Natural gas produced from shale formations in the United States over the past decade have altered the oil and gas industry remarkably. The Barnett shale was at the forefront of the shale gas revolution in the United States and was considered to be the highest producing natural gas field in the United States until 2012, yielding the top producer spot to the Marcellus shale. Due to the uncertainty regarding the accurate determination of Estimated Ultimate Recoverable (EUR) in shale gas reservoirs, this paper aims to assess EUR values for the Barnett shale using empirical decline curve methods like the Arp's hyperbolic, Modified Arp's hyperbolic and Doung's method. In addition, we investigated the economic viability of wells over time in the Barnett under various probabilities of success. Throughout this paper, reference is made to two key publications where a similar work was carried out for various shale plays in the United States, including the Barnett shale -though only the Arp's hyperbolic decline was employed.The dataset in this paper consisted of more horizontal wells from covering more counties within the Barnett shale compared to other similar studies. We conclude that either the Arp's hyperbolic or Doung's method can be used to forecast EUR in the Barnett shale as only marginal differences were observed. This is on the basis that production history exceeds 10 months (a maximum of 80 months production history was used). We also obtained reliable and conservative estimates of EUR compared to previous studies.
Natural gas produced from shale formations has increased rapidly in the past decade altering the oil and gas industry markets remarkably. The use of horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing has allowed previously unrecoverable shale gas to be extracted. Shale gas development is more expensive compared to conventional developments and as such, understanding the economic feasibility is of greater importance in successfully developing the resource. Using the estimated ultimate recoverable expressed in terms of P10, P50, and P90 from 2751 horizontal well production data (all starting production from 2008) from the Barnett shale, a discounted cash flow economic model (MS- Excel based) was used to quantify the effect of finding and development costs (F&DC) and gas prices on the economic viability of horizontal wells within four out of five basins (Strawn Basin, Ouachita Folded Belt, Forth-worth Syncline and Bendarch Basin) in the Barnett shale. The investment hurdle in the economic model was a rate of return of 20% and a payback period of 5 years or less. This paper helps determine the percentage of wells within basins in the Barnett shale that would be economically viable at various F&DC and gas prices subject to satisfying the prescribed investment hurdle.
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