Cheniere executives are optimistic the first LNG cargo will depart from Train 1 of its Corpus Christi Stage 3 project by the end of 2024, and that the company will bring all seven trains at the project online before the end of 2026.
Here’s a roundup of the latest E&P headlines, with a couple fields coming online, as well as new contract awards.
Chord Energy expects to close its Enerplus acquisition by the end of May but, for now, is focused on three-mile and, eventually, four-mile laterals in the Williston Basin.
Vital Energy anticipates making 42 double-long, horseshoe-shaped wells where straight lines would have made 84 wells. The estimated savings: $140 million.
Cheniere executives are optimistic the first LNG cargo will depart from Train 1 of its Corpus Christi Stage 3 project by the end of 2024, and that the company will bring all seven trains at the project online before the end of 2026.
Here’s a roundup of the latest E&P headlines, with a couple fields coming online, as well as new contract awards.
Chord Energy expects to close its Enerplus acquisition by the end of May but, for now, is focused on three-mile and, eventually, four-mile laterals in the Williston Basin.
Vital Energy anticipates making 42 double-long, horseshoe-shaped wells where straight lines would have made 84 wells. The estimated savings: $140 million.
Shell’s replicant strategy trades customization of the production unit for a sped-up cycle time for Whale, Sparta developments in the deepwater Gulf of Mexico.
KeyBanc Capital Markets reports SM Energy’s wells “measure up well to anything being drilled in the Midland Basin by anybody today.”
Riley Exploration Permian said it added 13,900 acres and up to 25 net locations in Eddy County, New Mexico.
Evolution Petroleum said the company added 300 gross undeveloped locations and more than a dozen DUCs.
SLB OneSubsea, a joint venture including SLB and Subsea7, have been awarded a contract by OKEA that will develop the Bestla Project offshore Norway.
APA Corp. plans to curtail gas and NGL production in the U.S. owing to weak Waha prices but remains confident it can deliver in the Permian Basin, CEO John Christmann said during a quarterly webcast with analysts.