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Drilling Productivity Report

Release Date:  January 13, 2014  |  Next Release: February 10, 2014  |  full report

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Contents

Report data (aggregated by region)

DUC data (aggregated by region)



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New-well oil production per rig
barrels/day
New-well gas production per rig
thousand cubic feet/day
Region January 2014 February 2014 change   January 2014 February 2014 change
Bakken 472 479 7   477 482 5
Eagle Ford 426 437 11   1,240 1,255 15
Haynesville 23 23 0   5,050 5,060 10
Marcellus 40 41 1   6,193 6,303 10
Niobrara 322 328 6   1,249 1,214 -35
Permian 88 90 2    189 194 5
Rig-weighted average 241 246 5   1,284 1,288 4
Oil production
thousand barrels/day
Gas production
million cubic feet/day
Region January 2014 February 2014 change   January 2014 February 2014 change
Bakken 1,011 1,036 25   1,117 1,143 26
Eagle Ford 1,251 1,285 34   6,112 6,223 111
Haynesville 52 52 0   6,376 6,259 -117
Marcellus 40 42 2   13,837 14,225 388
Niobrara 284 290 6   4,326 4,293 -33
Permian 1,370 1,373 3    5,055 5,056 1
Total 4,008 4,078 70   36,823 37,199 376


The Drilling Productivity Report uses recent data on the total number of drilling rigs in operation along with estimates of drilling productivity and estimated changes in production from existing oil and natural gas wells to provide estimated changes in oil and natural gas production for seven key regions. EIA's approach does not distinguish between oil-directed rigs and gas-directed rigs because once a well is completed it may produce both oil and gas; more than half of the wells produce both.

While shale resources and production are found in many U.S. regions, at this time EIA is focusing on the six most prolific areas, which are located in the Lower 48 states. These seven regions accounted for 95% of domestic oil production growth and all domestic natural gas production growth during 2011-13.

key tight oil and shale gas regions