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We share a raw operator roundtable on extreme extended laterals and the real reasons teams keep pushing beyond three-mile horizontals. We break down the physics, the economics, and the hard calls engineers make when the toolstring, the frac, or the surface plant becomes the limiting factor.
• how “extreme” laterals become routine and why length keeps rising
• surface cost amortization and the trade-off of weaker toe performance
• why M&A rewards operators with proprietary drilling capability and capital depth
• regional geology differences and how tortuosity drives exponential friction
• torque and drag limits, model breakdowns, and reliance on empirical real-time data
• stuck tools, tripping risk, and the shift from well economics to program economics
• frac chemistry at five miles, polymer shear, and preventing screenouts
• retraining on-site decision-making and paying premiums for endurance-focused services
• surface facility bottlenecks and the case for the next efficiency boom above ground
Let me know what you think.
By JP Warren4.4
1818 ratings
Send us Fan Mail
We share a raw operator roundtable on extreme extended laterals and the real reasons teams keep pushing beyond three-mile horizontals. We break down the physics, the economics, and the hard calls engineers make when the toolstring, the frac, or the surface plant becomes the limiting factor.
• how “extreme” laterals become routine and why length keeps rising
• surface cost amortization and the trade-off of weaker toe performance
• why M&A rewards operators with proprietary drilling capability and capital depth
• regional geology differences and how tortuosity drives exponential friction
• torque and drag limits, model breakdowns, and reliance on empirical real-time data
• stuck tools, tripping risk, and the shift from well economics to program economics
• frac chemistry at five miles, polymer shear, and preventing screenouts
• retraining on-site decision-making and paying premiums for endurance-focused services
• surface facility bottlenecks and the case for the next efficiency boom above ground
Let me know what you think.