Good day, everyone, and welcome to EOG Resources 4th Quarter and Full Year 2010 Earnings Results Conference Call. As a reminder, this call is being recorded. At this time, for opening remarks and introductions, I would like to turn the call over to the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of EOG Resources, Mr. Mark Papa. Please go ahead, sir.
Good morning and thanks for joining us. We hope everyone has seen the press announcing Q4 and full year 20 10 earnings and operational results. This conference call includes forward looking statements. The risks associated with forward looking statements have been outlined in the earnings release and EOG's SEC filings and we incorporate those by reference for this call. This conference call contains certain non GAAP financial measures.
The reconciliation schedules for these non GAAP measures to comparable GAAP measures can be found on our website at www.eogresources.com. Effective January 1, 2010, the SEC now permits oil and gas companies in their filings with the SEC to disclose not only proved reserves, but also probable reserves as well as possible reserves. Some of the reserve estimates on this conference call and webcast, including those for the Wolfcamp, Marcellus and British Columbia Horn River Basin, may include estimated reserves not necessarily calculated in accordance or contemplated by the SEC's latest reserve reporting guidelines. We incorporate by reference the cautionary note to U. S.
Investors that appear at the bottom of our press release and Investor Relations page of our website. With me this morning are Lauren Leiker, Senior EVP, Exploration Gary Thomas, Senior EVP, Operations Bill Thomas, Senior EVP, Exploitation Tim Drager, Vice President and CFO Moira Baldwin, Vice President of Investor Relations and Jill Miller, Manager of Engineering and Reserves. An updated IR presentation was posted to our website last night and we included 1st quarter and full year 2011 guidance in yesterday's press release. I'll discuss our business plan for 2011 in a minute when I review operations. I'll now review our Q4 and full year net income and discretionary cash flow and then I'll review our year end reserves and $1,000,000 or $0.21 per share and $160,700,000 or $0.63 per share for the full year of 2010.
For investors who follow the practice of industry analysts who focus on non GAAP net income to eliminate mark to market impacts and certain one time adjustments as outlined in the press release, EOG's 4th quarter adjusted net income was $92,000,000 or $0.36 per share and $296,400,000 or $1.16 per share for the full year. For investors who follow the practice of industry analysts who focus on non GAAP discretionary cash flow, EOG's DCF for the Q4 was 8 $27,000,000 $3,000,000,000 for the full year. Because we expect almost 70% of our 11% 73% of our 2012 North American wellhead revenues to emanate from liquids with current prices, we have shifted our reporting from natural gas unit measurements to crude oil unit measurements using a 6:one conversion ratio. I'll now address 2010 reserve replacement and finding costs. For the total company, we replaced 2 0 7 percent of our production at a $15.05 per BOE all in cost net of reserve revisions.
In the U. S, we replaced 3 39 percent of reserves at a 12 $0.96 per BOE all in cost net of revisions. For drilling alone in the U. S, our finding cost was 12.3 $5 per BOE. Total company proved reserves increased 8.5% to 19 50,000,000 barrels of oil equivalent.
Excluding the impact of producing asset sales, total company net proved developed reserves increased 9.6% overall and 12.6% in North America. Overall, 62% of the reserve adds were liquids. Overall natural gas reserves decreased due to producing property sales, a well that watered out in Trinidad and revisions in the Mid Continent area to reflect PUD reserves that are no longer part of our 5 year drilling program. For the 23rd consecutive year, the Galyer Mac and McNaughton has done an engineering analysis of our reserves and their overall number was within 5% of our internal estimate. Their analysis covered 77% of our proved reserves this year.
Please see the schedule of the company's earnings release for the calculation of reserve replacement and and 20 our 9% target articulated in November. Our 2011 gross projection of 9.5% on an BOE per day basis is identical to the goal that we presented in November. I'll also point out that this growth reflects all anticipated asset sales for 2011. Most importantly, the year over year liquids growth projection remains at 49%, although the mix between oil and NGLs is slightly more oil dominated than presented in November. We expect 50 5% oil growth and 34 percent reflecting property sales and only a limited amount of dry gas drilling.
I'll note that our 20 11 overall production growth will be lumpy. Depending on the timing of property sales and resource play batch fracs, which bring a number of wells to sales at once and also including some February cold snap downtime. I'd also like to interject a comment here regarding using production growth as a measurement parameter. At the current 22:one crude oil natural gas price ratio, I believe the production growth yardstick has become somewhat meaningless. In today's world, the metrics of liquids production growth and product mix change should be the focus since cash flow, returns and earnings will follow liquids growth and that's how we've defined start with our oil plays.
The Eagle Ford will be the biggest component of EOG's 2011 year over year oil growth and we have positive results across our acreage maintaining our 100 percent success rate. In our previously defined 120 mile oil area, we continue to achieve very consistent results. A sample of recent IPs from wells on the eastern half of our acreage are the Dulneague number 3H and 4H and Hanson Collin 2H and 4H which IP ed at 1243, 1244, 1627 and 1708 barrels of oil per day respectively with varying rates of rich natural gas in addition. On the western side, the Naylor Jones 86 No. 1H IP ed at 12 20 barrels of oil per day and 8.77 Mcf per day of rich natural gas.
We have 100 percent working interest in all these wells. Our pro well reserve estimates haven't changed from what we disclosed in November. Our current well costs in both areas of Eagle Ford are roughly $6,000,000 and we expect to reduce these by $1,000,000 by 2012 with further frac optimizations. At the current $6,000,000 well cost, we were achieving 65% to 110% direct after tax reinvestment rates return. We drilled 96 net Eagle Ford wells in 2010 and plan to drill approximately 250 net wells in 2011.
Also you may have noted from previous presentations that in addition to our oil acreage, we have 26 horizontal Eagle Ford well on this acreage, the Poly C. Gardner 100H has tested at a pipeline restrained rate of 2.8 1,000,000 cubic feet a day of rich natural gas with 2.39 barrels of condensate per day proving up this acreage. Therefore, we've extended the proven play to now include our wet gas acreage. We now have another quarter of drilling under our belt. We've confirmed that our 26,000 However, to be objective, I also need to mention 2 logistical pinch points in the Eagle Ford.
On our last call, I mentioned the tightness in availability of Eagle Ford frac equipment. This continues to be a problem, although in EOG's case, we've been able to alleviate almost all bottlenecks relating to completions and frac equipment except proppant availability. The second pinch point is crude oil trucking. You may recall we signed up with Enterprise to have a new 350,000 barrel oil per day oil pipeline built through our Eagle Ford acreage. However, the pipeline won't be in service until mid-twenty 12.
So essentially all Eagle Ford oil whether EOG or others will will have to move by truck throughout 2011 causing a crunch for crude truck availability. We have a plan to deal with both issues, but it will be a tight situation throughout this year. I'll next discuss 2 oil plays where EOG was once again the first mover, the Wolfcamp in Niobrara. We drilled our 1st Wolfcamp horizontal well in early 2000 and horizontal wells and have completed 4. Our second well was a short length lateral that proves the play concept and the next two wells were longer length lateral wells.
Of the 2 longer laterals, the University forty-fourteen oh two had an initial 30 day average rate of 3.90 barrels of oil per day and 600 Mcf of gas per day. The University 40 3-1000H has averaged 560 barrels of oil per day with 2 50 mcf of gas per day in the 1st 12 days of production. Our Wolfcamp product breakdown is approximately 55 percent oil, 23 percent NGLs and 22% residue gas. We have our initial reserve assessment from only one of the potential Wolfcamp target zones is at least 40,000,000 barrels of oil equivalent net after royalty with possible upside from successful drilling. This is typical of the EOG strategy.
We were the 1st mover and kept it low profile until we've proven to play and established a good acreage position. The typical well cost here is $6,500,000 and the net after royalty reserves are 270,000 barrels of oil equivalent per well yielding about a 25% direct after tax reinvestment rate of return. We expect we can improve this ROI when we move into a program drilling mode. In the Niobrara, recent completion results have increased our comfort factor regarding the play. As you know, this play has received a ton of press lately and our EOG, although first mover in the oil play, has been reticent to productivity.
Relative to the industry, we drilled more wells than any other operator in the oil play and we have the most data of any operator. We've recently found a way to convert the play from 1 dependent on fractures to more of a matrix dominated play. This increases our confidence that the Niobrara can be developed as a true resource play. So far, we've tested 80,000 of our 300,000 likely prospective net acres and have drilled wells such as the Critter Creek 13-17H and LC-seven-34H which recently tested at 731 and 820 barrels of oil per day respectively. During 2011, we plan to drill 40 wells and we'll evaluate the remainder of our 300,000 acres.
It's still too early to provide a total reserve estimate, but I can say that we're more optimistic about the play size that we were 6 months ago. I'll also note that we expect both the Wolfcamp and Niobrara plays to be only minor contributors to our 2011 liquids growth, which has little current infrastructure in the Niobrara and our Wolfcamp 11 development will be at a modest pace with a 3 rig program. I'll now address our Bakken results. Some people seem to take EOG's Bakken position for granted and perhaps it's been overshadowed by some of our newer oil plays. However, I remind everyone that EOG is the biggest oil producer in North Dakota, which means we're also the biggest BakkenThree Forks producer.
We have one of the largest acreage positions in the play with 600,000 net acres. The Bakken is our single largest oil production contributor and will remain so until the Eagle Ford passes it in 2012 or 2013. Our recent drilling effort has been to test areas outside the core and we've had very good results. Typical results on the Round Prairie ten-eighteen-nineteen H well near the Montana, North Dakota state line, which tested at 14 58 barrels of oil today and 600 Mcf of gas today. And the Bear Den 7-17H west of our core field, which IP ed at 1882 barrels of oil per day.
We have 80 5% 90% working interest respectively in these wells. Our typical non core well yields to 45% direct after tax reinvestment rate of return and we plan to run 10 rigs in the BakkenThree Forks in 2011. In our Barnett combo place, step by drilling has again extended our core area from 160,000 to 175,000 net acres. The results have been consistent and because of drilling efficiency improvements, we've reduced our typical completed well cost to $3,000,000 Given the reserves we're achieving, our direct after tax reinvestment rate of return is 50% to 60%. Typical well results are the Watson A-1H and 2H and the Bahama C Unit 3H, B Unit 4H and E Unit 5H were tested at oil rates of 6.35, 6.26, 3.70 6, 5.23 and 5.57 barrels of oil per day respectively with varying amounts of rich gas.
We have 100% working interest in all these wells. Because of our dominant acreage position, we have essentially no competition in this play. We drilled 231 net wells in 2010 and plan to drill about the same number in 2011. This play will be our 2nd largest liquids growth contributor in 20 mention our Permian Basin Leonard Shale play where we've had only limited drilling activity because we are not faced with short term lease expirations. The Endurance 361H has a 30 day average of 400 barrels of oil per day and 500,000 cubic feet of gas a day.
The Lomas Rojas 5H has a 30 day average of 4.63 barrels of oil per day with 1,200,000 cubic feet a day of rich gas. We have 100 percent working interest in both of these wells. Our Manitoba oil program continues to yield 90% after tax reinvestment rates return. We drilled 90 wells last year and plan to drill 86 wells this year. Before we switch to the natural gas side of the ledger, I want to talk about reinvestment rates return.
The entire reason EOG has shifted from a gas to a liquids focus is based on our macro view. We can achieve much higher reinvestment rates return with oil. Now that we're a few years into this strategy shift, what can we conclude? 1st, oil RORs are clearly much better than gas, which is obvious. 2nd, there is a differentiation between oil plays.
A lot of our oil plays, the Bakken Light, Niobrara, Barnett Combo, Wolfcamp and Leonard will yield a 30% to 60% direct AT reserves and costs, but somewhat surprisingly the RORs bunch together pretty closely. 2 other plays, the Bakken Corp and the Eagle Ford, will yield direct RORs between 65% 110%. EOG is fortunate to have the dominant position in both of these ultra high return plays particularly the Eagle Ford. Because of its size, the Eagle Ford gives us an opportunity to invest a large amount of capital at very high direct reinvestment rates of return. Now let me switch to the natural gas side of the ledger.
As you know, our CapEx split in 2011 is 80% to liquids plays and 20% to dry gas. The only percent to dry gas. The only dry gas drilling we're doing is where it's required to hold acreage. In 2011, we'll drill 0 dry gas wells in the Barnett, the Permian Basin, the entire Rockies and in Canada conventional. Our gas drilling will be primarily focused in the Haynesville, Marcellus and a little in the Horn River.
I'll briefly discuss the 3 plays where we're 20 11 capital. In the Marcellus, we've had an interesting and positive turn of events. As you know, in December, we mutually agreed to walk away from the sale of our 50,000 undeveloped net acres in Bradford County. We had drilled a few wells there a few years ago using our old completion techniques and we got decent but not spectacular wells. After our sale fell through, we completed our 1st Bradford County well using our new high rate frac completion techniques.
The 96% working interest, Hopaw 3H well has IP ed at 14,000,000 cubic feet a day with 1200 PSI flowing tubing pressure. This result is typical of results from offset operators, but we now think that the improved completion technique has significantly upgraded this acreage. We plan on completing 7 additional wells in Bradford County by mid year. If we can replicate these results, then we'll likely keep this acreage and not remarket it since we estimate 1 trillion cubic feet of recoverable gas here. We're also seeing similar improved results from high rate completions in Clearfield County on our joint EOGNFG acreage.
In the last 7 Punksy wells we've completed here have averaged 8,100,000 cubic feet per day with high flowing tubing pressures. We have 50% working interest in these wells. As more data becomes available, our perception of the Marcellus has improved. Data to date had indicated 2 sweet spots, 1 in the Southwest near Pittsburgh and 1 in North Central Pennsylvania in the Bradford County area near the Pennsylvania New York state line. It was thought that the area between these sweet spots was of lesser quality, but our Clearfield County results indicate at least a portion of the intervening acreage is excellent and we're very pleased with our total 210,000 net acres.
In the Haynesville, we plan to run 8 rigs this year compared to 11 last year. The activity level is the minimum required to hold all of our sweet spot acreage. Based on our analysis, the Haynesville can be divided into 2 regimes, the sweet and non sweet spots. Outside of the sweet spot, the chances of making an economic return are low. In the sweet spot, at today's gas prices with average EURs of 8 to 12 Bcf today's gas prices with average EURs of 8 Bcf to 12 Bcf per well, one can make an economic Fortunately, compared to others, EOG has a very high percentage of leases in the sweet spot versus total Haynesville leasehold.
In fact, we believe we're the 3rd biggest holder of sweet spot acreage, a fact that most people don't think of when they consider our Haynesville position. Our recent well results are typical of what we reported in previous quarters. The Sutton number 1 and Oglesbee number 1 in Nacogdoches and San Augustine Counties, Texas had IPs of 24.7 and 21,000,000 cubic feet a day from the Bossier. Our working interest in these wells range from 72% to 96%. I'll also note that like several other companies, we've concluded that producing Haynesville wells at a restricted rate for the 1st several months is likely helpful to long term production and we have implemented that progress that process.
In the British Columbia Horn River Basin, we completed several wells from our early 2010 drilling program and obtained results consistent with past years. 100% working interest GOAT BE55B tested with a peak rate of 22,000,000 cubic feet per day and flowed at a rate in excess of 18,000,000 cubic feet a day for 15 days and appears to be the best well we drill to date with estimated reserves of 17 Bcf. In conjunction with Apache, we've made good progress on the Kitimat LNG export facility project.
We finalized an agreement with the Heisla First Nation regarding the
site for the LNG. We finalized an agreement with the Heisla First Nation regarding the site for the LNG plant. We bought out the original owners of the Kitimat project and with next step is to secure oil indexed LNG contracts. In my opinion, if any LNG export plants are built in North America, Kitimat is the most likely to happen. In my mind, our Horn River development is an oil project because we expect the gas to be sold at an oil index price.
Now I'll address our 20 11 business plan. We expect our 20 11 total CapEx to be between $6,400,000,000 $6,600,000,000 of which 1.1 $1,000,000,000 will be devoted to facilities and midstream infrastructure. As previously noted, 80% of the CapEx will be focused on oil or liquids rich plays and 20% is dedicated to holding natural gas acreage in the Haynesville, Marcellus and Horn River. We intend to sell approximately $1,000,000,000 of assets in 2011. We are currently negotiating agreements to sell 5 $50,000,000 of acreage and natural gas assets that we expect to close in the first half of this year.
We expect about 3 $50,000,000 of midstream sales and the remaining $100,000,000 will come from a combination of acreage and gas producing property sales. As noted on the last call, our maximum net debt to cap tolerance level is 35% for year end percent I've had a few investor questions recently about monetizing a portion of our 520,000 Eagle Ford oil position since it's now a hot commodity. My answer is that we can achieve 65% to 110% direct after tax rate to return by developing this acreage, but why would we want to water down a multi $1,000,000,000 reinvestment opportunity given these kinds of returns. EOG seems to be almost the only independent E and P that isn't selling down its core resource play assets and we think that's a positive discriminator. I'll now turn it over to Tim Driggers to discuss financials and capital structures.
Capitalized interest for the quarter was $19,500,000 and for the year was $76,300,000 For the Q4 20 10, total cash exploration and development expenditures were 1 point expenditures were $148,000,000 Total acquisitions for both the quarter and full year were $210,000,000 all of which represent the cost to require the rights to Kitimat LNG. For the full year 2010, total exploration and development expenditures were $5,370,000,000 excluding acquisitions and asset retirement obligations. In addition, total gathering, processing plants and other property plant and equipment expenditures were $371,000,000 For 20 10, approximately 19% of the drilling program CapEx was exploration and 81% was development. Approximately 70 percent was directed toward oil and liquids rich drilling programs with 30% to natural gas. We had proceeds from asset sales of $673,000,000 in 20.10.
At year end 20 10, total debt outstanding was 5 $200,000,000 and the debt to total cap ratio was 34%. At December 31, we had $789,000,000 of cash giving us non GAAP net debt of $4,400,000,000 or a net debt to total GAAP ratio of 30%. On a GAAP reporting basis, the effective tax rate for the 4th quarter was 62% and the deferred tax ratio was 27%. Similarly, on a GAAP basis, the effective tax rate for the year was 61% and the deferred tax ratio was 31%. We have also announced another increase
of
the annual indicated rate is $0.64 per share. On the natural gas side, from March 1 through December 31, 2011, EOG has 425,000 MMBtu per day of financial price swaps in place at an average price of $5.09 per MMDtu excluding unexercised swaptions. This is roughly 1 third of our expected 20 11 North American gas production. For the full year 2012, EOG has 250,000 NMBTU per day of financial price swaps at an average price of $5.56 per MMbtu excluding unexercised swaptions. And this is roughly 20 percent of our expected 2012 North American gas production.
On the crude side, for February through December 2011, EOG has 18,000 barrels of oil per day financial price swaps in place at a weighted average price of $90.69 per barrel. For the full year 2012, we have financial price swaps for 2,000 barrels of oil a day at $100.50 per barrel. Yesterday, we included a guidance table with the earnings press release for the Q1 and full year 2011. For the Q1, the effective tax range is 35% to 50%. For the full year 2011, the effective tax range is 35% to 40 5%.
We've also provided an estimated range of the dollar amount of current taxes that we expect to record during the Q1 and the full year. For each one dollars per barrel change in wellhead crude oil and condensate price combined with the related change in NGL price, the sensitivity is approximately $26,000,000 to net income $39,000,000 for operating cash flow. EOG's price sensitivity for each $0.10 per Mcf change in wellhead natural gas prices is approximately $19,000,000 for net income and $28,000,000 for operating cash flow. Now I'll turn it back to Mark for his concluding remarks.
Thanks, Tim. Now let me summarize. In my opinion, there are 6 important points to take away from this call. 1st, our shift from a natural gas to a liquids company is proceeding very well. At current prices, we expect almost 70% of our North American 2011 wellhead revenue to emanate from liquids as opposed to gas with over half that coming from crude oil.
This ratio increases to 73% in 2012. Most importantly, our Eagle Ford are matching expectations. 2nd, all of our plays are in North America with the vast majority in the U. S. 3rd, with the Wolfcamp and Niobrara, EZ has increased our oil inventory again on a 1st mover basis.
Our oil inventory is now so deep that we won't begin intensive development of the Wolfcamp, Leonard and Niobrara until the 2013 timeframe. This suggests that our strong liquids production growth will be sustained for many years. 4th, given our high ROR domestic oil inventory combined with the fact that 80% of our CapEx is directed toward liquids, we expect to achieve above average reinvestment rates of return on our capital program in 20 11 and later years. This will ultimately show up as above average ROEs and ROCEs versus the industry. 5th, we have a coherent plan to fund our capital program.
And 6th, our Marcellus gas acreage currently appears to be more prolific than we had previously presented to the investment community. Thanks for listening. And now we'll go to Q and A.
Thank you. The question and answer session will be conducted And we will go to our first question from Scott Wilmot with Simmons and Company.
Hey guys. Just looking at your 2011 rate of liquids growth, it looks like up 49%, down a little bit from what you guys have previously said in November of 53%. Is that a function of maybe the oil pinch points you mentioned in the trucking in the Eagle Ford? Or are there an asset where you're getting maybe less liquids content than you initially thought?
Scott, I mean your question is not quite correct. In November, we said 49% liquids growth and that's currently what we're saying. So there's no 2011, the mix has improved between NGLs and crude oil, where now the crude oil is a slightly higher portion of the total liquids growth.
Okay. I must be misreading the November press release, but we can get that squared away with more after the call. Jumping to the Eagle Ford completion equipment, you mentioned that that used to be a pinch point, but now you guys have secured your frac equipment you needed. What have you guys done to secure that equipment? And have you done anything to secure for your 2012
program? Yes. What I'll say
is we've
got some proprietary activities going on relating to fracs. And nation wide right now, I'd say that there's the fracs are a pinch point for everybody in the industry. The work we've done in the Eagle Ford has removed the pinch So right now industry wide you've got a shortage of sand, you've got a shortage of pumping equipment. And we've got one of those two issues fixed for the Eagle Ford, but we really don't want to go into any details right now other than we will say the same as we articulated on later calls that we are moving in the direction of self sourcing a higher percentage of our fracs in the company as we get to particularly toward 2012.
And we'll go to our next question from Brian Lively with Tudor, Pickering, Holt.
Good morning. Mark, just on the asset sales, appreciate the remarks earlier, especially with the Marcellus, but just want to make sure I understand what properties are you guys now planning to sell for 2011? And then what are the expected timing from a quarterly basis?
Yes. I'll kind of go through, I mean, the biggest property we sold in 2010 with a portion of our shallow gas acreage, producing acreage in Canada. And we're not looking at selling additional shallow gas production in 2011. The sales that we're looking at for 2011 are primarily from long live natural gas assets in the U. S.
And then some acreage positions that we have that are currently kind of hot commodities. And then on the midstream side, it's just some various midstream facilities up there. As far as on a quarter to quarter basis, I can't give you specifics of sales accomplished. Okay. Of sales accomplished.
Okay. And then just one more if I may. On the Niobrara comments around matrix permeability in the Hereford Ranch area, what permeability range are you seeing there? And then and just given the data that you've seen so far, do you expect Niobrara to really have a core in an Niobrara light region?
Yes. What we can say about this is, as Mark noted earlier, the early wells in are generally dominated by high permeability open fracture systems. And this typically leads to very wide spacing patterns and low in place oil recoveries. So what we're doing, we're developing a new completion concept and this encouraging, but they're early. And if we're successful in changing this to connecting more certainly increase the recovery factor of the oil in place.
So, it's going to take some time to determine this and the ultimate impact on the play will just reveal itself over time.
And moving on, we'll take next question from Leo Marini with RBC Capital.
Yes. Good morning here folks. You're obviously more excited about the Marcellus based on some of your recent drilling results. Can you give us a sense of your well cost up at the Marcellus and the EURs and those wells?
Yes. In Bradford County, I mean the typical well cost is about $5,000,000 The EURs are we're looking in the range of probably about minimum of close to 4 Bcf. We just need to watch production from some of these wells. But if we can replicate these Bradford County results, they're as far as dry gas drilling, they're going to be reasonably economic dry gas wells to drill. So we really may have a situation here where we get a series of wells that have been IP at 14000000, 15000000 a day up in the Marcellus and Bradford County area.
And then the stuff in Clearfield County, kind of similar well costs, reserves might be a a because as I said, it might infer that there's a trend of good gas productivity all the way from New York State line down to Pittsburgh. So we just have to do some additional drilling to see if that really pans out in that manner. But there's no doubt that we're more sanguine regarding the Marcellus than we had been previously.
Got you. Okay. I guess just touching base on the Eagle Ford here. I mean it looks like in your latest update, you did have some improving IPs in the wells you guys have reported. You did talk about a fair bit of consistency across your position.
But given the improving IPs, do you guys see potential upside in the URs during the course of the year as you refine your completion techniques?
I mean,
we'll I'd say if you're modeling the company or assessing the company's NAV, we still recommend use the $900,000,000 that we articulated last April. And we just have to as we get more data, we may come up with some different reserve estimates on there. But right now, I'd say that the data that we accumulated over the last 3 months just supports our 9 $100,000,000 MBOE net reserve estimate. The surprising The surprising thing to me about the Eagle Ford is just the remarkable consistency over such a long geographic area. So the next step, think, for our Eagle Ford is really driving our costs down.
We've got them pretty well tamed to the $6,000,000 range now. And they're obviously generating, I'd say, stupendous reinvestment rates return. I would say, in North America, whether oil or gas, I'm not sure there's any other large play that's generating any higher reinvestment rates of return than our Eagle Ford And obviously, if we can knock that price down for 2012 and the well cost from $6,000,000 to $5,000,000 with improved frac methodology then we're going to have much, much even stronger investment rates of return. And that's what this company is all about.
And we'll hear next from Brian Singer with Goldman Sachs.
Thanks. Good morning.
Hey, Brian.
Going back to the Niobrara, can you speak more specifically to what you did differently in terms of the completion that gave you more confidence in matrix flow? And how, if at all, those changes may be applicable to other emerging liquid plays in your portfolio where you're facing similar questions over natural
reasons, we really don't want to give a lot away relating to the Niobrara. There's probably 10 or 15 of our peer companies listen this call that would like to hear what we've done in that manner and we're not going to give it away. I would say each of these resource plays turns out to require a little different frac recipe and the Niobrara has been maybe the most unique so far just because it's got such a high percentage of fractures. So whatever solution we come up with for the Niobrara, it's not obvious that that's going to oil resource place, because most of the others don't have a high degree of natural fractures that we've seen in the Niobrara.
Okay. Thanks. That's helpful. And then shifting to the Permian, can you put a play into context when you look at the Wolfcamp, which really overlies a lot of the play extending into the Delaware Basin and based on what you know now in the 2 counties you've tested, can you talk to, I guess, A, whether you think the Wolfcamp can be drilled commercially beyond those two counties, whether it's the start of something wider within the play? And do you think there's other zones beyond the Wolfcamp and the Leonard that you think can provide a similar greater size resource for EOG?
Yes. Brian, on the Wolfcamp specifically, we've talked about Erie and Crockett Counties, and we're not going to go much beyond that today. But I would say that at least within the areas that we defined so far and where we bought or leased our 120,000 net acres, seen some pretty positive things, very simple geology. We do have multiple targets in a thick section and it's only very lightly structured, so not a big geo steering issue of any kind. Massive boil in place in the overall Wolfcamp section, 20,000,000 barrels of oil, 40 Bcf of gas in place per section per zone.
So there's a lot to work with in that Wolfcamp play. And also we're pretty encouraged by the early costs and EURs achieving 25% direct after tax rates of return. In program mode, we obviously hope to improve that pretty substantially. Right now, we're only talking about a 40,000,000 barrel oil equivalent net after royalty, but that's only from a certain percentage of our acreage. It's risked pretty heavily for early recovery efficiencies.
And as I said, it's only one of multiple targets in that interval. Where it goes from here remains to be seen. It's a pretty competitive play right now, so we're not going to talk much about extensions beyond that. For the other play that we're involved in here, the Leonard or Avalon Shale play, we're also pretty happy with that, but it's a much more variable play geologically. In the Leonard, as we've said before, there's at least 2 target intervals.
And then below that in the Bone Spring, there's 2, maybe 3 target intervals. Obviously, that plays also economic at current costs and EURs, but in program mode, we hope to get that up in the 40%, 50% range as well. I would say on our 120,000 acres, we do have potential from additional zones including the Bone Spring sands and maybe a little known fact is that we've been active in the second Bone Spring sand for years since 2,005. We've drilled about 27 horizontals and averaged about 300 MBOE per well, NAR. And then the 3rd sand, which may have even wider implications, both in our acreage position and others, we just really haven't tested that in too many areas, but we did have an early discovery in that field, in fact, an oil discovery at a field called Red Hills, which we developed it vertically because it was kind of pretty horizontal.
But I guess we probably produced what maybe 15,000,000, 16,000,000 barrels out of that field over the years. So we're pretty familiar with those objectives and we'll be pursuing them in the future.
And moving on, we have a question from Irene Haas with Wunderlich Securities.
Good morning, Irene.
Hi. How you doing? This is really a macro question for Mark. I mean, I'm looking at everybody. This whole waiting towards oily play is just great, it's fantastic, all good.
How do you feel about oil marketing, sort of localized oil on oil competition? And the reason why is because all these old basins that have been sort of declining are coming back stronger and faster than expected. Do you see any sort of issue with really downstream infrastructure in the U. S, which is really, really sticky and the ability to kind of catch up with upstream production growth in oil area, which is more dynamic? Should I start a trucking company?
Yes. If you had an oil trucking company in the Eagle Ford area right now, you'd be rich.
Okay.
Yes. The answer to your question, I believe, is that in multiple areas, we're going to on a macro view, we're going to see oil production subsume the existing oil transportation infrastructure. We clearly saw that in the Bakken play and EOG put in a crude by rail to get our crude oil out of that North Dakota, which is kind of a depressed pricing area. And by the way, that project we put in is working like a charm, very profitable for us. And we've got a lot of requests to move other oil volumes on that line.
The same thing is happening in the Eagle Ford in that the amount of oil that's generated is completely subsuming the existing very limited infrastructure. And that will also happen in the Niobrara. If the Niobrara turns out to be a very, very large play, there's very little infrastructure there. So, what I think is going to happen is you're going to see some significant differentials relative to some indices whether it's LOS, whether it's Cushing and you're going to see some companies who are proactive here probably advantaged in their regional pricing relative to some other companies in the play. I will say that there's a lot of talk right now on this LOS Cushing big oil price differential that if that differential persists with time that we believe that our Eagle Ford oil is likely to get a price that is certainly better than Cushing, but not quite as good as LLS, because most of our Eagle Ford oil by 2012 is going to end up in the Houston Ship Channel area.
So that should be relatively advantaged certainly to Cushing. But short answer to your question is this infrastructure is a big deal.
Great. Thank you.
And we'll take our next question from Joe Allman with JPMorgan.
Yes. Thank you. Good morning, everybody. Hey, Mark, on
the same note on the marketing, what precludes you from trucking your oil to LLS at this point? What are the costs involved there?
Yes. The real issue we have right now, Joe, is just the physical time it would take to take a truck from the Eagle Ford to get it over to Louisiana it would require that we need to sign up even more trucks to get our oil to some to get our oil moved. And there's really believe it or not, there's just not enough trucks out there to deal with that. So in the short term, our issues with the Eagle Ford are we're going to be trucking it to local areas where it can be areas where it can be put into a pipeline. But it's not going to be a situation that we're going to be able to get it to Louisiana anytime in the short run.
I will say we're looking at some rail issues that could get us even our Bakken crew to Louisiana, but it may take a year before we get those implemented. And as you know, the differential LOS to Cushing typically is only $2 or $3 Now it's blown out. And I certainly can't predict whether it's going to stay at that blowout rate for years or weeks.
Okay. That's helpful. And then on asset divestitures,
just kind of
3 part question. 1, do you think you'll need to sell additional assets in 2012? And 2, do you still plan on selling Niobrara acreage given kind of the update? And 3, what actually went awry with that Marcellus Shale
sale? Yes. I mean on the last question there on the Marcellus Shale Acreage, I mean it was mutual agreement between us and the intended buyer part ways on that. But what I can say about that Marcellus acreage is there are no title or environmental issues relating to that acreage. The fact that we're going to go ahead and develop that ourselves would indicate that there are no issues as far as will we need to sell something in 2012 Niobrara acreage some of that kind of comes around to this funding gap question, which I'm surprised I haven't gotten so far.
What I'd say on the funding GAAP issue is that philosophically the 35% net debt to cap ratio is a pretty hard line. It's not our intention to run this company at debt levels, net debt levels higher than 35 percent. And that goes for 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, etcetera. And we've got a lot of levers at our disposal for 2012, 2013, 2014 that we can pull. Some of that obviously going to depend on what are the hydrocarbon prices in those years and what will be our cash flow.
Flow. And we just if I leave you with anything related to that, it's that we really we're not going to lever up this company to unreasonably what we view as unreasonably high debt levels. And we are going to pursue these reinvestment opportunities and it is unlikely that we are going to do JVs certainly on any of our oil plays. And we'll keep open on our gas plays, but our inclination as of now is not to do any JVs on any of our gas plays. Although in the Horn River, potential buyers that we have talked to in the Far East for the LNG have expressed some interest in equity in the upstream.
And we'll just have to see how that plays out in negotiations with potential buyers over this year. So we've got the Horn River kind of earmarked as we'll figure out what to do with it as the Kitimat LNG story plays out. But right now the plan for the Horn River is to end up linking that large amount of gas to an LNG oil index contract. So as far as the other part of your question was, would we sell some Niobrara acreage? The answer is yes.
I mean, we would consider that just depending on what price is offered on some situations like that. Hopefully, that gives you at least some clarity.
And we'll take our next question from Monroe Helm with Vero Henley.
Great results. Just a little bit more on the Wolfcamp play, if you would. The 40,000,000 barrels that you've indicated here, you said is from one zone. Can you identify the Wolfcamp look like there's maybe in C zone. Can you talk about where you think the reserves are within 40,000,000 barrels relative to those 3 zones?
And what other zones in the Wolfcamp, you take a perspective we go down the
road? Yes. Monroe, we said really about all we need to say on the amount of oil and gas in place in that overall Wolfcamp and the fact that there's multiple zones. But that's a bit of a question yet in everybody's mind, which of the zones is going to be best? Are they all going to be good?
What areas are the A or the B or the C going to be perspective into the overlying or not? And that's all kind of proprietary information from drilling that we're not ready to give up yet.
Okay. You did say from one zone, there's 20,000,000 barrels of oil in place and 40 Bcf, is that what you said?
That's in place per section per zone.
Per zone. Okay. Okay. But you won't give any color on what you think the ultimate could be here on a per section basis for oil in place?
Well, I think I just did. I mean oil in place per section is that 20,000,000 barrels of oil in place per zone.
Okay.
That's really as far as we can take it today, Monroe. It's just too early in the play for us to talk much more about it than what we've already said.
Okay. Second question has to do with the Niobrara. Do you think that there'll be like in we're seeing in East Texas, you think there's going to be some really sweet spots in this play? And do you think you've pretty much identified where the sweet spots are on your acreage?
Yes. All of these plays have sweet spots in them. We've learned from the experience, the vast
amount
of exposure that EOG has on
all these resource plays. And we're still really working on that and determining that and it's really early in the testing process of this new technique. And but we're working on that and I think there will be some sweet spots and we'll just have to see how it plays out.
And we'll take our next
information kind of skinny on the Wolfcamp play, but can you the 40,000,000 barrels of your early assessment there, is that limited just to the Crockett Counties or is it across the basin?
No, Daniel, it's limited to a portion of our acres in Erie and 8 horizontals and completed 4. We're not ready to talk about the entire position yet.
Yes. I guess, as an overview, there's 2 ways the old reserves in the Wolfcamp could grow. One overall 120,000 acres. The second way is that if it turns out that these two other zones which might be productive, if they turn out to be productive, if they extend just over the acreage we've tested or if they extend over all the acreage. And obviously, the big home run is you have multiple zones that are productive over 120,000 acres.
And I would say by year end we ought to have a reasonable guess on do we have multiple zones and do they extend overall our acreage or part of our acreage. We're just as curious as you are to find out what the answer is.
Thank you
And we'll take our next question from David Tamarin with Wells Fargo.
I'm just going back to what you said on trucking, Mark. If I think about the oil ramp or the oil volumes that are ramping are predominantly in the U. S. For EOG, but yet you said the trucking is tight. Can you reconcile that a little bit for me?
How are you going to be able to grow at that rate with the tight trucking and just the tight infrastructure?
Well, you just I mean, you have to come up with some alternatives. I mean, for example, in the Bakken, when we had the high growth rate, if we had not come up with the crude by rail and implemented it within 12 months, we would have had significant production curtailments, but we came up with a plan. And the same thing, we have an interim plan that the window of problem area relating to Eagle Ford is really today through mid-twenty 12. Once the line gets put in by enterprise, the oil pipeline, this problem pretty much just goes away. So we have 12 months kind of a timeframe here, 12, 15 months where we have to deal with it.
And we're looking at some, I guess the best thing to say, some unique and inventive ways to deal with it. And some of that's proprietary.
Okay. Is fair to say that if you didn't have that or if you don't implement, if you didn't have a system that it would be hard to hit those numbers? I'm just trying to figure out the overall tightness just coming out of the basin and the bigger picture oil macro.
I mean, I guess the way to put it is that I'd expect there that as we go through the year, you may hear some stories about issues on tight trucking, particularly in Eagle Ford, and we hope we get a fix on that. It's pretty much the same thing as when we articulated in November that the frac situation was any other companies. And I think now if you get other companies to fess up, I'd say 100 percent of the companies in the U. S. Have problems with frac availability.
So again, EOG is trying to be open to discuss these issues on the front end even though you may not be hearing them from other companies.
Okay. No, that's fair. One more quick question. If I think about bigger picture, you made a comment about supply consuming the infrastructure. There's always been the old axiom that oil is harder to grow than gas.
And of course that was before horizontal drilling. So how do you think about have you found that oil has been harder to grow than gas or is it more infrastructure related or is it just the initial ramp that we're putting in these places? It seems like across the industry like you mentioned, right, fracking in November, everybody's bringing in production rates a little bit. Can you just talk about how you see that at EOG has harder to grow oil, etcetera?
Yes. And that's a good question, David. The answer I mean, simple answer to your question is, yes, it's harder to grow oil than gas. And I think that as you see the whole industry moving toward liquids, you're going to see this played out among multiple companies that perhaps the initial estimates they gave on liquids volume growth don't turn out to be what happens. For one reason and a couple of reasons are that we all report whether it's Eagle Ford or Bakken wells or whatever initial IP rates that look outstanding, but oil wells don't flow very They need artificial lift in very short periods of time as opposed to a gas well that may go 5 or 6 years before it needs compression in some kind of cases.
The second thing is the artificial lift that you put in oil wells has a higher downtime than you typically have with gas wells. The rod pumps, centrifugal pumps, they fail more frequently. So one of the issues that we've had to adjust to is that we've had to factor in for 2011 and 2012 guidance just a higher downtime in our producing oil wells than we would have been using in a year ago. And I think you'll see that across the industry that the bottom line is it's just flat harder to grow oil than it is gas.
And we have for one final question from David Heikkinen with Tudor Pickering Holding Company.
Just a couple of quick ones. After tax rates return for your Haynesville and Marcellus today each region?
Yes. Using if you use the 5 year gas strip, just NYMEX on there in the Marcellus and the stuff that we're doing in Bradford County, it's pretty darn high. I mean, you could build a case that it's 40% or so. In Clearfield County, it's a little bit lower than that. It's probably in the range of 30% or so.
The Haynesville in the sweet spots, I would say it's probably 20% to 30% in that.
And then Kitimak CapEx and export capacity in a go forward case?
Well, it's going to be a bunch of money ultimately. I mean the export capacity is on an 8 inches basis is about 700,000,000 cubic feet of gas a day. And conceptually what we're looking at and I believe this is in conjunction with Apache. I'm not sure what comments may have made on Kitimat on their call. But we're really looking at this as Kitimat Plant 1 and then Kitimat Plant 2, which would double that 700,000,000 cubic feet a day.
Ultimately, and the CapEx requirements are clearly multibillion dollars. We're currently doing some engineering analysis on that. Of course, the big portion of that would be not required until 2013, 2014 kind of a time frame on there. So the biggest goal for Kitimat for 2011 is to secure an oil index contract in the Far East. And I expect it's going to take probably 12 months or so before we know if we can secure one.
We have a lot of warm and fuzzy positive feelings now, but it's just going to take these things take a
fairly long time to get it all done.
So that's going to be the key 2011.
And that concludes the question and answer session today. At this time, Mr. Pappas, I will turn the conference back over to you for any additional or closing remarks.
Okay. Thank you very much for listening and we'll talk to you again 3 months from now.
And again, that does conclude today's conference. We do thank you for your participation.