Crescent Energy’s new Uinta Basin completions are showing 60% greater production now that the new-design wells have been online 150 days, the E&P reported May 7.
And the extra oil is “with only minimal increases in our D&C costs,” David Rockecharlie, Crescent CEO, told investors in an earnings call.
A report earlier this year indicated 50% uplift, based on new wells’ output through that time.
“When we acquired this position [in 2022], the only horizontal development on the assets utilized a legacy, smaller completion design with roughly 1,500 pounds of proppant per foot,” Rockecharlie said on May 7.
“As we've implemented our operational approach, we are seeing significantly enhanced returns and improved capital efficiencies through larger completions, which we've doubled to roughly 3,000 pounds per foot.”
Crescent, which operates in Utah’s Uinta as Javelin Energy Partners, was the state’s No. 3 oil producer in January, putting into pipe some 21,000 bbl/d, according to state data.
Crescent brought four new Uinta wells online in the first quarter and 20 in its other play, the Eagle Ford Shale. Its 2024 capex is split 50-50 between the two plays.
Companywide drilling speed has grown 25% from 2022 to 2,000 ft per day, it reported, while completion speed has grown 40% since 2022 to 100,000 bbl/d of fluid pumped.
In full D&C cycle time, the results “save us a couple of days [per] well,” Rockecharlie said. “So a pretty meaningful improvement … over a year ago.”
Meanwhile, well costs have declined 10% to $900/ft per day from 2023, Crescent reported.
‘Supports our optimism’
Based on production growth from both areas, Crescent has increased its 2024 estimated production by 2,500 boe/d to average some 160,000 boe/d this year.
Rockecharlie said of the Uinta Basin results in particular, “Long-term implications for our asset are becoming clearer and clearer over time as productivity remains strong.”
He noted that the findings are still nascent, “but the data supports our optimism about the long-term value creation potential.”
Crescent has one rig drilling in Utah; two rigs, in the Eagle Ford.
It isn’t looking to add rigs or frac spreads, Rockecharlie said, and will return surplus earnings to shareholders instead.
“We would not look to accelerate activity …. I think our basic guidance of a two- to three-rig business today is going to remain intact.”
As for adding more Uinta or Eagle Ford leasehold, Rockecharlie said, “We are constantly in the market and looking for opportunities to invest at attractive risk-adjusted returns.”
Deal-making in the Uinta Basin has been a target of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) beginning in 2022.
Crescent Energy neighbor XCL Resources has a deal underway to buy fellow operator Altamont Energy, but it is on hold as it awaits FTC approval.
Recommended Reading
CEO: EQT Positioned to Meet Demand of Power-guzzling AI Data Centers
2024-04-01 - EQT Corp.’s Toby Rice said demand for AI could exceed the power demand required to meet U.S. residential demand and jump 20% by 2030, in this Hart Energy Exclusive interview.
Novo II Reloads, Aims for Delaware Deals After $1.5B Exit Last Year
2024-04-24 - After Novo I sold its Delaware Basin position for $1.5 billion last year, Novo Oil & Gas II is reloading with EnCap backing and aiming for more Delaware deals.
EIA: Permian, Bakken Associated Gas Growth Pressures NatGas Producers
2024-04-18 - Near-record associated gas volumes from U.S. oil basins continue to put pressure on dry gas producers, which are curtailing output and cutting rigs.
Gulfport Plans Liquids-rich Program After ‘Strong’ Ohio Oil Tests
2024-05-01 - Appalachia gas producer Gulfport Energy continues to report “strong oil production” from a two-well Hendershot pad drilled in eastern Ohio last year. Gulfport plans to develop additional liquids-rich opportunities this year as natural gas prices hover near record lows.
Enverus: 1Q Upstream Deals Hit $51B, but Consolidation is Slowing
2024-04-23 - Oil and gas dealmaking continued at a high clip in the first quarter, especially in the Permian Basin. But a thinning list of potential takeout targets, and an invigorated Federal Trade Commission, are chilling the red-hot M&A market.