March 23, 2008
Getting ready for a gusher
Vast reservoir under state could hiss for decades

A  ponderous natural-gas reservoir, largely out of reach until now, could more than double the nation's annual output - and it sits underneath practically all of West Virginia.

The gas floats in black shale, fine-grained sedimentary rock, about 5,000 feet below ground in a bed geologists call the Marcellus Shale formation. Though developers have long known about the Marcellus' potential, they've left it mostly untapped because boring down so far proved too expensive.

But with gas prices staying high and new technology becoming more affordable, the Marcellus is suddenly ripe, and drillers all over the state are aiming at it.

1 of 2 Photos
Chris Dorst
Sam Gunnoe attaches a new drill “string,” lengthening the bore on a Cabot Oil & Gas derrick in Jackson County. The rig will push down more than 5,000 feet, said manager Chad Shoffner (left), to the largely untapped Marcellus Shale gas formation.
"The question is, who isn't thinking about the Marcellus right now?" said Nicholas "Corky" DeMarco, director of the West Virginia Oil & Natural Gas Association trade group. "There are studies of the formation being done all over the state."

According to research released earlier this year by Penn State University and the State University of New York at Fredonia, the Marcellus - which stretches over 54,000 square miles, from upstate New York into Southern West Virginia - could contain as much as 516 trillion cubic feet of gas, though only 50 trillion can be recovered today by existing technology.

By contrast, the nation now produces 30 trillion cubic feet per year, and that amount has been falling.

Tapping the Marcellus could enrich U.S. energy resources by as much as $1 trillion, the study's authors estimated.

Similar black, or gas-rich, shale reservoirs at the Marcellus' level have been tapped with spectacular results in Texas and Arkansas. Partly because of the success of prospecting pioneers there, Appalachian Basin drillers have been getting the resources they need to follow suit, said Philip Towey, exploration manager for Cabot Oil & Gas Corp.'s Eastern Region in Charleston.

"As a result of their success, everybody started looking in their back yard," Towey said. The Appalachian Basin black shale "has the potential to be the single largest gas play in the country right now."

Houston-based Cabot and West Virginia's other biggest drillers - Dominion Resources Inc. of Richmond, Va., Equitable Resources Inc. of Pittsburgh and Chesapeake Energy Co. of Oklahoma City, along with a newer player, Houston's PetroEdge Resources LLC - appear to be the most active in Marcellus exploration and drilling in West Virginia, DeMarco said.

Revitalizing Appalachia

"It has definitely revitalized the industry in the Appalachian Basin," said Joe Holsen, reservoir and production manager at PetroEdge.

Though PetroEdge is a smaller player in West Virginia, Holsen said, it is probably most active in Marcellus drilling in the state, having opened 41 Marcellus wells in Lewis, Marion, Ritchie and Wetzel counties. Right now it's drilling one, in Wetzel County, but this year it expects to add 15, Holsen said.

Cabot, the state's No. 3 producer, started running tests on Marcellus shale about three years ago, mainly in Southern West Virginia, said Tom Liberatore, its Eastern Region vice president and regional manager.

"We're aggressively pursuing it," he said.

Cabot has drilled eight wells in Southern West Virginia straight to the Marcellus this year, Liberatore said. But 50 to 80 more state wells are also planned this year that will tap gas reserves above the Marcellus, mainly in south-central and Southern West Virginia. Plans are to take these wells deeper to look at the Marcellus too, Liberatore said.

"They're probably all going to be Marcellus plays," he said.

West Virginia's biggest gas producer, Dominion, has been testing the Marcellus for three years now and expects to drill its first five to six producing wells this year, in the north-central part of the state, said Rick Goings, general manager of geosciences for Dominion's Exploration and Production unit in Jane Lew.

"We're trying to be smart about it," he said. "The Marcellus is thin [in West Virginia] but certain places are going to have sweet spots."

Chesapeake, meanwhile, has said it has 1 million acres of Marcellus acreage under lease, making it possibly the biggest Marcellus owner.

In a company disclosure released last month, Chesapeake said it is employing two operated rigs to develop the reservoir. By drilling up to 1,400 wells "in the years ahead," it says, it stands to produce as much as 7.1 trillion cubic feet, though that is only an estimate.

Equitable, No. 2 in West Virginia production, has estimated this year that its Marcellus holdings could yield up to 5 trillion cubic feet.

(Chesapeake, along with PetroEdge and Eastern America Energy Corp., is also fighting the West Virginia Coal Association and other drillers in a case before the state Supreme Court over how closely Marcellus wells can be drilled to other wells, and the decision in that case could affect how many Marcellus wells are ultimately drilled.)

Officials from Chesapeake and Equitable did not return calls for comment.

"There's definitely something there," said Ken Mariani of EnerVest Management Partners Ltd., a Houston-based driller and energy investment company. EnerVest is just beginning to evaluate its Appalachian acreage for Marcellus potential, said Mariani, general manager of the company's Charleston-based Eastern Division.

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