Rex Energy Corporation
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In Westmoreland Co. Rex was in the process of drilling its seventh well there. The first six wells drilled and completed were in the process of being flow tested. They had initially flowed an average of 3.3 Mmcf/d for 14 days. These wells had lateral lengths of 2,100 feet. As mentioned a seventh well was drilling, and the company planned to drill an eighth one before releasing its rig. Rex's JV partner, Williams, was to perform the [[Hydro-fracturing|fracture stimulations]] on these latter two wells. The company was planning to bring in a ''HP4S plus flex rig'' at the end of March. Combined, Rex and Williams planned to drill a dozen wells between them in Westmoreland Co. during 2010. These were to have lateral lengths between 3,000 and 4,000 feet. | In Westmoreland Co. Rex was in the process of drilling its seventh well there. The first six wells drilled and completed were in the process of being flow tested. They had initially flowed an average of 3.3 Mmcf/d for 14 days. These wells had lateral lengths of 2,100 feet. As mentioned a seventh well was drilling, and the company planned to drill an eighth one before releasing its rig. Rex's JV partner, Williams, was to perform the [[Hydro-fracturing|fracture stimulations]] on these latter two wells. The company was planning to bring in a ''HP4S plus flex rig'' at the end of March. Combined, Rex and Williams planned to drill a dozen wells between them in Westmoreland Co. during 2010. These were to have lateral lengths between 3,000 and 4,000 feet. | ||
- | In [[Centre|Centre Co.]], the company had recently acquired 3,000 acres on the Centre Co. and Clinton Co. border that was held by production. It also had two wells shut in that were awaiting pipeline connection to Rex's tap on the ''Columbia 1711 line''. Collectively, these two shut-in wells were expected to flow between 5 and 7 Mmcf/d once online to sales. | + | Also, according to the March, 2010 update, the company had recently acquired 3,000 acres on the [[Centre|Centre Co.]] and Clinton Co. border that was held by production. It also had two wells shut in that were awaiting pipeline connection to Rex's tap on the ''Columbia 1711 line''. Collectively, these two shut-in wells were expected to flow between 5 and 7 Mmcf/d once online to sales. |
* The company's President and CEO is Benjamin W. Hulburt. | * The company's President and CEO is Benjamin W. Hulburt. |
Revision as of 23:15, 30 June 2010
State College, Pennsylvania-based Rex Energy Corporation (NASDAQ: REXX) is an oil and gas exploration and production company that has made the Marcellus shale formation a major focus of its operations. As of March, 2010 Rex's leasehold amounted to 68,700 acres in the Marcellus shale fairway.
Rex was reported in September, 2008 to have drilled its first Marcellus shale test well in Westmoreland County, PA. It was the first of three vertical wells in that county that Rex planned to drill to a depth of 9,000 feet. At the time, Rex held almost 50,000 net acres of Marcellus shale leases.
An October, 2008 report stated that Rex also had active locations in Butler County, PA. It owned a 50% interest with a partner in two wells there. Initial production on these wells was approximately 675 Mcf per day. (See July, 2009 revision of ownership percentage below)
A few months later in March, 2009 there was a further update that Rex also had two wholly-owned wells in Butler County that were selling between 50 and 400 mcf/d or as much as the pipelines were able to accept in that area.
The update also mentioned that Rex was building a refrigeration processing plant in Butler County with initial capacity between 3-5 Mmcf/d, but expandable up to 25 Mmcf/d.
In November, 2008, the company reported that drilling had been completed on the three aforementioned vertical test wells in Westmoreland County. Two of the three had already been hydro-fractured, and the last one was to be hydro-fractured in November. Update #1: The company provided an update in December, 2008 that stated the two completed Westmoreland County wells had been producing with a flowrate of 300 to 500 Mcf/d each, and that a third well there was to be complete in mid-December. Update #2: In a March 2009 update Rex announced a third well in southwest Pennsylvania with an average flow-rate of 1.4 million cu. ft./day. It could very well be the third and final test well in Westmoreland Co.
Also, in early December, 2008 it was reported that Rex had two wells in Clearfield County, Pennsylvania--one was complete, and drilling was still under way on the other. Both were to be completed by year-end 2008.
Rex also had acreage in Centre County, Pennsylvania.
An approximate breakdown of Rex's drilling rights in the State was: * 29,000 acres - Clearfield and Centre Counties * 18,000 acres - Westmoreland County * 13,000 acres - Butler County * 10,000 acres - All other ------ 70,000 acres TOTAL
According to a March, 2009 update Rex owned drilling rights to 62,000 net acres that were prospective for Marcellus shale. At the time, Rex continued to increase its leasehold. Update: A January, 2010 company update noted that Rex's leasehold had grown to 92,000 gross acres in the Marcellus shale play.
The company had also received permission from the Susquehanna River Basin Commission to withdraw up to four million gallons per day for its Marcellus shale drilling operations.
By March, 2009, the company had also completed drilling its first vertical test well in Clearfield County, PA having encountered 150 feet of Marcellus Shale formation there. As previously noted, two vertical wells in Butler County, PA had also been drilled and were expected to be complete during the first quarter of 2009 after a gas processing facility had been installed. The timetable for this had been pushed back a little, and the Butler County situation is discussed further below.
According to the aforementioned March, 2009 update, at year-end 2008, Rex had seven vertical wells located in three distinct operating regions in Pennsylvania: Butler, Clearfield, and Westmoreland counties.
In a May, 2009 update, the company announced that it had finished drilling its first horizontal Marcellus shale well in southwest Pennsylvania. It was located in Butler County. The company planned to hydro-fracture and complete the well in June, 2009. Rex was in the process of gearing up to drill a second horizontal well in Westmoreland County, PA. Also, it was analyzing the core taken from the already drilled horizontal one. In addition, it was acquiring seismic data taken from its various areas of operation across the state. The company anticipated drilling several more wells before year-end 2009. It planned to analyze core samples from these wells and to conduct further testing in order to enhance its understanding of the reservoir and serve as a basis for further planning. Gathering pipelines had been established in all its areas of operation and a new gas processing (refrigeration) plant built in Butler County. Rex continued to lease acreage in its prime areas of operations albeit on a very selective basis.
Wells located in Westmoreland County tended to be twice as deep as those in Butler County, and with increased depth came increased pressure and thus higher production rates. For that reason, most of the horizontal wells planned for the balance of 2009 were to be in the deeper Marcellus shale located in Westmoreland County.
A report in June, 2009 found Rex teaming up with The Williams Cos. to develop roughly 44,000 acres of the former's Marcellus shale leases in Pennsylvania's Centre, Clearfield and Westmoreland counties. Williams planned to invest $33 million in the venture in exchange for a 50% share of Rex's working interest in the leases. The companies termed their agreement a "drill-to-earn" structure. Under the agreement, Williams was to be well operator and bear 90% of the drilling expense up $33 million on behalf of Rex, or $41 million of its own expenses, in order to earn a 50% share. In other words, because of the carry, Rex was only required to pay 10% of the cost to drill and complete the wells, yet it owns a 50% interest under the agreement. Willimas had up until the end of 2011 to complete its investment.
Rex also announced in June, 2009 that it had bought out its 50% partner in its Butler County leasehold. This addition of 6,500 net acres in Butler brought its total up to roughly 21,250 net acres in the county. This property is located in the neighborhood of Rex's four producing vertical Marcellus wells, its recently completed first horizontal well, and the gas processing plant.
According to an end-of-July, 2009 company update Rex's first horizontal well in Butler County, after having been hydro-fractured, had produced at a flow rate of 2.4 Mmcfe/d for 30 days without seeing any measurable decline in production. Update: A November, 2009 status report from Rex stated that after four months this well, named the P. Knauff #1H, continued to produce at the exact same 2.4 Mmcf/d rate. It had been drilled to a depth of 5,500 feet, with lateral extension of 1,800 feet, and had gone into production in June.
The four vertical wells in Butler County had been shut in pending completion of the gas processing plant. The plant was planned to start up in August, 2009 with initial flow capacity of 5 Mmcf/d that could accommodate both the four vertical wells and the one horizontal one. It was planned to be scaled in stages up to 25 Mmcf/d as production came online from additional horizontal wells planned over the next two years. Rex continued to lease additional acreage in Butler County. Williams was not involved in any of Rex's Butler County operations.
The previously mentioned end-of-July update noted that Rex had recently completed a second horizontal Marcellus shale well in Westmoreland County, PA that had been stimulated with a seven stage frac, and it was undergoing flow testing. It was expected to be producing by August, 2009. The well had been drilled to a depth of 8,200 feet, and had a lateral extension 2,000 feet in length. A third horizontal well there was in the process of being drilled. These wells were considered to be the first ones in the drilling program with Williams. Update #1: Rex's November, 2009 status report stated that for its initial 30 days the third well in the Westmoreland County series of horizontal wells had produced at the rate of 4.2 Mmcf/d. At the time, drilling was complete on a fourth horizontal well, and underway on a fifth and sixth one. These wells were expected to be fracture stimulated and completed by year-end 2009. Update #2: By mid-December, 2009 fracture stimulation was complete on these latter two wells, and flow testing was about to begin.
Rex's November, 2009 status report also mentoned that it was in the process of drilling its first horizontal well in Clearfield County. This well was slated for fracture stimulation during the fourth quarter of 2009. Update: In December, 2009 the company announced that it had completed the Alder Run #1H, its first horizontal well in Clearfield Co. It had been drilled to a depth of 8,200 feet with a 2,700 foot lateral. It had initial production (13 days) of 4.1 Mmcf/d and was shut in pending completion of a connecting pipeline to be finished in February, 2010. Rex was in the process of drilling the Alder Run #3H well. It was a direct offset to the Alder Run #1H, and the company expected to fracture stimulate it by year-end.
Also, in July, 2009, Rex was in the news when several Westmoreland landowners sued the company over alleged breach of contract regarding leases they had signed for drilling rights. One of the suits had already settled out-of-court. However, three landowners in Derry and Ligonier townships had filed a class action lawsuit against Rex in the Westmoreland County Common Pleas Court, claiming that the company had defaulted on its lease agreements with them and failed to make promised payments. The company, defended by Greensburg attorney George N. Stewart is disputing these claims. The plaintiffs are represented by David A. Borkovic of Sewickley.
In September, 2009 Rex announced that it had hired Union Drilling Inc. to bring in a second rig in its Marcellus shale horizontal drilling program. The rig was expected to arrive on location in central Pennsylvania by the end of September. It was to be deployed drilling Rex's first horizontal well in the central part of the state (presumably Clearfield Couty). From there, it was planned to move the rig to Butler County, PA to bolster the company's 2009-2010 drilling program in that development area.
A December, 2009 news account found Rex having formed a joint venture (JV) with Stonehenge Energy Resources. The JV was to be called Keystone Midstream Services, LLC. The purpose of the JV was to develop a cryogenic gas processing plant in Butler County, as well as to build a gathering network to flow gas from wellheads to the processing plant.
In March, 2010 Rex provided an update for the fourth quarter of 2009 in which it was mentioned that the company had drilled and completed 7 horizontal wells that had averaged 3.1 Mmcfe/d for their first seven days of production. Rex projected that its estimated ultimate recovery (EUR) per well averaged 3.2 Bcfe. As of March, the company's leasehold had grown to 68,700 net acres in the Marcellus shale fairway, and it continued to acquire new acreage.
During 2010, Rex planned to field 2 rigs over its three operating areas in the Marcellus shale and drill 19 gross horizontal wells. As of March, the company had drilled its first two horizontal wells of 2010 in Butler Co., PA. These were scheduled to be fraced in March. The company was using a vertical well to drill ahead of its horizontal rig, so at the time Rex was already drilling its third and fourth Butler Co. wells. Drilling time was under 21 days. The lateral lengths were to run 3,000 to 4,000 feet.
The aforementioned Keystone Midstream-Butler Co. cryogenic plant was on track and scheduled to go online during the fourth quarter of 2010. The JV was still in the process of obtaining necessary state and local permits. It was now called the Sarsen plant.
In Westmoreland Co. Rex was in the process of drilling its seventh well there. The first six wells drilled and completed were in the process of being flow tested. They had initially flowed an average of 3.3 Mmcf/d for 14 days. These wells had lateral lengths of 2,100 feet. As mentioned a seventh well was drilling, and the company planned to drill an eighth one before releasing its rig. Rex's JV partner, Williams, was to perform the fracture stimulations on these latter two wells. The company was planning to bring in a HP4S plus flex rig at the end of March. Combined, Rex and Williams planned to drill a dozen wells between them in Westmoreland Co. during 2010. These were to have lateral lengths between 3,000 and 4,000 feet.
Also, according to the March, 2010 update, the company had recently acquired 3,000 acres on the Centre Co. and Clinton Co. border that was held by production. It also had two wells shut in that were awaiting pipeline connection to Rex's tap on the Columbia 1711 line. Collectively, these two shut-in wells were expected to flow between 5 and 7 Mmcf/d once online to sales.
- The company's President and CEO is Benjamin W. Hulburt.
- Thomas (Tom) Stabley is Executive Vice President and CFO.
- William Ottaviani is COO.
- Julia Williams is Rex's Manager of Investor Relations.
- Timothy Beattie is a spokesman for Rex Energy regarding Keystone Midstream.