Questerre Energy Corporation

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Questerre Energy Corporation (TSX:QEC) (OSLO:QEC) is a Calgary, Alberta-based junior exploration company which holds the largest acrage position in the Utica shale in the Saint Lawrence Lowlands, Quebec, Canada.

In Septeber, 2008 Questerre was participating in a farm-in agreement with Talisman Energy Inc., the well operator, to drill three wells in the St. Lawrence lowlands. The wells were to test multiple horizons including the Trenton-Black River (TBR), Utica and Lorraine shale formations. At the time, it was reported that the first of these three wells had been spud.

Questerre and Talisman's permit sits squarely in the middle of the St. Lawrence Lowlands located between Logan’s Line and the Yamaska growth fault and extends from Quebec City south to a point beyond Lac Saint Pierre.

According to a November, 2008 report, Questerre was participating in a joint-venture Utica shale drilling program on its Yamaska property which consisted of 112,000 acres in the Province of Quebec. The report stated that at the time two horizontal wells had been drilled, and a pilot program of horizontal drilling was planned for 2009. Candian Forest Oil and Gastem were listed as joint-venture partners. Questerre owns a 20% working interest as does Gastem, and Canadian Forest Oil is the development operator and owns the balance of 60%. This appears to be a completely different property than the aforementioned one farmed-in with Talisman since the well operators are different.

In December, 2008 the company reported that it had completed drilling the La Visitation #1 well in the St. Lawrence Lowlands, Quebec. and the well was being cased for shale gas testing. This was one of a series of wells which had been drilled under the previously mentioned Talisman farm-in for three wells (now grown to four).

In April 2009 the company announced that it had completed drilling the St. Edouard #1 well which had promising TBR interval gas shows. An open-hole test is planned. Other intervals to be tested at the same time were the Lorraine and Utica shales. St. Edouard #1 was the forth and final earning well in the series required to meet the terms of its farm-in agreement with Talisman Energy. In July, 2009 Questerre announced that in fact Talisman had met all requirements for it to earn its 75% share under the farm-in.

At the end of April, 2009 the company announced the results of a vertical well, the St. David #1 that was fracture stimulated and during an initial test period of 17 days flowed at the rate of 450 Mcf/d. The previously mentioned La Visitation #1 well had flowed at a rate of 300 Mcf/d during a 5 day initial test after fracing. The production logging from both wells indicate most of the production was flowing from a similar Utica interval.

The well operator was beginning a program of 2-D seismic data acquisition that was to be used to help identify well pad locations. Each pad potentially included multiple horizontal wells.

In May, 2009 Questerre was reporting initial production of between 300 mcf/d - 800 mcf/d from its vertical well drilling program. The gas was coming from the same Utica shale interval in each of the wells.

In late June, 2009, the previously-mentioned fourth well in the above series, St. Edouard #1 was being fracture stimulated and tested for different intervals. Both the Utica and Lorraine shale formations were to be evaluated. The Trenton-Black River interval had previously been tested and for three days had flowed at the initial rate of 2.2 Mmcf/d with wellhead pressure of 2,000 psi on a 7/32-inch choke after the acid stimulation. However, this flow rate was not deemed significant enough to justify a tie-in for the well. This well offsets another one called the Leclercville #1 that produced 900 mcf/d from the Utica interval in testing.

At the end of August, 2009 the company announced that it had received an estimate from the reservoir engineering firm, Netherland, Sewell & Associates, Inc (NSAI) , that was 150 Bcf per square mile; that is, two thirds higher than had previously been given for Questerre's St. Lawrence Lowlands gas play. NSAI also estimated that Questerre's prospective recoverable resources to be anywhere from 2.2 Tcf to 8.0 Tcf. Their best estimate was 4.28 Tcf. NSAI's updated assessment had in part been based upon the above mentioned St. Edouard #1 well that tested at rates of 700 mcf/d from the Utica shale interval. It had been on a 1 inch choke for 10 days of tests after fracture stimulation. At the time of the report, the well had been shut-in for pressure buildup. According to one report, the inital production from the Utica interval had been 2.6 Mmcf/d for this well.

In a November, 2009 quarterly update Questerre mentioned that it had spud a horizontal well, St. Edouard #1A HZ, that was to target the middle Utica shale. It is part of a broader drilling program the company had begun intended to evaluate the commercial aspects of the Utica shale play. Update: This well had been drilled and cased to a total depth of 10,436 feet with a 3281 foot lateral. Fracture stimulation was to take place in January, 2010.

Questerre's St. Lawrence Lowalands leasehold consisted of roughly 833,000 gross acres located in the Utica shale fairway between Logan's line and the Yamaska growth fault. It's joint venture partner in the project had been Talisman Energy.

  • Michael Binnion is President and CEO of Questerre.
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