- Increased number of stages used in hydraulic fracturing operations
- Increased use of techniques such as zipper fracturing (simultaneous fracturing of individual stages of two parallel horizontal wells)
- Use of specific components during well completion that aid in increasing fracture size and porosity of the geologic formation being targeted
EIA's latest data show that natural gas produced from U.S. shale basins now accounts for 56% of U.S. dry natural gas production.
Collectively, shale gas production from the Marcellus and Utica regions
increased by 12.6 Bcf/d from January 2012 to June 2015, making these
regions the driving forces behind overall U.S. natural gas production
growth.
http://www.theenergycollective.com/todayinenergy/2254563/marcellus-utica-provide-85-us-shale-gas-production-growth-start-2012
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