Officials Expect Historic Highs By Year's End

Colorado Drill Rates Soaring

Capitalizing on vast improvements in drilling techniques in recent years, Colorado is on pace and expects to issue a record number of drilling permits this year, state regulators say.

Drilling permits are expected to hit a record 2,700 this year, substantially up from the 2,245 permits issued in 2003, said Brian Macke, acting director of the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission.

"That would be the highest since 1981," Macke said — and this pace is expected to continue for several years.

While there is some oil drilling and some coalbed methane exploration in the state, most of the energy activity is focused on natural gas plays, he said.

"It’s primarily tight gas sand formations — there’s been a dramatic improvement in well stimulation technology that has unlocked the tight rock formations in sandstone," he said.

"In recent years, the techniques for drilling and completing these wells have improved dramatically to the point where today it’s economical to develop these resources," he said.

However, the availability of rigs has limited production locally and nationally.

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Capitalizing on vast improvements in drilling techniques in recent years, Colorado is on pace and expects to issue a record number of drilling permits this year, state regulators say.

Drilling permits are expected to hit a record 2,700 this year, substantially up from the 2,245 permits issued in 2003, said Brian Macke, acting director of the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission.

"That would be the highest since 1981," Macke said — and this pace is expected to continue for several years.

While there is some oil drilling and some coalbed methane exploration in the state, most of the energy activity is focused on natural gas plays, he said.

"It’s primarily tight gas sand formations — there’s been a dramatic improvement in well stimulation technology that has unlocked the tight rock formations in sandstone," he said.

"In recent years, the techniques for drilling and completing these wells have improved dramatically to the point where today it’s economical to develop these resources," he said.

However, the availability of rigs has limited production locally and nationally.

The state’s production of natural gas is projected to reach a trillion cubic feet of gas in 2004. Wellhead revenues are expected to be about $4 billion, officials said.

Weld County in north central Colorado remains the most active drilling site in the state.

"Year in and year out, Weld County has seen a third of the permits," Macke said. "It’s because it has been the subject of improvements in well deepening, well stimulation and directional drilling practices that goes back for the last eight years."

As of the first part of the summer, some 439 drilling permits had been issued there, mostly around Wattenberg Field, which is located between Denver and Greeley. Some 10,000 wells are active in Weld County, representing about 40 percent of the state’s drilling activity, he said.

Meanwhile, the Piceance Basin in Garfield County, about 30 miles west of Glenwood Springs, had received 377 drilling permits so far this year — about 29 percent of the state’s drilling activity, he said.

"The other very active area is between Rifle and Parachute in the Piceance Basin," Macke said. "That’s where a lot of drilling rigs are running right now."

This part of the Piceance Basin is very large and covers parts of Mesa, Delta and Rio Blanco counties.

"It’s a giant," Macke said. "It has been an active area for several years, but the total percentage of drilling permits has been increasing here for the last 10 years."

The gas produced in Garfield County is fairly rich natural gas. "Lately we’ve seen an increase in oil production in Garfield County because of the condensate attributable to gas production," he said.

"Most people agree that the Piceance Basin will continue to increase for the foreseeable future," Macke said. "That’s the most rapidly emerging area. The development of better technology along with an improved price environment is driving it."

Keeping Busy

Ken Wonstolen, general counsel for the trade group Colorado Oil and Gas Association, agreed that drilling in the Piceance Basin has increased.

"The two fields with the most intense activity are the Piceance and Wattenberg fields," he said. "Wattenberg is over 30 years old — it’s still the gift that keeps on giving. There’s been a lot of recompletion and refragmenting drilling going on there.

"The Wattenberg keeps surprising folks," he continued. "About 30 years ago, common wisdom was that it would peter out, but it’s produced over 3 tcf of gas and has additional reserves."

In the Piceance, "there’s been a fair amount of directional drilling because of terrain issues," Wonstolen said. "The Piceance is potentially one of the crown jewels of North American gas reserves with 15 to 150 tcf of gas."

EnCana Corp. and Williams are the biggest drillers in the Piceance play, he said. Kerr-McGee Oil Co. is the largest player in Wattenberg, along with Patina Oil and Gas Co. of Denver.

Evergreen is active in the emerging fields of Raton Basin in southeastern Colorado, while BP and Williams are active in the Four Corners area.

Another emerging area in Colorado includes Yuma County in the state’s far northeast part, where active shallow marlstone formations are now being developed.

Last year Colorado produced 1 tcf of gas for the first time in history, and the state has more than doubled its gas production in the last decade, he said.

Wonstolen said about 85 percent of what has been discovered in the Rockies is still in the ground.

Currently, Colorado ranks as the sixth leading producer in the country behind Texas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, New Mexico and Wyoming.

Experts believe that the Rocky Mountain states of Colorado, New Mexico, Wyoming, Montana and Utah hold about 40 percent of the country’s gas reserves.

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