An Overview of
Production
Performance for Selected Rocky Mountain Unconventional Gas Reservoirs
Stark, Pete
IHS Energy Group, Englewood, CO
Unconventional gas reservoirs are commanding increasing attention from U.S. producers. Interest is driven by several factors including increased gas prices, improved completion technologies and lack of conventional reservoir targets.. Many such plays were established more than a decade ago when Section 29 tax credits were applied to designated tight sand, Devonian shale and coalbed methane reservoirs. Gas productivity patterns provide a framework to compare and contrast unconventional reservoir performance in proven and emerging unconventional gas reservoirs. Over the past decade, several general
production
performance patterns have been observed for established coalbed and tight sand reservoirs in the Rocky Mountain region: 1)Average peak gas well
production
rates have tended to decrease, 2) First year
production
decline rates have tended to increase, and 3) Average cumulative
production
over the first 24 months has varied from year to year in most basins.
Tight sand
production
in the Jonah Field and Pinedale Anticline is an exception. There, average peak well
production
and average 24 month cumulative
production
increased markedly after 1995 when improved frac methods were introduced. No such consistent improvements are observed in other unconventional reservoirs assessed in this study. This paper presents gas productivity trends for selected coalbed methane plays in the Raton, San Juan, Uinta and Powder River Basins and for selected tight sand plays in the Green river, Piceance and Uinta Basins, the Pinedale Anticline and Jonah Field. The objective is to provide benchmarks to guide investments into future unconventional gas plays.