EIA: stripper wells chip 11 percent in to total U.S. natural gas production

Over the past decade, stripper wells, known as marginal wells have on aggregate provided 11 to 15 percent of total U.S. oil and natural gas production, according to the U.S. Energy Information Agency. 

Natural gas stripper wells, so called because they are stripping the remaining natural gas out of the ground are characterized as producing no more than 90,000 cubic feet per day over a 12-month period.

EIA estimates that there were about 456,000 stripper gas wells in the United States operating at the end of 2015, compared with about 122,000 nonstripper gas wells.

Stripper wells may have originally been high-volume wells, but through normal production declines now produce only small volumes. Because these wells usually have low ongoing maintenance costs, they are kept active and may continue to produce for many years, as long as they are economically feasible.

Despite each stripper well’s small individual production, on aggregate, they make a contribution to total natural gas production, EIA said.

The production share of stripper gas wells has remained relatively constant over the past 25 years, rising from about 10 percent in 1991 to 15 percent in 2006–09 and dropping again to about 11 percent in 2015.

The recent decrease in stripper wells’ share of total production reflects the large increase in production from relatively prolific wells drilled in shale and tight gas formations with enhanced completion techniques.

Because these wells, and nonstripper wells in general, produce at a much higher rate than stripper wells, they account for the bulk of total U.S. natural gas production.