Shell tests gas from New Mexico's Tucumcari area
Field reports indicate that Shell Western Exploration & Production, Houston, has been spearheading a play for gas
in north-eastern New Mexico's nonproducing Tucumcari basin.
The company tested gas from an indicated discovery well in Guadalupe County after it assumed operation from another
company. Shell has drilled two more wells to about 13,000 ft on its own, is preparing to spud a third, and has
reportedly completed 3D seismic survey of as much as 80 sq miles.
Shell filed reports with the New Mexico Oil Conservation Division in late 2008 on stimulation and testing of the
discovery well (CB Webb No. 1), on a fee lease in 25-11n-23e, in the Cuervo sub basin 20 miles northeast of Santa
Rosa.
Shell assumed operation of the well from Cuervo Exploration, a group of private independents comprised of
Inter-American, Dallas, Ceja, Tulsa, and Gunn Oil, Wichita Falls. Cuervo Exploration drilled and cased the CB Webb
well in 2006 but didn't perforate due to internal disagreements among the partners about completion procedures and
economic viability.
Upon taking over from Cuervo, Shell conducted multiday flow tests between August 2007 and January 2008. Shell also
reported a flow rate of 1.74 mm cfpd of gas and 47 bpd of water from Pennsylvanian Strawn sandstones of low
permeability and high thermal maturity, at casing pressures of up to 800 psi.
Shell also reported having perforated the well in 10 intervals between 7,950 ft and 10,783 ft (all
Pennsylvanian-aged) and reported a multiple completion in the 10 zones. The total depth on the discovery well was
10,927 ft, and the well is plugged back to 10,814 ft. There was no indication when Shell might be capable of starting
gas production. Low commodity prices have led the company to rethink participation in some new projects.
Other acreage holders in the greater Tucumcari area include Ceja, David Petroleum, Roswell, NM, Inter-American,
Hyperion Exploration, Dallas, and Yates Petroleum, Artesia, NM. Ceja, Inter-American, and Yates are believed to each
hold 100,000 acres or more.
Ronald F. Broadhead, geologist at the New Mexico Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources at Socorro, published a
positive assessment of the potential of Cuervo and other so-called "elevator basins" or troughs of eastern New
Mexico. The current prospectors regard these studies as the prime catalyst for activity in the basin.
