Over 1.1 Million Active Oil and Gas Wells in the US
Many people ask us how many wells have been hydraulically fractured in the United States. It is an excellent question, but not one that is easily answered; most states don’t release data on well stimulation activities. Also, since the data are released by state regulatory agencies, it is necessary to obtain data from each state that has oil and gas data to even begin the conversation. We’ve finally had a chance to complete that task, and have been able to aggregate the following totals:
While data on hydraulically fractured wells is rarely made available, the slant of the wells are often made accessible. The well types are as follows:
- Directional: Directional wells are those where the top and the bottom of the holes do not line up vertically. In some cases, the deviation is fairly slight. These are also known as deviated or slant wells.
- Horizontal: Horizontal wells are directional wells, where the well bore makes something of an “L” shape. States may have their own definition for horizontal wells. In Alaska, these wells are defined as those deviating at least 80° from vertical. Currently, operators are able to drill horizontally for several miles.
- Directional or Horizontal: These wells are known to be directional, but whether they are classified as horizontal or not could not be determined from the available data. In many cases, the directionality was determined by the presence of directional sidetrack codes in the well’s API number.
- Vertical: Wells in which the top hole and bottom hole locations are in alignment. States may have differing tolerances for what constitutes a vertical well, as opposed to directional.
- Hydraulically Fractured: As each state releases data differently, it wasn’t always possible to get consistent data. These wells are known to be hydraulically fractured, but the slant of the well is unknown.
- Not Fractured: These wells have not been hydraulically fractured, and the slant of the well is unknown.
- Unknown: Nothing is known about the slant, stimulation, or target formation of the well in question.
- Unknown (Shale Formation): Nothing is known about the slant or stimulation of the wells in question; however, it is known that the target formation is a major shale play. Therefore, it is probable that the well has been hydraulically fractured, with a strong possibility of being drilled horizontally.
Wells that have been hydraulically fractured might appear in any of the eight categories, with the obvious exception of “Not Fractured.” Categories that are very likely to be fractured include, “Horizontal”, “Hydraulically Fractured”, and “Unknown (Shale Formation),” the total of which is about 32,000 wells. However, that number doesn’t include any wells from Texas or Colorado, where we know thousands wells have been drilled into major shale formations, but the data had to be placed into categories that were more vague.
Oil and gas wells in the United States, as of February 2014. Location data were not available for Maryland (n=104), North Carolina (n=2), and Texas (n=303,909). To access the legend and other map tools, click the expanding arrows icon in the top-right corner.
The standard that we attempted to reach for all of the well totals was for wells that have been drilled but have not yet been plugged, which is a broad spectrum of the well’s life-cycle. In some cases, decisions had to be made in terms of which wells to include, due to imperfect metadata.
No location data were available for Maryland, North Carolina, or Texas. The first two have very few wells, and officials in Maryland said that they expect to have the data available within about a month. Texas location data is available for purchase, however such data cannot be redistributed, so it was not included on the map.
It should not be assumed that all of the wells that are shown in the map above the shale plays and shale basin layers are actually drilled into shale. In many cases, however, shale is considered a source rock, where hydrocarbons are developed, before the oil and gas products migrate upward into shallower, more conventional formations.
The raw data oil and gas data is available for download on our site in shapefile format.
So this is total producing oil and gas wells, not just those pumping fracked shale gas? Also, do you know of anywhere I could find the total number of oil and gas wells in the United States, both producing and plugged? Thanks! (p.s. your site is an awesome resource– I love it!)
Hi Matt,
I am researching oil and gas production, but in the context of who is the producer for a certain well or lease. I was wondering how you collected this data, does each state regulatory commission have a data set for download, or did you have to scrape the websites for the data? Also do you have any good resources for finding this kind of data?
Hunter,
We get our data by going to each state’s regulatory agency. The operator data is generally part of the wells drilled or permit issued file. Each state has their own way of distributing O&G data, although I will tell you that lease data is not very common to come across. The links to the state regulatory agencies should be found in the “Details” sections of our maps.
Please include information about extreme fracturing such as:
acid fracturing,
matrix acidization,
acid stimulation treatment,
acid well stimulation,
carbon dioxide flooding,
or other chemical treatments
thanks. We experienced extreme fracking in Florida this past year, when a Dan A. Hughes Company illegally fracked a location within the Everglades
Hi I’m doing some research on the oil and gas industry in Colorado and I am having difficulty resolving two numbers. The total number of active wells is over 10,000, but the total number of rigs is 80+, so can you tell me the difference between an active well versus an active rig?
thanks in advance.
Matt Roeser
clarification, these numbers I stated are for Garfield county, CO. thanks
Matt Roeser
Is it best to map out using the zip codes the areas where drilling of shale gas is most active or should we do it by county or what?
Thanks for posting, very helpful information.
A follow-up question: The EIA reports ~500,000 active gas producing wells in the US in 2012 (http://www.eia.gov/dnav/ng/ng_prod_wells_s1_a.htm). Wanted to get your thoughts on the difference between that and the 1.1M you have – do you think the majority of the difference is driven by oil wells? Or do you think they used a more exclusive definition of “active well”?
Thanks in advance.
Great question. The page that you linked to showed producing gas wells in the US. According to their definition page, that excludes all wells that produce any amount of oil. Also, we compiled wells that are between the phases of having been drilled, and having been permanently plugged. Producing well totals won’t capture wells that are shut-in, in the process of being plugged, or inappropriately abandoned, for example.
Matt
An update on drilling in North Carolina from our readers…
The state has fast-tracked the application process for testing of shale gas potential in Graham County, Macon and Jackson counties. Testing there is likely to begin by August of 2014.
http://www.blackeaglegroup.co
We are manufacture of FRAC SAND from SPAIN. What are the needs in the USA import FRAC SAND? What kind of problems it will solve or create considering the problems related with whether, plants and logistics and changing in schedules?
Hi Teresa,
The FracTracker Alliance is not an industry organization, so we’re not the best equipped to answer your question. However, the State of Minnesota has a very informative page that covers some of the desirable characteristics and associated risks of the frac sand mining industry.
Matt
South Central Kansas & Northern Oklahoma oil play is still moving at a fast pace. Each well drilled is a new experiment in technology . Great future for new oil resources in this play.
Mike
Again, fantastic work from fractracker.org. This website is a great resource. I’m wondering, however, how I might procure the data on the Texas wells (and in a form so that it can be integrated with the rest of this dataset). Could you point me in the right direction? Thanks.
Texas oil and gas location data may be purchased from the Railroad Commission.
Matt
This file does not distinguish between oil and gas wells.
Each state releases their data in a different way. We chose the most basic data, so as to get the best representation from the most states. Still, some of these do mention whether they are oil or gas wells.