RIO VISTA
- Thanks to Mike Patman, the multinational Shell
Exploration and Production Co. and Boone Pickens are now in the
Barnett Shale natural-gas play.
Patman hooked up with the two heavyweights by offering
something increasingly rare these days in the Barnett Shale,
75,000 acres of leases rarin' to go for somebody with the
capital to get the rigs in place.
Shell is the answer to a riddle that has vexed North Texas
energy operators for most of this year: the identity of the
mysterious multinational that was coming into the 6-year-old
natural-gas play that extends around Fort Worth.
Shell signed an agreement last month to partner with
Patman's Sundance Resources to drill in Parker and Erath
counties.
Shell also bought 25,000 acres of leases in Parker County
that it intends to exploit on its own. It thus becomes the first
integrated multinational energy company to join a play that
heretofore has been dominated by Texas- and Oklahoma-based
independent producers.
"We view the Barnett Shale as a significant resource and
see the potential in the expansion of the field," says Shell
spokeswoman Kelly op de Weegh.
Pickens, who built Mesa Inc. into one of the nation's
largest natural-gas producers from its base in the Panhandle and
who now operates the BP Capital energy investment firm in
Dallas, wasn't available to comment last week on his venture
into the Barnett Shale. But a spokesman, Jay Rosser, confirmed
the Pickens partnership with Sundance, saying "Mr. Pickens is
pleased to have some skin in the Barnett Shale game."
So how did Patman, a genial Texas Aggie who for 25 years
has drilled his way around East, West and South Texas and
eastern New Mexico, get hooked up with big feet like Pickens and
Shell?
"I had 75,000 acres of leases, and I went to an oil
convention in Houston in February and set up a booth," Patman
says. "Mr. Pickens came around, and we made a deal before the
convention actually started."
Shell, too, was interested in Patman's fistful of
ready-to-drill leases. With landsmen tramping all over the
Barnett Shale, good leases are increasingly hard to come by.
Most of them have been taken up by a new generation of
independent operators, including XTO Energy and Quicksilver
Resources of Fort Worth.
Although Patman had the leases, Shell and Pickens (whose
deals with Patman are not connected) had something Patman needs:
heavy dough. Sundance needs the money to pay for the 12 drilling
rigs it is building and will begin operating by early next year.
Independents traditionally haven't owned their own
drilling rigs, preferring to avoid the heavy capital expense and
simply lease the equipment when needed. That strategy has worked
fine in the past but lately a serious shortage of equipment has
hampered that approach. For the lucky souls who can get rigs,
day rates are expected to reach $15,000 by the end of this year,
triple the rate of five years ago.
The squeeze on equipment is causing an increasing number
of Barnett Shale leases to mature after three years without a
bit turning in the ground because operators couldn't get
equipment. Patman, who with his own rigs won't be beholden to
equipment-leasing companies, hopes to take advantage of that
situation.
"We'll be able to deliver on a promise to drill, and a lot
of others won't," he said.
At $7 million a pop, drilling rigs aren't cheap. Patman
already has four: three working in Johnson County and one in
Parker County. The remaining seven are under construction in
Houston and are expected to be ready by early next year.
Because one rig can drill a new well every 25 to 30 days
at the fastest, Patman would have the capacity to drill 130 to
160 wells next year -- if everything falls into place. The work
force at Sundance's office in the old Cow Pasture Bank building
on Texas 174 in Rio Vista, which now has slightly more than 100
employees, will expand next year by a dozen or so employees per
rig.
Sundance Resources is a family operation that Patman and
his brother, Pat, have operated since 1980.
Patman's interest in the Barnett Shale was piqued two
years ago on the news that Johnson County was being tapped for
gas. Patman and his brother had grown up in Johnson County,
seven miles south of Rio Vista.
"For years everybody said drilling in Johnson County was a
no-go because the geology was supposed to be too impossible,"
Patman said. "But that hasn't proved to be true."
After learning the essentials of Barnett Shale drilling as
a nonoperating partner in four wells in Denton County, Sundance
shifted the focus of its operations back to Rio Vista. Patman
and his leasing agents, led by Vice President Andy Cunningham,
beat the bushes for leases. In particular, they headed into Hill
County for what is expected to be the next great opening for the
Barnett Shale.
"At $13 [per thousand cubic feet of] gas, a lot of things
are possible," Patman said.