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ENERGY BACKGROUNDER
1220 L Street, Northwest Washington, D.C. 200054070
http://www.api.org
PETROLEUM FACTS AT A GLANCE –March 2007
1. U.S. petroleum imports (crude & products) in February 2007: 12,521,000 barrels per day
(February 2006: 13,307,000 b/d). [API]
2. Total imports in February 2007 as a percentage of total domestic petroleum deliveries: 59.6
percent (February 2006: 65.5 percent). [API]
3. Persian Gulf petroleum imports in December 2006 as a percentage of total imports: 18.0 percent
(December 2005: 17.5 percent). [DOE]
4. Average price for a barrel of OPEC crude oil on March 2, 2007: $57.98. [DOE]
5. Average U.S. refiner acquisition cost in January 2007 for a barrel of crude oil: $50.69. [DOE]
6. U.S. crude oil production in February 2007: 5,244,000 b/d (of which 749,000 b/d was Alaskan)
(February 2006: 5,142,000 b/d). U.S. natural gas liquids production in February 2007: 1,765,000 b/d
(February 2006: 1,677,000 b/d). [API]
7. U.S. marketed natural gas production in December 2006: 54.3 billion cubic feet per day
(December 2005: 51.5 billion cf/d). [DOE]
8. U.S. deliveries from primary storage of motor gasoline in February 2007: 9,237,000 b/d (February
2006: 8,836,000 b/d). [API]
9. U.S. deliveries from primary storage of distillate fuel oil (home heating and diesel) in January
2007: 4,455,000 b/d (February 2006: 4,318,000 b/d). [API]
10. Total petroleum products delivered to the domestic market in February 2007: 21,020,000 b/d
(February 2006: 20,316,000 b/d). [API]
11. Average active rotary drilling rigs in the U.S. as of March 9, 2007: 1,757 (alltime high of 4,530
announced 12/28/81; record low of 488 announced 4/23/99). (2005 average 1,383) [Baker Hughes
Inc., Houston]
March 14, 2007 (F)
ENERGY BACKGROUNDER
1220 L Street, Northwest Washington, D.C. 200054070
http://www.api.org
PETROLEUM FACTS AT A GLANCE –March 2007
1. U.S. petroleum imports (crude & products) in February 2007: 12,521,000 barrels per day
(February 2006: 13,307,000 b/d). [API]
2. Total imports in February 2007 as a percentage of total domestic petroleum deliveries: 59.6
percent (February 2006: 65.5 percent). [API]
3. Persian Gulf petroleum imports in December 2006 as a percentage of total imports: 18.0 percent
(December 2005: 17.5 percent). [DOE]
4. Average price for a barrel of OPEC crude oil on March 2, 2007: $57.98. [DOE]
5. Average U.S. refiner acquisition cost in January 2007 for a barrel of crude oil: $50.69. [DOE]
6. U.S. crude oil production in February 2007: 5,244,000 b/d (of which 749,000 b/d was Alaskan)
(February 2006: 5,142,000 b/d). U.S. natural gas liquids production in February 2007: 1,765,000 b/d
(February 2006: 1,677,000 b/d). [API]
7. U.S. marketed natural gas production in December 2006: 54.3 billion cubic feet per day
(December 2005: 51.5 billion cf/d). [DOE]
8. U.S. deliveries from primary storage of motor gasoline in February 2007: 9,237,000 b/d (February
2006: 8,836,000 b/d). [API]
9. U.S. deliveries from primary storage of distillate fuel oil (home heating and diesel) in January
2007: 4,455,000 b/d (February 2006: 4,318,000 b/d). [API]
10. Total petroleum products delivered to the domestic market in February 2007: 21,020,000 b/d
(February 2006: 20,316,000 b/d). [API]
11. Average active rotary drilling rigs in the U.S. as of March 9, 2007: 1,757 (alltime high of 4,530
announced 12/28/81; record low of 488 announced 4/23/99). (2005 average 1,383) [Baker Hughes
Inc., Houston]
March 14, 2007 (F)
ENERGY BACKGROUNDER
1220 L Street, Northwest Washington, D.C. 200054070
http://www.api.org
PETROLEUM FACTS AT A GLANCE –March 2007
1. U.S. petroleum imports (crude & products) in February 2007: 12,521,000 barrels per day
(February 2006: 13,307,000 b/d). [API]
2. Total imports in February 2007 as a percentage of total domestic petroleum deliveries: 59.6
percent (February 2006: 65.5 percent). [API]
3. Persian Gulf petroleum imports in December 2006 as a percentage of total imports: 18.0 percent
(December 2005: 17.5 percent). [DOE]
4. Average price for a barrel of OPEC crude oil on March 2, 2007: $57.98. [DOE]
5. Average U.S. refiner acquisition cost in January 2007 for a barrel of crude oil: $50.69. [DOE]
6. U.S. crude oil production in February 2007: 5,244,000 b/d (of which 749,000 b/d was Alaskan)
(February 2006: 5,142,000 b/d). U.S. natural gas liquids production in February 2007: 1,765,000 b/d
(February 2006: 1,677,000 b/d). [API]
7. U.S. marketed natural gas production in December 2006: 54.3 billion cubic feet per day
(December 2005: 51.5 billion cf/d). [DOE]
8. U.S. deliveries from primary storage of motor gasoline in February 2007: 9,237,000 b/d (February
2006: 8,836,000 b/d). [API]
9. U.S. deliveries from primary storage of distillate fuel oil (home heating and diesel) in January
2007: 4,455,000 b/d (February 2006: 4,318,000 b/d). [API]
10. Total petroleum products delivered to the domestic market in February 2007: 21,020,000 b/d
(February 2006: 20,316,000 b/d). [API]
11. Average active rotary drilling rigs in the U.S. as of March 9, 2007: 1,757 (alltime high of 4,530
announced 12/28/81; record low of 488 announced 4/23/99). (2005 average 1,383) [Baker Hughes
Inc., Houston]
March 14, 2007 (F)
HEMI Leases and Independent Oil & Gas Service Pool Boundaries (East) 3/1/2007
BENNETT C Lease
Operator: Hemi Energy Group, Inc.
Location: T25S, R17E, Sec. 28
KS Dept. of Revenue Lease Code: 100830
Field: Humboldt-Chanute
County: Woodson
PURCELL Lease
Operator: Hemi Energy Group, Inc.
Location: T25S, R17E, Sec. 20
KS Dept. of Revenue Lease Code: 113003
Field: Humboldt-Chanute
County: Woodson
ORTH-SILVEY Lease
Operator: Hemi Energy Group, Inc.
Location: T25S, R17E, Sec. 28
KS Dept. of Revenue Lease Code: 100802
Field: Humboldt-Chanute
County: Woodson
Source: The Independent Oil & Gas Service
www.theindependentonline.com
NORTH CENTRAL OKLAHOMA LEASES
Creek County -- 2,200 Acres producing profitably with 10 of 50 wells in operation at present.
Logan County -- 320 Acres with one gas well completed thus far.
Okmulgee County -- 486 Acres
May take a little time to load image. RED DOT=GAS GREEN DOT=OIL
More than you would ever want to know about gaps:
http://stockcharts.com/school/doku.php?id=chart_school:chart_analysis:gaps_and_gap_analysi
Previous PR on 4000 Acre New Mexico Lease...
Hemi Energy Projects December Oil Production of over 900 Barrels
Wednesday November 8, 10:00 am ET
GRAHAM, Texas--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Hemi Energy Group, Inc. (Pink Sheets HMGP) reports the first shipment of 180 bbls at $53.70 per bbl has been completed in November. Hemi Energy will have 3 to 4 shipments of 180 bbls each completed in the month of November. More oil is produced each month than can be shipped because partial shipments of less than 180 bbls cannot be picked up by Plains Marketing, LLP, since safety regulations control how pickups may be made at tanks in an oilfield.
Extensive rebuilding and reconditioning of equipment and lease improvement, i.e. electrical lines, road improvements and underground oil pipeline systems to oil storage tanks, has allowed improvements to be made to wells. A little over 20 percent of the wells in the Woodson County, Kansas five leases have now established base-line production figures, and are reworked completely and producing oil.
Based on improvements being completed in November, Hemi Energy expects to have more than 900 bbls of oil production in December. The above lease improvements will enable Hemi to complete additional wells being reworked and bring more wells on line.
Hemi Energy has approximately four thousand acres on a lease in southeastern New Mexico near Roswell in Chaves County. This lease has historic oil production. There have been new wells drilled by other oil companies that are currently producing, and new reserves being explored in Eddy and Lea County adjacent to and south of Chaves County. Hemi Energy also has leases in four additional states and some of these leases are near major oil/gas production.
(image below might take some time to load. Red Dot=GAS Green=Oil)
As most have concluded, the real value of these maps are the high resolution. They need to be enlarged significantly and the details are very telling.
These will be of use if you are following any of LOWMAN's picks.
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/NorthDakotaMapLarge.jpg
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/OklahomaMapLarge.jpg
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/NewMexicoMapLarge.jpg
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/TexasMapLarge.jpg
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/WyomingMapLarge.jpg
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/MontanaMapLarge.jpg
Previous PR on Texas Gas Wells Enhanced version
Hemi Energy in New Gas Well Discussions about Its Leases in Sabine County, Texas
Business Wire - January 18, 2007 09:45
(Red Dots=Gas Wells)
GRAHAM, Texas, Jan 18, 2007 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- Hemi Energy Group, Inc. (Pink Sheets: HMGP) acquired three adjacent oil and gas leases with a total of 360 gross acres in Sabine County near the town of Hemphill, Texas. Natural gas prices are currently more than two times higher than at the time the leases were purchased in 2003. The geological formations under Hemi's leases, known as James Lime, Cotton Valley and Travis Peak, are the same formations that are under the major gas field that is now only approximately four miles to the north in Shelby County. In the past these leases have had two producing gas wells, but because of economic reasons they were abandoned in the 1970s. Major oil companies have been developing and producing these natural gas fields for over five years which started approximately 15 miles away and have been steadily trending toward the Hemi leases. Currently new gas wells are being drilled approximately 4 miles north. The width of the proven gas reserves in these geological formations are narrow, being only 5 to 10 miles wide. The average gas well in this major gas field in Shelby County typically produces over 2,000 MCF per day 2(mMCF) or gross revenue of approximately $360,000 per month. These gas wells and gas fields have common characteristics of a slow rate of decline in gas production and have an economically viable life of over ten years.
Management is in ongoing discussions with industry partners about how to best develop the leases natural gas reserves on the Hemi leases, which have the same geological formations as the trending gas fields. Information discovered in Hemi's extensive library of geological information and historical information for the area makes management strongly believe there are substantial gas reserves in place. Several financing options are being considered, such as joint venture, specialized exploration/drilling funds, etc., for funding the drilling of a new gas well on the lease.
Here's some more:
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?Message_id=18227517
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?Message_id=18227996
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?Message_id=18228168
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?Message_id=18228350
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?Message_id=18228418
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?Message_id=18228733
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?Message_id=18228880
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?Message_id=18261595
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?Message_id=18343288
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?Message_id=18348996
Some DD posts On Rees:
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?Message_id=17866609
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?message_id=17875346
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?Message_id=17879037
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?Message_id=17901443
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?Message_id=17991926
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?Message_id=18226850
OT.. Wish I could get a map that good for Kansas. If you download the map and load into a good graphics program you can blow it up many more times than what I posted. These maps are 3.5 meg to 6-7 meg. The one for Texas is incredible and the gas lease for the "other company" can be put into perspective.
Theoretical situation. I have a million shares of a pink stock.
I trade back and forth with my buddies 10 times in a day. Will this result in 20 million share volume?? (buy and sell 1 million shares 10 times. 10 1 million buys and 10 1 million sells) Oversimplified but does not a lot of the volume in these stocks get flipped multiple times daily, and volume can be somewhat misleading as far as trading % of float??
Points of interest. Creek and Rogers Counties where the WRNW leases and wells are located. Red dot gas well, green dot oil well.
Here's a start..............
As most have concluded, the real value of these maps are the high resolution. They need to be enlarged significantly and the details are very telling.
These will be of use if you are following any of LOWMAN's picks.
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/NorthDakotaMapLarge.jpg
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/OklahomaMapLarge.jpg
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/NewMexicoMapLarge.jpg
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/TexasMapLarge.jpg
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/WyomingMapLarge.jpg
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/MontanaMapLarge.jpg
As most have concluded, the real value of these maps are the high resolution. They need to be enlarged significantly and the details are very telling.
These will be of use if you are following any of LOWMAN's picks.
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/NorthDakotaMapLarge.jpg
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/OklahomaMapLarge.jpg
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/NewMexicoMapLarge.jpg
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/TexasMapLarge.jpg
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/WyomingMapLarge.jpg
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/MontanaMapLarge.jpg
As most have concluded, the real value of these maps are the high resolution. They need to be enlarged significantly and the details are very telling.
These will be of use if you are following any of LOWMAN's picks.
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/NorthDakotaMapLarge.jpg
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/OklahomaMapLarge.jpg
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/NewMexicoMapLarge.jpg
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/TexasMapLarge.jpg
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/WyomingMapLarge.jpg
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/MontanaMapLarge.jpg
Thanks for the nice words. As most have concluded, the real value of this map is the high resolution. It needs to be enlarged significantly and the details are very telling.
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/MontanaMapLarge.jpg
Few more that may be of use if you are following any of LOWMAN's picks.
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/NorthDakotaMapLarge.jpg
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/OklahomaMapLarge.jpg
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/NewMexicoMapLarge.jpg
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/TexasMapLarge.jpg
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/WyomingMapLarge.jpg
Hopefully no one is using hard stops and instead using mental ones. As most know, MM's see all hard stops and will run it down to get the "business".
DOE, Industry Consortium Project Deploys New Stripper Well Tool
Issued on: October 4, 2006
Novel Technology Boosts Oil and Gas Production and Efficiency at 200 Sites Nationwide
Washington, DC - A novel technology developed through a joint government and industry venture has demonstrated significant cost and production benefits for lower-producing wells, called "stripper wells," while contributing to the security of the nation's oil and gas supplies.
The technology, named the VortexFlowTM SX tool, was sponsored by the Stripper Well Consortium, a national industry-driven group focused on developing low-cost technologies applicable to both oil and gas stripper wells. The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) co-funds the consortium through its National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL) in an agreement with The Pennsylvania State University.
Stripper wells produce oil and gas at the low rates of less than 10 barrels per day of oil or 60,000 cubic feet per day of natural gas. Tapping into additional oil and gas supplies within the nation's stripper wells can be an important contributor to U.S. energy security.
Some 80 percent of U.S. oil wells are now classified as marginal wells. Because these wells produce 860,000 barrels of oil per day (nearly 20 percent of U.S. production) and the nation's natural gas stripper wells produce 1.5 trillion cubic feet of gas per year (about 8 percent of U.S. production), any increase in their production rates or decrease in related costs serves as a boon to the nation's supply of energy.
Vortex Flow LLC developed the new SX tool and, to date, has deployed it in more than 200 stripper well operations across the country, increasing production and decreasing maintenance costs.
Some "real-life" successes of the Vortex technology include the following:
A Pennsylvania well operator installed the tool on numerous gas wells and lowered line pressures to increase gas production by 30 percent.
An operator in New Mexico installed Vortex tools ranging from 4 inches to 12 inches in a well system and similarly lowered line pressures and increased production.
A Colorado pipeline operator installed a 10-inch SX tool and observed drops in pipeline pressures, increases in production, and the cost-saving elimination of a process called "line pigging."
The installation of an SX tool in a 3,000-foot-deep coalbed gas well resulted in lowering the bottom hole pressure by 15 percent and increasing gas production by 10 percent.
The installation of the SX tool in a 600-foot-deep Powder River coalbed gas well allowed the well to continue to flow uninterrupted for 10 months, thereby saving about $12,000 in annual costs.
What is so inherently special about the Vortex tool that facilitates enhanced production and greater cost effectiveness in stripper wells?
Vortex Flow based its SX tool -- tubelike devices with spool connectors inserted into a well -- on breakthroughs in fluid dynamics that provide a way for an operator to address the turbulence and disorganization of liquids and gases when they flow through a pipe. The SX tool converts the turbulent, disorganized flow into an organized "vortex" flow that accelerates the velocity of water used in the process and reduces the friction that causes the pressure to drop as fluids move through a pipe. By doing so at both surface and subsurface levels, the SX tool helps to reduce wear and tear on oil and gas pipelines while increasing production and reducing costs. At current gas prices, the SX tool has been shown to pay for itself within 60 days. Vortex Flow perfected its tool during testing at DOE's Rocky Mountain Oilfield Testing Center in Casper, Wyoming.
NETL researchers have been actively identifying wells that prematurely decline to stripper well status and have been developing technologies that result in increased production, longer well life, and more efficient and cost-effective recovery of remaining oil and gas in those wells.
Since the majority of stripper well owners are small, independent operators, NETL organized the Stripper Well Consortium to leverage the resources of those operators to develop applicable technologies.
http://www.fossil.energy.gov/news/techlines/2006/06056-Vortex_Technology_Success.html
Marginal & Stripper Well Revitalization
We have leases in 4 of the 10 mentioned top States
http://www.fossil.energy.gov/programs/oilgas/marginalwells/index.html
Manipulation with extreme prejudice. em
Kansas Projects to Help Improve Oil Production, Site Remediation
The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS, is involved in five projects that are investigating technologies to improve oil recovery. The five projects have a total value of $12.01 million with DOE providing $6.84 million.
4-D Seismic Monitoring of Carbon Dioxide Miscible Flooding - The University of Kansas will field level research to better understand the movement of carbon dioxide through oil reservoirs. The project will acquire, process and interpret 4-D (length, width, height and time) seismic data to accomplish this objective. Reservoir fluid characteristics change as it comes in contact with CO2. Time lapse 3D seismic (4D) maps the flow of CO2 through the reservoir by interpreting the fluid characteristic changes. A basic understanding of CO2 movement through reservoirs will aid in maximizing oil production. DOE is contributing $2.90 million to this $3.58 million project.
Carbon Dioxide Miscible Flooding - The University of Kansas will demonstrate the viability of carbon dioxide miscible flooding in the Lansing-Kansas City Formation on the Central Kansas Uplift, and compile data on reservoir properties, flood performance, and operating costs and methods to aid operators in future floods. The project addresses the recovery problem in Class II shallow-shelf carbonate reservoirs depleted by effective waterflooding that leaves significant trapped oil reserves. DOE is providing $1.89 million toward the $5.39 million project.
Development of Polymer Gel Systems - The purpose of this project is to improve the effectiveness of polymer gels to increase volumetric sweep efficiency of fluid displacement processes and reduce water production in production wells. The total cost is $1.19 million with DOE contributing $691,000.
Improved Geologic and Engineering Models - The University of Kansas Center for Research will develop seismic tools, methodologies and workflows to recognize, identify and quantify karst-modified reservoirs. The total cost is $1.09 million with DOE contributing $800,000.
Using Biosurfactants to Improve Oil Recovery - The University of Kansas is evaluating the use of low-cost biosurfactants produced from agriculture process waste streams to improve oil recovery in fractured carbonate reservoirs. DOE is contributing $560,000 to this $759,000 project.
If you have a little time............................
Gas/Oil - Drilling, Completion and Stimulation Projects in the state of Texas and Oklahoma
www.fossil.energy.gov/fred/feprograms.jsp?prog=Gas/Oil+-+Drilling,+Completion+and+Stimulation&state=TX
www.fossil.energy.gov/fred/feprograms.jsp?prog=Gas/Oil+-+Drilling,+Completion+and+Stimulation&state=OK
You'll have to copy and paste to addy bar. Too long a link for IHUB
Just a little icebreaker. Not a Hemi well. Just a well refrac operation that was huge. I'll stick to serious stuff. That was an obvious unsuccessful attempt at humor.
Gotta refrac the well...
County/Lease/Wells........................
Oklahoma Oil and Gas Production and Infrastructure
Leases are in Creek and Rogers Counties which are areas of significant oil and/or gas production and Major oil fields.
Oklahoma Quick Facts:
Oklahoma is one of the top natural gas-producing States in the Nation.
In 2005, 17 of the 100 largest natural gas fields in the country were found in Oklahoma.
Oklahoma has five petroleum refineries and ranks among the top 10 States in distillation capacity.
Cushing, Oklahoma, is the designated delivery point for NYMEX crude oil futures contracts.
The Oklahoma State Legislature created the Commission on Marginally Producing Oil and Gas Wells in 1992 to keep State production decline to a minimum.
http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/state/state_energy_profiles.cfm?sid=OK
Very LARGE map of Montana Oil and Gas divided into sections and counties. Very nice. Pay special attention to Roosevelt County and Fort Peck Indian Reservation location.
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/MontanaMapLarge.jpg
Very LARGE map of North Dakota Oil and Gas divided into sections and counties. Very nice. Pay special attention to Burke and Divide County Line where Hemi Leases located.
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/NorthDakotaMapLarge.jpg
Very LARGE map of Oklahoma Oil and Gas divided into sections and counties. Very nice.
http://www.petrodatasource.com/images/maps/OklahomaMapLarge.jpg
OKLAHOMA DRILLING AND PRODUCTION
Number of counties in state 77
Number of counties with oil or gas production 71
Oil and Gas Wells Drilled
Year Number of Wells
2005 2,369
2004 2,299
2003 2,117
2002 2,339
2001 2,348
2000 1,531
1999 1,264
1998 1,558
1997 1,844
1996 1,607
1995 1,555
1994 1,582
1993 1,743
1992 1,678
Producing Oil Wells
Date Number of Wells
January 1, 2005 82,551
January 1, 2004 83,222
January 1, 2003 83,415
January 1, 2002 83,730
January 1, 2001 84,160
January 1, 2000 84,432
January 1, 1999 85,043
January 1, 1998 85,691
January 1, 1997 86,765
January 1, 1996 88,144
January 1, 1995 90,557
January 1, 1994 91,289
January 1, 1993 92,377
January 1, 1992 93,192
Producing Gas Wells
Date Number of Wells
January 1, 2005 36,704
January 1, 2004 35,612
January 1, 2003 34,334
January 1, 2002 33,279
January 1, 2001 32,672
January 1, 2000 31,580
January 1, 1999 30,978
January 1, 1998 30,501
January 1, 1997 30,101
January 1, 1996 29,734
January 1, 1995 29,733
January 1, 1994 29,337
January 1, 1993 29,118
January 1, 1992 28,902
http://www.okmoga.com/facts-06.htm
More recent well info links...........
http://imaging.occeweb.com/OG/Well%20Records/002CE676.pdf (oil)
http://imaging.occeweb.com/OG/Well%20Records/002CE67A.pdf (oil and gas)
http://imaging.occeweb.com/OG/Well%20Records/002CE67B.pdf (oil)
http://imaging.occeweb.com/OG/Well%20Records/002CE672.pdf (oil)
http://imaging.occeweb.com/OG/Well%20Records/00298963.pdf (oil)
More recent..........
Recent RWNW Well info...........
Definitely. Hopefully very long-term. eom
Just started in-depth DD and will try to help if I can. Haven't read all posts yet, but am sure i am not posting anything that hasn't been posted once before. Am going through all posts and will try to find some new and recent info.
Hope I can help.
GLTY,
David
Here's the info......
"I take it that operator 21872 which appears on all of these charts is Well Renewal..."