Selain potensi CBM, Gas shale di Indonesia jarang
kedengaran..... apakah masih terlalu mahal untuk
diexploitasi ?

-Sena


AP
Texas Gas Field Fastest-Growing in Nation
Friday April 7, 1:46 pm ET 
By Steve Quinn, AP Business Writer  
Texas Natural Gas Field, Barnett Shale, Is
Fastest-Growing in the Nation 


PONDER, Texas (AP) -- From atop a 40-foot-high walkway
on a towering natural gas rig, Doug Hampton scans the
grassy scrubland that has served ranchers since the
19th century. 
He doesn't see much evidence of that history now,
though. No cattle, horses or cowboys. Instead, out on
the horizon, he sees the future of this vast expanse
north of Fort Worth. 

"Just look out there. See?" he said, pointing to
another solitary steel structure. "There's a rig over
there, another out there and another way out there." 

Hampton is a project manager for Oklahoma City-based
Devon Energy Corp., one of several companies tapping
into the nation's fastest-growing natural gas field --
The Barnett Shale. 

The reservoir is vital to a tight U.S. supply market,
has become a template for other fields nationwide, and
is turning oil and gas into this region's most
important industry. 

The changing landscape is making wells on high schools
and private property a familiar sight. Even
Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport is reviewing
its options with 12 companies to lease land for
drilling. 

"It's going great guns," said John Wood, director of
reserves and production for the U.S. Department of
Energy's information administration, which ranks the
shale as the fourth-most productive onshore field in
the nation. 

Barnett Shale produces about 1.2 billion cubic feet of
natural gas a day, enough to power about 10,500 homes
a year. Forecasts say that will eventually reach 1.7
billion cubic feet, or 2 percent of the annual
domestic production. 

That growth is crucial because most gas drilling
operations -- which make up the vast majority of the
U.S. supply -- are declining or stagnating. The United
States produces 85 percent of its gas supply. 

"If we did not have shale gas, then there would be
less gas available and natural gas prices would be
higher," said Kent Bowker, a private Houston-based
consultant who once worked for an energy company at
the forefront of the Barnett Shale work. "I didn't
think it would be nearly as big as it is right now." 

Named after pioneer settler John W. Barnett, the
5,000-square-mile reservoir covers 15 North Texas
counties. It consists of a dense, jet black rock found
thousands of feet below the surface. 

Gas was first discovered there in 1981, but geologists
were frustrated for years because tight geographic
formations made it tough to unlock gas from the heavy
rock. 

The Barnett Shale wasn't even among the nation's top
100 natural gas fields until the last few years when
two technological advances helped drive growth:
horizontal drilling and a hydraulic fracturing
technique to break through the thick rock surrounding
the gas. 

That means Barnett Shale has gone from 25 rigs
drilling wells in 2001 to more than 130 by the end of
last year. In production, the gas field trails only
the San Juan Basin Gas Area, which covers New Mexico
and Colorado; Prudhoe Bay in Alaska; and Pinedale in
Wyoming. 

Industry analysts and executives credit George
Mitchell, who sold his Houston-based Mitchell Energy
to Devon in 2002 for $3.5 billion, for not giving up
on the North Texas field. 

"It's taken a lot of effort to unlock the heat," said
George Jackson, former Mitchell employee, now an
operations supervisor with Devon. "He had to drag most
of us with our heels fixed to the dirt, but he
understood what its value was and that it would work."


George Mitchell said he believed Barnett Shale could
be profitable despite the geologic barriers. He said
engineers and geologists repeatedly told him to cut
his losses and forget about the field and move on. 

"If we hadn't persisted, we never would have made it
work," Mitchell said. "I had to kick their butts to
get it done and now, it's a tremendous asset to the
entire country." 

In 1997, Mitchell's engineers found that blasting
water and sand into the shale would crack the tight
rock and economically produce the natural gas. Five
years later, just as he was selling his business to
Devon, his crew found a way to reach larger tracts of
shale using horizontal drilling. 

By drilling straight down and then across, companies
can extract large amounts of gas from one well rather
than four or five. 

In the case of Hampton's project for Devon, the crew
drilled about 8,000 feet down then continued boring
another 2,000 feet across the shale. 

"It's the geological complications that make this
unique," said Devon Vice President Brad Foster, whose
company leases or owns more than 500,000 acres and
accounts for about 45 percent of the area's
production. "It's not as easy as putting a drill bit
down into the ground; you have to understand where you
are before you drill." 

Horizontal drilling allows producers to reach gas
beneath churches, playgrounds and residential
developments with minimal surface disruption. In one
case, gas is being extracted from beneath an
elementary school in Denton, Texas, but no drilling
takes place on the land. 

This kind of production has helped small and
developing communities build their tax base, but it
hasn't created a rush on land, says Terry L. Clower,
economist with the University of North Texas in
Denton. 

That's because property owners may be willing to sell
their house or business, but not the mineral rights
that come with it. 

"It's been a huge driver in improving amenities in a
region with pockets of it already doing very, very
well," Clower said. "And for some of the areas that
have not seen as much growth, they have benefited
greatly as well." 

The technology working in Texas is being applied to
other areas where shale is found, including Arkansas,
Oklahoma, Michigan and several Canadian provinces. 

Analysts say such drilling could be instrumental to
the nation's natural gas supply as other areas dry up.


"That is the only segment that is going to give us a
chance to continue growing," said Bob Esser, a senior
consultant with the Cambridge Energy Research
Associates. 

"There may not be another Barnett Shale that is as
productive, but we think there are other shales that
will be productive," said Glenn Darden, chief
executive of Fort Worth, Texas-based natural gas and
crude oil producer Quicksilver Resources. 

Darden said Quicksilver has successfully started
branching outside of Texas and is pursuing similar
projects throughout North America. 

"Just about every oil and gas company now has a
strategy of some kind to look for these types of
fields," he said. "We've built our team around chasing
these."



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