Atlas Energy
From Wikimarcellus
Moon Township, Pennsylvania-based Atlas Energy, Inc (NASDAQ GS: ATLS) (Pittsburgh metro area) superseded and merged a subsidiary of Atlas America, Inc. and Atlas Energy LLC and effective September, 2009 became the surviving entity. As of February, 2010 it controlled approximately 584,000 acres prospective for Marcellus shale with over half of the acrage outside of its traditional southwestern Pennsylvania territory. Its leasehold was located in Pennsylvania, West Virginia and New York. A September, 2008 report stated that Atlas had 78 vertical Marcellus shale wells drilled and one horizontal one. 69 of these fed into a pipeline. By year-end 2009, the company was reporting a total of 17 horizontal wells had been drilled during the year. 10 of these had been completed and were producing to sales. Most of the horizontal drilling had taken place in the last quarter of 2009.
Atlas was reported in September, 2008 to be an investor along with CONSOL Energy Company of approximately $100 million in the western Pennsylvania counties of Westmoreland and Allegheny.
According to an October, 2008 report, Atlas owns drilling rights to roughly 587,000 acres of Pennsylvania Marcellus shale, and has invested in excess of $50 million. 271,000 acres are in southwestern Pennsylvania and were mostly acquired during 2007 to 2008. Update #1: August, 2009. Atlas' second quarter, 2009 report issued in early August indicated that the company now owned 532,000 acres prospective for Marcellus shale, and 266,000 acres of it is located in southwest Pennsylvania. Update #2: A February, 2010 company update clarified the above by designating an additional 44,000 acres as prospective for Marcellus shale thus bringing Atlas' grade A southwestern Pennsylvania acreage up to 314,000 acres.
By early November, 2008 drilling on the horizontal leg of the company's second horizontal well had begun, and it was expected to be completed and online by year-end. In late November, Atlas announced that it had finished drilling and casing this well. It is located in Washington County and extends horizontally 3,000 feet. The company planned an eight-stage frac for it. In May, 2009 Atlas announced a third horizontal well in the series had the extraordinary initial production rate of 10.1 Mmcf/d. By mid-May, eight horizontal wells had been drilled since the forth quarter of 2008. Only the first three of the eight were on line. Working with its various joint venture partners, Atlas planned to drill twelve additional Marcellus wells by year-end 2009.
The company owns a 50% interest in the twelve planned horizontal wells including those ones already mentioned. Ten of the wells are located in Washington County, Pa. The remaining two are to be drilled in eastern Greene and western Fayette Counties. With the latter two, Atlas is slated to operate the wells and have a 25% working interest.
Another November, 2008 report indicated Atlas has 90 Marcellus shale wells producing 25 million cubic feet per day.
In December, 2008 the company announced that one of its vertical Marcellus shale wells had an estimated initial production of 5 Mmcf/d. While the location of this spectacular vertical well was not provided, the same company update noted that Atlas had completed over 100 vertical wells in its Marcellus drilling program.
The company is organized similar to a limited partnership run by the parent company, ATLS. The later, also has another subsidiary, Atlas Pipeline Partners (APL), which owns and operates a network of gas pipelines that hook-up to interstate pipelines.
In April, 2009 APL announced that it had become 49% owner of a joint venture with The Williams Companies in which substantially all of its Appalachian pipeline gathering system had been transferred to it.
Atlas was reported to be actively leasing drilling rights in Fayette, Greene, Washington and Westmoreland Counties in Pennsylvania.
Atlas' second quarter, 2009 report stated that the company had drilled 19 vertical and two horizontal wells in the quarter. It had completed one of the two horizontal ones.
The company planned to drill and complete roughly 100 vertical and 4 horizontal Marcellus shale wells before the end of 2009. The horizontal wells were to be 100% owned by Atlas.
According to a July, 2009 report, Atlas had about 75 people working in its Moon Township Headquarters and another 200 in its Fayette County Field Office in Smithfield, PA.
In November, 2009 Atlas reported that it had drilled two horizontal wells in southwestern Pennsylvania:
- one in western Fayette County - 3.3 million Mmcf/d average for 30 days
- another in eastern Greene County - 3.5 million Mmcf/d average.
The first well had shown virtually no decline after 40 days, and the second Greene Co. one had shown similar stable or flat performance. During the first 3 quarters of 2009, the company had drilled 14 horizontal wells. 4 were online and producing, whereas of the remaining 10 wells one was flowing but awaiting connection, three were shut-in behind a processing plant upgrade, and six were awaiting fracs. These are to be placed online during the final quarter of 2009 or in 2010. Some of these wells are in the company's partnership program or else were drilled in partnership with other companies and are not owed outright. However, in 2010, Atlas planned to drill and complete 30 horizontal Marcellus shale wells on its own account.
A year-end 2009 Atlas update that appeared in late February, 2010 emphasized that the company had been undergoing a transformation from a master partnership that maximized cash distributions to limited partners to that of a more full E & P company with specific focus on the Marcellus and other shale formations. The shifting emphasis had involved organizational and staff changes as well as general curtailment of shallow drilling activities. At the time of this report, Marcellus production amounted to 60 Mmcf/d (gross) and 15 Mmcf/d (net) and this volume was on the increase. The company continued to upgrade its pipeline and gas processing capacity to accommodate the future growth in production expected. It planned to drill 28 Marcellus wells that were 100% owened during 2010. All of its wells during 2009 had been drilled with limited partners.
The February, 2010 update also mentioned that Atlas had been using a drilling strategy of landing its wells in the lower portion of the Marcellus formation in order to maximize exposure of fracs to the rich deposits of organic material that have the highest productivity. By landing low, fracs were allowed to climb upwards into the part of the formation with best pay. According to Atlas' microseismic survey, the best intervals to frac are in the Anadarko limestone just below the Marcellus shale formation and in the Tully limestone that sits above the Hamilton group--right above the Marcellus formation. The company's microseismic logs indicated that its wells were draining a 350 foot section that was about evenly divided between the Hamilton group and the Marcellus shale. The company was estimating that the fully loaded cost of drilling a well at approximately $4.2 million, although it was experiencing improved economics through an experience factor and that cost was expected to decline to $3.75 million through:
- greater use of pad drilling
- more specifically targeted completions
- greater reuse (100%) of waste water
- Richard D. Weber is President and COO of Atlas Energy.
- Edward E. Cohen, Ph.D. is CEO of the company.
- Matthew A. Jones is the CFO.
- Jeff Kupfer is a Senior Vice President of Atlas.
- Greg Ryan is Senior Vice President of Land.
- Greg Muse is Senior Vice President of Marcellus Operations.
- Tommy L. Thompson is Vice President, Horizontal Drilling.
- Brian Begley is Vice President of Investor Relations.
- Gene Dubay is President and CEO of Atlas Pipeline Partners.
- Brett Loflin is Director of Permitting and Regulatory
Compliance.
- Jim Brauns is an Environmental Regulatory Compliance Officer.
- Bob Hertz and Brett Loflin are spokesmen for Atlas.