
“When you think about it, it’s exceptionally good geology work and geophysics work. It’s ground-floor leasing of land. It’s drilling horizontal wells, completing horizontal wells and then building surface facilities,” Gaspar said of the blocking and tackling of Fervo’s work. “That kind of sounds familiar to what we do. Now, we don’t market electrons today. But hey, we’re smart enough to figure out how to partner, how to close that gap […] I think that really could be something that’s interesting when you look further out kind of into the next decade.”
Expand’s Dell’Osso talks Western Haynesville advantage
Executives of Expand Energy Corp., Oklahoma City, raised a few eyebrows last fall with the announcement that they had committed nearly $180 million to build a nearly 75,000-acre position in the Western Haynesville region. Nick Dell’Osso, the company’s president and chief executive officer, told Goldman attendees the move is part of the company’s view that the industry’s existing Haynesville operations won’t be able to meet expected demand growth.
Asked about the Western Haynesville being potentially more expensive to develop—Expand is drilling its first well there now—because some of its zones are hotter and deeper than others in the region, Dell’Osso said he’s counting on Expand’s experience elsewhere with such zones as well as its ability to bring newer tools and technologies to the table.
“There’s no question about it; it is higher-cost than some other areas,” Dell’Osso said. “But again, we have assets that are high-cost today and we’re able to drill those pretty attractively. In the NFZ [Northwest Louisiana], which is the higher-cost area on the Louisiana side, we sit at about $1,500 a foot for drill completion turn-in-line in aggregate. […] Our peers are significantly higher than that—20%, 25% higher than that in a lot of cases. We think we can replicate that kind of advantage in this asset as well.”




















