Norse Energy

From Wikimarcellus

Revision as of 02:51, 2 April 2010; view current revision
←Older revision | Newer revision→
Jump to: navigation, search

Lysaker, Norway-based Norse Energy Corp. (OTCQX: NSEEY), or its North American subsidiary, Nornew, Inc. (aka Norse Energy USA), with offices in Norwich, New York, northeast of Binghamton, is the most active driller in Chenango County, NY. It had drilled dozens of wells in the sandstone formations in both Madison and Chenango counties, especially in the towns of Lebanon, Plymouth and Smyrna. A company spokesman stated that it had purchased most of the available Marcellus and Utica shale acreage in these two counties or else already had it under lease. As of January, 2010 its leasehold consisted of 180,000 acres. 130,000 of the total acreage had stacked potential not only for the Herkimer formation, but also for the Marcellus and Utica shales.

norse_map.gif norse_map_legend.gif
N.Y. map courtesy Norse Energy

Contents

Latest Company Developments

At the conclusion of 2009, Norse's production from the Herkimer formation amounted to 12 Mmcf/d. While much of its acreage is prospective for Marcellus and Utica shales too, drilling is on hold for these pending final approval of New York State's Supplemental Generic Environmental Impact Statement. Final approval of it is expected to occur before the end of the second quarter of 2010. Horizontal drilling is permissible in the Herkimer formation so long as the limit of 80,000 gallons per fracture stimulation is not exceeded.

2008 Development Timeline

It was reported in August, 2008 that Norse had drilled eleven wells in the previous twelve months in Chenango County. It had been active there since 1996. Later reports indicated that all eleven had been successful in fractured Silurian Herkimer sandstone.

Many Herkimer wells drilled - Central NY leasehold grows

By Septeber, 2008 the company announced that two of its wells in northern Chenango County eacn had been producing approximately 1 Mmcf/d of natgas from the Herkimer formation. Neither well location was disclosed, yet most of Norse's Herkimer wells are located on various country roads west of State Route 12 and 12B between South Oxford and Pine Woods in rural Chenango County. There is also a small cluster of wells near Coventryville off State Route 41. Production from these wells flows out either through a New York State Gas & Electric or a Dominion line.

An October, 2008 report indicated Norse's leasehold had grown to 130,000 acres in Broome, Chenango and Madison counties in New York. It had drilled two additional wells near Norwich, New York, and also built a gathering system there.

Setting up infrastructure

The company planned to drill in central Broome County from where it could ship gas out through the Millennium Pipeline.

It had also set up a gas compression station at the northern end of its zone of operations so gas could be flowed into a Dominion pipeline running through Madison County. Covering more than fifty miles, Norse's gas transportation and gathering pipelines anchored the company's acreage and added considerable value.

Nornew had a pipeline underway that ran south through Chenango Co. to connect up with the Millennium Pipeline in Broome County. It was to be completed by 2010, and it traveled from Plymouth to Preston, Oxford, Coventry and Afton. Offshoots from this main line were to connect up with individual well locations along the way.

Acreage grows - Marcellus shale permits

According to a November, 2008 report, Norse's total leasehold had swollen to roughly 175,000 acres. It had applied for several permits for Marcellus shale wells in the same general area as mentioned above for its Herkimer wells--off State Route 12 between South Oxford and Smyrna. There is also another small cluster of permits near Coventryville off Route 41.

Drilling results

In December, 2008 the company stated that it had drilled 33 wells during 2008 in New York State.

The company's Q4, 2008 Quarterly Report stated that its reserves are estimated at 1.2 Bcf of natgas per Herkimer well, and that the last five horizontal wells drilled had averaged 1 Mmcf/d.

Acreage prospective for Marcellus and Utica shales

The lion's share of Norse's 175,000 acre New York leasehold was prospective for Marcellus shale, and the evaluation of its potential production had led to a large increase in the company's contingent reserves. Some of the central New York leases were also prospective for Utica shale. That also had a positive impact upon contingent reserves.

Shoots seismic and looks for a strategic partner

The company had been very active researching prospective Marcellus and Utica locations as well as in the Herkimer. In the process, its exploration department shot over 500 miles of 2D seismic data during 2008. The company had retained an investment bank to assist it in locating a strategic partner to help fully develop its shale potential in New York.

2009 Development Timeline

Norse/Nornew planned 25 more New York Herkimer wells in 2009. The company continued to drill numerous wells in Chenango Co. along with those in other counties.

norse_rig.gif
Norse Energy U.S.A. Herkimer Formation Drilling Rig In Madison Co., NY
Courtesy of Norse Energy

Lebanon Rig Fire

The company was in the news in March, 2009 when there was a gas rig fire in southern Madison County near the town of Lebanon on the border with Chenango County. According to the report, another well fire had occurred a couple of months earlier two miles from this location. It was mentioned that Nornew had around 100 wells in the area of Lebanon and the neighboring town of Smyrna. This fire occurred in a very isolated area, and the cause of the fire was unknown.

More drilling results

An April, 2009 update mentioned that Nornew had identified a minimum of 250 prospective locations in the Herkimer formation on its 130,000 acres in central New York. The report also mentioned that the company's two most recent wells had production rates of 2.5 Mmcf/d. As of late April, five successful horizontal Herkimer wells had been drilled in 2009, and 18 previously drilled to various formations were awaiting pipeline hookup.

2010 Development Timeline

A January, 2010 company update noted that the its leasehold had grown to 180,000 acres and 130,000 of them had "stacked potential". By stacked the company meant that this acreage also had potential for Marcellus and Utica shale development as well as Herkimer. The company noted that horizontal shale wells were presently prohibited in New York State pending final approval of the State's Supplemental Generic Impact Statement that was expected by the second quarter of 2010. At year end 2009, Norse was producing 12 Mmcf/d primarily from the Herkimer formation. Horizontal drilling had been permitted in that formation but with a limit of 80,000 gallons per fracture stimulation.

Spotlight Issues

  • Assuming New York State's Supplemental Generic Impact Statement blesses horizontal Marcellus and Utica shale drilling and DEC issues permits, Norse could be one of the biggest beneficiaries with its 130,000 acres prospective for both formations.
  • Norse has been active in central New York since 1996. The company has had time to establish its gathering lines and compression plants. It is well positioned to take advantage of new production coming from horizontally drilling these presently off-limit shale formations.
  • Higher natgas production from Norse's newer wells demonstrates a learning curve effect and that the company's drilling efforts are gaining in productivity with experience.

Executive Contacts

  • Øivind Risberg is Norse's Chief Executive Officer.
  • Steven Keyes is its Vice President of Norse Operations.
  • David Holbrook is a company spokesman and attorney.
  • Mark Dice is President and COO of Norse Energy USA.
  • Richard Broughrum is CFO of Norse Energy USA.

Resources

Personal tools