BP Enters the Utica/Point Pleasant Shale in Ohio
“BP is excited to expand our presence in Ohio in a way that will create jobs, bolster the local economy and provide additional sources of energy from an important emerging American resource,” said Lamar McKay, chairman and president of BP America. “Over the last five years BP has been America’s largest energy investor with vast experience in developing natural gas resources. We intend to bring our expertise and the highest industry safety and environmental management practices to this project.”
BP signed an agreement to lease about 84,000 acres in Trumbull County, Ohio with the Associated Landowners of the Ohio Valley (ALOV), a group representing area mineral owners. Members of ALOV voted March 26 to approve the lease arrangement. Terms of the agreement, to be executed with each landowner, are confidential.
The Utica/Point Pleasant shale is at a depth of about 6,000 feet. This rock formation is of similar thickness to the Marcellus and has the potential to deliver higher liquids rates. The Ohio Department of Natural Resources estimates a recoverable Utica shale potential between 1.3 and 5.5 billion barrels of oil and between 3.8 and 15.7 trillion cubic feet of natural gas.
“We are very encouraged by what we have seen of the Utica/Point Pleasant formation. Our focus in 2012 will be to better understand the geology and devise a plan to safely develop the resource,” said Tim Harrington, regional president for BP’s North America Gas (NA Gas) business. “BP is committed to hiring and purchasing locally whenever possible and we anticipate having a positive impact on the region while providing a new source of energy for America.”
Operating across a vast U.S. geography that stretches from onshore U.S. Gulf Coast through the Rocky Mountains, BP’s North America Gas business has one of the best portfolios in the industry with a presence in seven of the leading U.S. onshore basins. In the lower 48 U.S. states alone, BP and its co-owners operate fields holding some 50 trillion cubic feet of natural gas, enough to satisfy U.S. needs for more than two years.
Currently BP has active shale positions in the Woodford, Haynesville, Fayetteville and Eagle Ford. With a huge resource base and a deep expertise in unconventional gas, including shale, the NA Gas business provides production value and an ability to transfer technical knowledge to all parts of the globe.
Notes to editors:
- BP's capital investments in the U.S. from 2007-2011 total more than $52 billion. We invest more in the U.S. than in any other country and reinvest 100 percent of profits derived here back into U.S.
- BP is the sixth largest producer of natural gas in the U.S, but the company has one of the most diverse energy portfolios in the nation, with a mix that also includes oil, wind power, biofuels and an emerging ventures business.
- Headquartered in Houston, NA Gas has about 2,200 employees across seven states with more than 10,000 producing wells and 70,000 royalty owners. Our vision is to be the most respected and admired oil and gas company in the lower 48.
- NA Gas has a diverse portfolio which includes some of the largest and most well-known basins in the U.S. including promising shale gas plays in the Woodford, Fayetteville, Haynesville and Eagle Ford. In Wyoming our operations are anchored on the giant Wamsutter gas field. In the San Juan basin of Colorado and New Mexico we operate in the country’s largest coal-bed methane field while our operations in Oklahoma and Texas include the famed Arkoma, East Texas and Anadarko basins. We also operate a gas processing plant in Pascagoula, Mississippi.
In this section
More