Fields Make Big Impact on State's Production

Trenton-Black River on New York ‘Hit List’

At the end of 1999 - the latest production figures available from the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation’s Division of Mineral Resources - three Trenton-Black River fields were producing in New York.

  • Columbia Natural Resources Glodes Corner Field came on line in 1996, and in 1999 produced 2.5 billion cubic feet of gas from 10 wells at depths ranging from 6,600 to 7,700 feet.
  • Columbia’s Muck Farm Field was discovered in 1998, and in 1999 four wells produced 431 million cubic feet of gas from between 6,800 and 7,800 feet.
  • Pennsylvania General Energy’s Wilson Hollow Field was discovered in 1999, and one well produced 58 million cubic feet of gas that year from around 9,700 feet.

DEC records show that at the end of 1999 33 wells had been completed in the Trenton-Black River in New York, and 15 of those reported some production.

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At the end of 1999 - the latest production figures available from the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation’s Division of Mineral Resources - three Trenton-Black River fields were producing in New York.

  • Columbia Natural Resources Glodes Corner Field came on line in 1996, and in 1999 produced 2.5 billion cubic feet of gas from 10 wells at depths ranging from 6,600 to 7,700 feet.
  • Columbia’s Muck Farm Field was discovered in 1998, and in 1999 four wells produced 431 million cubic feet of gas from between 6,800 and 7,800 feet.
  • Pennsylvania General Energy’s Wilson Hollow Field was discovered in 1999, and one well produced 58 million cubic feet of gas that year from around 9,700 feet.

DEC records show that at the end of 1999 33 wells had been completed in the Trenton-Black River in New York, and 15 of those reported some production.

And what a difference those wells are making to the state’s production. DEC’s Kathleen Sanford said that in 1986 New York’s production was 34.8 billion cubic feet of gas, and 89 percent of that total was from 4,800 Medina and Queenston wells; none was from the Black River formation.

By 1999 the state’s production declined dramatically to 16.1 billion cubic feet of gas, but over 18 percent of that total was from just 15 Black River wells.

Through the end of 2000 the state issued permits for about 40 additional Trenton-Black River wells.

New York and West Virginia are not the only regions where operators have banked Trenton-Black River fields. The search has paid off in northeastern Ohio, where CGAS Exploration of Columbus recently discovered the York Field in Ashtabula County.

That Trenton-Black River field was drilled based on 2-D seismic, and today the firm has six producing wells with plans for additional drilling and field extension using 3-D seismic.

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