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Message: The good side: Tiny PanTerra sees potential for next big natural gas find

The good side: Tiny PanTerra sees potential for next big natural gas find

posted on Apr 14, 2009 03:20PM
Shale party comes to Saskatchewan
Tiny PanTerra sees potential for next big natural gas find
Shaun Polczer
Calgary Herald

Saturday, April 12, 2008


CREDIT: Leah Hennel, Calgary Herald
PanTerra Resource Corp. vice-president Herve Collet, left, and president and CEO Fred Rumak say Canada is waking up to the potential of shale and believe the company's Saskatchewan assets could hold more than 60 trillion cubic feet of natural gas.

After big discoveries in British Columbia and Quebec, a small Calgary company is hoping Saskatchewan will be the next shale gas hot spot.

That's because tiny PanTerra Resource Corp. has almost half a million hectares of prospective land near Moose Jaw it says could hold more than 60 trillion cubic feet of unconventional gas reserves.

"Shale gas is basically unknown in Canada," compared to the United States, where it is well-established, says vice-president Herve Collet. "We looked around and said there are other places to do this."

"It's a new game in town," adds president Fred Rumak. "People are finally waking up to it in Canada."

PanTerra is a latecomer to the shale gas party after big discoveries in other parts of the country.

In February, Houston-based EOG Resources said it might have tapped more than six trillion cubic feet in an area of B.C. known as the Horn River basin, in the extreme northeast portion of the province.

On Wednesday, Apache Corp. said test wells in the region produced as much as eight million cubic feet per day.

Also last week, Denver-based Forest Oil said the St. Lawrence lowlands in Quebec could hold four trillion cubic feet after a pair of experimental test wells drilled this winter yielded commercial quantities of gas.

The Quebec discovery sent the shares of Calgary-based Questerre Energy, which has a stake in the find, soaring from about 30 cents to $2.45 in less than a week. Now PanTerra, which closed at 13 cents on Friday, is hoping for more of the same.

"He (Questerre CEO Michael Binnion) shopped that play for eight years before people would listen to him," Collet says. "We hope it won't take us that long."

After three years and sinking $12.5 million into the Saskatchewan shale play, Rumak says the company is ready to follow Questerre's route to commercial success by bringing in a strategic partner. "We're looking for our Forest Oil."

The company has been in discussions with potential cohorts, with interest from larger American players.

The U.S. has had considerably more experience with unconventional gas and several large independents are looking north, outside their traditional hunting grounds in Texas and Utah.

Last August, Dallas-based Hunt Oil Co. outbid PanTerra for a $4.1-million exploration parcel adjacent to its existing land.

On Monday, the Saskatchewan government took work commitments totalling $5.7 million for four gigantic exploration parcels covering more than 250,000 hectares.

Rumak and Collet are hoping the $265-million sale result will continue to shine the spotlight on the shale potential of the province.

Geologists have known for decades that shale rocks hold significant quantities of natural gas, but getting the gas out of the ground has so far proven to be an insurmountable technical challenge.

That's because the rocks have to be fractured, or broken, to release the gas and allow it to flow to the surface.

Much of the renewed interest is due to new drilling and completion techniques that are unlocking the shale treasure chest.

Long-reach horizontal wells expose more of the rock for production, while multi-stage fractures open up more of the well to release gas.

The developments have spawned a whole new service industry catering to the special needs of unconventional gas players.

In January, Calgary-based GasFrac Energy Services performed the world's first fracture treatment using propane gel on a PanTerra test well. GasFrac has since gone on to perform two-dozen additional treatments based on the success of the first.

"It just happened we were building a product and they (PanTerra) had an application for it," says Eric Tudor, the company's vice-president of sales. "The more unconventional it is, the more potential there is."

Kirk Wilson, an analyst with Clarus Securities Inc. rates PanTerra as a speculative buy that could top $1.

"The knowledge level is going up exponentially in Canada.

"It's a situation where the technology transfer from the U.S. to Canada is opening up a lot of unconventional resources."

As conventional sources for natural gas are becoming economically challenging, Wilson says unconventional plays like shale gas will play a larger role in meeting gas demand -- with caveats.

"Shale is the biggest, most readily available rock in North America, but you need all the checkmarks next to all the right boxes."

spolczer@theherald.canwest.com

© The Calgary Herald 2008


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