Kodiak Oil & Gas Corp. Provides Interim Operations Update
February 16 2010 - 7:00AM
PR Newswire (US)
- Bakken Well IPs at 1,419 BOE/d on 24-hour Test - Two Wells
Waiting on Completion - Second Operated Rig Being Mobilized DENVER,
Feb. 16 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Kodiak Oil & Gas Corp. (NYSE
Amex: KOG), an oil and gas exploration and production company with
assets in the Williston Basin of North Dakota and Montana and in
the Green River Basin of southwest Wyoming and Colorado, today
provided an interim update on its Williston Basin drilling and
completion activities. Williston Basin Activities -- Dunn County,
North Dakota Since commencing drilling activity in the middle
Bakken on its Dunn County leasehold in November 2008, Kodiak has
drilled and completed 10 oil producers, has an inventory of two
wells awaiting initial completion activities and is drilling ahead
in the horizontal leg of its thirteenth well. Included below is a
summary of recent operations and an outlook for upcoming
activities, including the mobilization of and plans for the second
Kodiak-operated drilling rig. The drilling and completion table
provides comprehensive per-well information for easy reference.
Drilling Operations During the first part of 2010, the Company has
completed drilling operations on three wells. All three wells were
drilled as shorter laterals with horizontal lengths ranging from
4,200 feet to 4,800 feet. These wells represent the tenth, eleventh
and twelfth wells drilled by the Company in Dunn County since
operations commenced in late November 2008. Kodiak operates these
three wells with a 60% working interest (WI) and a 49% net revenue
interest (NRI). The Moccasin Creek (MC) #16-3-11H and the MC #16-3H
wells were drilled on a two-well pad. The MC #13-34-3H well was
drilled as part of a three-well pad that includes the MC
#13-34-28-2H well, currently drilling in the lateral portion of the
well bore, and the MC #13-34-28-1H. While the MC #13-34-3H well was
drilled as a short lateral, the other two wells being drilled from
the same pad are projected to be approximately 9,000-foot laterals.
Kodiak operates the two longer laterals with a 45% WI and a 37% NRI
and the shorter lateral with a 60% WI and a 49% NRI. The MC
#16-3-11H and the MC #13-34-3H wells represent the second and third
promoted wells drilled under an exploration agreement entered into
during the fourth quarter 2008 pursuant to which the Company is
required to pay 20% of drilling and completion costs for its 60%
WI. The MC #13-34-28-1H will represent the fourth and final
promoted well subject to that agreement and all future wells within
the area will be drilled based upon working interest. A second
three-well drilling pad was constructed in the Two Shields Butte
prospect area north of the Moccasin Creek area. Kodiak expects to
commence drilling operations on this pad immediately after drilling
operations are completed in the Moccasin Creek area. Kodiak will
operate these three wells with a 50% WI and a 41% NRI. Completion
Operations Bakken producer with 4,729 foot lateral has initial
production rate of 1,419 BOE/D The MC #16-3-11H well, a 4,729-foot
horizontal lateral, was successfully completed in 12 stages. The
well recorded 24-hour production rates of 1,260 barrels of oil per
day and 0.950 million cubic feet of natural gas per day, or 1,419
barrels of oil equivalent per day. Wells Waiting on Completion The
MC #16-3H well was drilled from the same pad as the MC #16-3-11H
well and completion is expected in early March utilizing 10 stages.
As noted earlier, the MC #13-34-3H well is the first well drilled
from a three-well pad design. Kodiak anticipates that drilling of
the last two wells from this pad will be completed in March.
Completion operations are expected to commence on these three wells
in May, continuing through second quarter 2010. These wells will be
completed utilizing staged completions with each stage comprised of
approximately 350-400-foot fractured stimulation intervals.
Completion operations are subject to weather and availability of
services. The table below summarizes Kodiak's 2010 activity in Dunn
County, N.D.: Kodiak Oil & Gas Corp. 2010 Dunn County Drilling
and Completion Activities ---------------------------------- Longer
Laterals (8,000' - 10,000') ----------------------------------
Number IP First 30 WI / Days of 24-Hour Days BOE NRI to Lateral
Completion Frac Test Produc- Well (%) TD* Length** Date Stages
(BOE/d) tion Comment ---- ---- ------ -------- ------- ------
-------- ------ MC # 13-34- Drilling 28-2H 45/37 -- 9,500' Q210 19
-- -- Ahead MC# Spud After 13-34- MC#13-34- 28-1H 45/37 -- 8,600'
Q210 -- -- -- 28-2H TSB # Spud 14-21- After 33-16H 50/41 -- -- --
-- -- -- MC Pad TSB # Spud 14-21- After 33-15H 50/41 -- -- -- -- --
-- MC Pad Shorter Laterals (4,000' - 7,000')
---------------------------------- Number IP First 30 WI / Days of
24-Hour Days BOE NRI to Lateral Completion Frac Test Produc- Well
(%) TD* Length Date Stages (BOE/d) tion Comment ---- ---- ------
-------- ------- ------ -------- ------ MC # 16-3- Flowing 11H
60/49 38 4,729' Feb. 2010 12 1,419 -- Well MC #16-3H 60/49 19
4,188' Mar. 2010 10 -- -- WOCT^ MC # 13-34- 3H 60/49 22 4,330' Q210
11 -- -- WOCT^ TSB # Spud 14-21- After 4H 50/41 -- -- -- -- -- --
MC Pad *Includes running liner in the hole /** Approximate lateral
length / ^Waiting on completion tools Williston Basin Activity --
Sheridan County, Montana Second Kodiak-Operated Drilling Rig
Mobilizing The Company's second operated drilling rig, the Unit
#118, will be mobilized for delivery to Sheridan County, Mont. in
the coming weeks. Kodiak expects to spud the first of two
seismically defined Red River Formation test wells once rigging up
is completed in March 2010. The location for the Meagher #16-30
(Kodiak operated - approximate 34% WI - 28% NRI) is being
constructed. The vertical well is scheduled to be drilled to a
proposed total depth of 11,250 feet. Subject to partner agreements,
a second Red River well could be spud immediately following in the
same general area. McKenzie County, North Dakota Following the
drilling of the Red River wells, the Company intends to move the
rig to the Mondak Field area, which is part of the extended Elm
Coulee trend from Montana down into North Dakota. The Company
anticipates drilling the Grizzly Federal #1-27HR well as a
replacement well for the Grizzly Federal #1-27H well that was
drilled by Kodiak in 2007 and encountered casing issues in early
2008. The well produced 39,000 barrels of oil during 24 months of
intermittent production. Kodiak will operate the well with an
approximate 63% WI and a 51% NRI. The well is a horizontal well to
test the productive potential of the Bakken Formation with a
projected lateral of 10,000 feet. The Company has legacy production
in this Field, but has not drilled a well here with the advantage
of multi-stage fracture stimulation technology currently being
employed by Kodiak in Dunn County. Management Comments Commenting
on ongoing operations, Kodiak's president and CEO Lynn Peterson
said: "Our drilling operations continue at a brisk pace. Our team
is doing an excellent job of driving down our drilling days and
controlling our well costs. We have experienced some delays in our
completion work as a result of weather conditions, but this is to
be expected with winter operations and is common in the Williston
oilfield during the winter months. Having proven the productive
potential of our Dunn County leasehold during 2009, we are now
concentrating on improving per-well results. As the Bakken shale is
generally considered a resource play, we place less emphasis on
initial production rates. Instead, Kodiak focuses its
well-performance analysis on longer-term production rates and also
looks to ensure that it invests its capital for the most efficient
development of our reserves. Based upon our production data, the
recovery rates per-foot of horizontal lateral appear to be greater
in the shorter laterals; however our analysis indicates that we
achieve a stronger rate of return with the longer laterals as
additional reserves are obtained with marginal incremental
investment. Therefore our 2010 development program will be geared
to longer laterals as opposed to the shorter laterals. Of the
remaining wells to be drilled during 2010, we are projecting one
short lateral and 11 longer laterals. We will continue to work to
refine and improve completion designs as we move through the year.
"We continue to evaluate Three Forks production in the immediate
area and now expect to drill our initial test well sometime in the
second quarter 2010. A delay in the completion of an offsetting
well drilled by another producer with whom we share data has led us
to await their results. The delay they incurred was due to
mechanical issues now remediated and to inclement weather
conditions. The well began producing in early February. While we
are encouraged with the initial production data which further
proves Three Forks potential in our immediate area, we have opted
to defer the Three Forks test until the second quarter while
continuing with our Bakken development drilling as scheduled." 2009
Financial and Operational Results The Company expects to announce
its 2009 financial and operational results on March 11, 2010 with a
conference call with management to discuss the results to be held
the following morning on March 12, 2010. The details of the call
will be announced at a later date. About Kodiak Oil & Gas Corp.
Denver-based Kodiak Oil & Gas Corp. is an independent energy
exploration and development company focused on exploring,
developing and producing oil and natural gas in the Williston and
Green River Basins in the U.S. Rocky Mountains. For further
information, please visit http://www.kodiakog.com/. The Company's
common shares are listed for trading on the NYSE Amex exchange
under the symbol: "KOG." Forward-Looking Statements This press
release includes statements that may constitute "forward-looking"
statements, usually containing the words "believe," "estimate,"
"project," "expect" or similar expressions. These statements are
made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private
Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking
statements inherently involve risks and uncertainties that could
cause actual results to differ materially from the forward-looking
statements. Forward looking statements are statements that are not
historical facts and are generally, but not always, identified by
the words "expects," "plans," "anticipates," "believes," "intends,"
"estimates," "projects," "potential" and similar expressions, or
that events or conditions "will," "would," "may," "could" or
"should" occur. Forward-looking statements in this document include
statements regarding the Company's exploration and development
plans, the Company's expectations regarding drilling plans,
including the timing of drilling commencement and drilling
completion of our wells, and the manner and stages in which wells
are expected to be drilled, the Company's expectations regarding
the mobilization, intended use and current planned future location
of our rigs, the Company's expectations regarding spudding
activities, the Company's expectations regarding the number of
shorter versus longer laterals to be utilized and the expected
benefits associated with each, the amount and allocation of the
Company's anticipated capital expenditures, the Company's
expectations regarding the timing and success of such programs, the
Company's expectations regarding the estimated costs to drill and
complete wells and its ability to improve efficiencies in such
drilling and completion efforts, the Company's expectations
regarding the future production of its oil & gas properties,
and the Company's expectations regarding the amount and sufficiency
of future cash flows, and anticipated rates of return on invested
capital. Factors that could cause or contribute to such differences
include, but are not limited to, fluctuations in the prices of oil
and gas, uncertainties inherent in estimating quantities of oil and
gas reserves and projecting future rates of production and timing
of development activities, competition, operating risks,
acquisition risks, liquidity and capital requirements, the effects
of governmental regulation, adverse changes in the market for the
Company's oil and gas production, dependence upon third-party
vendors, and other risks detailed in the Company's periodic report
filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. For further
information, please contact: Mr. Lynn A. Peterson, CEO and
President, Kodiak Oil & Gas Corp. +1-303-592-8075 Mr. David P.
Charles, Sierra Partners LLC +1-303-757-2510 x11 DATASOURCE: Kodiak
Oil & Gas Corp. CONTACT: Mr. Lynn A. Peterson, CEO and
President of Kodiak Oil & Gas Corp., +1-303-592-8075; or Mr.
David P. Charles of Sierra Partners LLC, +1-303-757-2510, ext. 11,
for Kodiak Oil & Gas Corp. Web Site: http://www.kodiakog.com/
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