Brand-New Oil Play in this Overlooked Texas Region

Source: Streetwise Reports 05/08/2018

Advancements in fracking and a rising oil price are putting the Red Cave formation back on the map, and a small-cap energy company is acquiring a large land package, cementing its position in this low-cost area.

When you think about oil and gas formations in Texas, names like the Permian Basin and Eagle Ford come to mind. Ask people about the Red Cave formation, and you’ll most likely get blank stares. This mostly overlooked oil and gas region is in the Texas Panhandle and is beginning to come into its own.

Red Cave is mainly noted for natural gas production. Among the players in the area are:

Panhandle Oil & Gas, Inc. (PHX:NYSE) dates back to 1926, when it was formed as a co-op; it converted to a public company in 1979. Some 66% of the company’s proved reserves are natural gas. The company does not operate any wells, instead it partners with larger oil and gas companies for exploration and development.

DCP Midstream LP (DCP:NYSE) is a master limited partnership (MLP) that transports and processes natural gas; among its 61 plants are facilities in the Red Cave region.

Pioneer Natural Resources Co. (PXD:NYSE), one of the largest operators in the region, has more than 700 wells on some 246,000 gross acres. However, the company has announced that it plans to sell off its assets in the area to become a Permian Basin “pure-play.”

“Once Molori can successfully establish strong oil flows from these new wells and show just how attractive this brand new oil play truly is, the sky is the limit.” – Keith Kohl, Pure Energy Trader

Oil has not fared as well as gas in the Red Cave formation. The formation is relatively shallow, located between 1900 and 2500 feet below surface, but is tight, so while oil and gas were clearly present, drilling did not prove to be economic in the 1960s and 1970s. In the 1980s, small-scale fracking also failed. Operators in the region drilled through the Red Cave formation into the lower Brown Dolomite formation, which was more productive. Today, Brown Dolomite formation is pretty much drilled out.

It wasn’t until recently that economic production of Red Cave has become viable. A private company called Adams Affiliates experimented with large-scale fracs and found success. Virtually all of the company’s more than 50 wells discovered oil, and Initial Production (IP) rates have varied between 30 and 125 barrels of oil equivalent per day (boepd).

Now another company, Molori Energy Inc. (MOL:TSX.V; MOLOF:OTCQB), appears poised to build off that success. It has land adjacent to Adams’ productive wells. A year and a half ago, the company undertook an extensive evaluation of the Red Cave formation analyzing “approximately 370 well logs and cores from wells that were drilled through the Red Cave and down into the now largely depleted Brown Dolomite formation.” Combining this data with Adams Affiliates drill data on file with the Texas Railway Commission gives Molori an extensive database on which to base its exploration.

Molori CEO Joel Dumaresq stated, “Dozens of well logs have been accumulated and analyzed resulting in a strong understanding of this ‘virgin’ and previously poorly understood hydrocarbon bearing formation.”

“We believe that the Red Cave play is one of the most promising onshore development opportunities in the continental U.S. today, and with oil testing the $70 mark the economics of the play are highly compelling and warrant our full capital and attention,” Dumaresq commented.

To test the model, Molori drilled its first well, Thompson 23-1R. Initial Production was approximately 28 boepd, and the company has begun to sell the oil. The company noted that its “ability to access light oil from the Red Cave demonstrates proof of concept of Molori’s thesis on the productivity of the Red Cave Formation.”

Molori’s technical team, by analyzing that initial well, believes that tweaking the frac treatments “will significantly enhance flow from the Red Cave formation in future wells.”

The company now plans to drill more wells. It has completed a trade with Ponderosa Energy LLC, swapping out marginally productive leases in Hutchinson County for 100% interest in all its Red Cave oil and gas acreage in Moore Country.

And Molori just announced that it has signed a letter of intent to acquire 30,000 additional acres in Moore County.

Molori will pay $1.7 million to Wolf Energy, LLC for a 100% working interest “in existing oil and gas wells, salt water disposal wells, together with all interest in properties, facilities and equipment” on the property.

The company noted that the property includes “34 operated Red Cave wells, 1 salt water disposal well, 4 Red Cave wells that have not been fracked, along with 8 wells currently producing.”

Dumaresq stated, “Our initial focus is upon the Baker 39 Lease, which while only 562 acres of the overall 30,000 acres, provides infill drilling potential for as many as 55 wells upon 10-acre spacing. With 8 wells on this lease demonstrating historical IPs of between 50 and 100 boepd, we are excited to commence the work on the Baker lease, the next phase of Molori’s development program.”

“Upon completion of the acquisition of this 30,000 acre parcel, and when added to its current acreage, Molori will have access to several hundred well locations upon 10-acre spacing and double that number should the Company eventually move to 5-acre spacing. Management of Molori believes that the shallow, low cost, high-recycle rate of these Red Cave wells is what strongly differentiates this opportunity,” Molori stated.

The company notes that drilling costs for Red Cave wells are relatively modest in comparison to those in the Permian Basin. While a well in the Permian Basin could cost between $5 million and $7 million and have a payback period of two to three years, a well in Red Cave formation could only cost $250,000 and be paid back in six months. …read more

From:: The Energy Report