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Bullboard - Stock Discussion Forum Reconnaissance Energy (Africa) Ltd V.RECO

Alternate Symbol(s):  RECAF

Reconnaissance Energy Africa Ltd. is a Canada-based oil and gas company. The Company is engaged in the opening of Kavango Sedimentary Basin in the Kalahari Desert of northeastern Namibia and northwestern Botswana. It holds 90% interest in a petroleum exploration license in northeast Namibia and a 100% interest in petroleum exploration rights in northwest Botswana over the entire Kavango... see more

TSXV:RECO - Post Discussion

Reconnaissance Energy (Africa) Ltd > Nick Steinsbergers success
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Post by Flintstone60 on Apr 03, 2021 7:11am

Nick Steinsbergers success

From: https://jaypgreene.com/2020/10/08/nick-steinsberger-for-the-al/
$RECAF

ask yourself why a petroleum industry engineer like Nick Steinsberger (recognized as the inventor of the slick water frack) would come out of retirement to join a junior explorer like ReconAfrica. End of march he invested further $200.000 in ReconAfrica.He is the man in charge of our drilling and completions for the company in Namibia.

Nick Steinsberger for the “Al”

 

(Guest Post by Matthew Ladner)

 

Nick Steinsberger was a subordinate of previous “Al” winner George Mitchell, but after having read Gregory Zuckerman’s excellent book The Frackers it is clear that Steinsberger is worthy of an Al of his own. Mitchell was a driving force behind America’s energy revolution, but the lesser known Steinsberger actually made it happen.Although you may be hearing of Nick Steinsberger for the first time, he fundamentally changed the course of the world. As a young petroleum engineer working for Mitchell Energy in the 1990s, Steinsberger drew what was regarded as the dead-end assignment of working on George Mitchell’s obsession of drilling shale formations. The project had gone nowhere for years, the company was in deep financial trouble and it wasn’t a great time for the oil and gas industry generally. Mitchell considered selling the energy side of the business, but didn’t find much of a market for the company. Mitchell’s chosen successor and the board of the company were restless, and Steinsberger found himself in charge of the least profitable division of a not terribly profitable company in a not currently profitable industry nursing a decades long obsession of an aging and increasingly cantankereous founder. From this grim spot, Nick Steinsberger made the discovery that changed the world.

The technique being used combined horizontal drilling and fracking- blast liquid and sand into a formation in the hopes of releasing hydrocarbons. Mitchell’s obsession was to combine these techniques in order to get at the vast amounts of oil/gas contained in shale formations. Rather than giant collected resevoirs, shale formations contain small amounts of hydrocarbons spread throughout a large underground rock formation. The oil industry had knows about shale oil and gas for years but had large since written it off because it could not be extracted economically. The techniques being overseen by Steinsberger were extracting gas in the Barnett shale- just not nearly enough for Mitchell Energy to remain solvent.

One Steinsberger noticed that a fracking well he was supervising didn’t mix the fluid properly. The normal mix of fluids was thicker than Jell-O, but in this faulty mix the fluid was more like liquid. Strangely enough, the well with the faulty mix produced a surprising amount of gas. Some of Steinsberger’s colleagues thought it was a fluke, but Steinsberger began to suspect that maybe water and sand minus all those expensive chemicals might work just as well.

A few weeks later over beer and bbq at a Texas Rangers baseball game, Steinsberger learned from a friend of a technique used in Kansas called a “river frac.” Almost entirely water and sand, this technique had been used to break up dense rock. Given that Mitchell Energy was in deep financial trouble and that Steinsberger was running what was viewed as a quixotic vanity project, Nick decided to trim chemical expenses on more wells. What did he have to lose?

Many of his coworkers thought Nick was out of his mind. By their understanding of the geology of shale, this technique which had worked on Kansas sand-stone had no chance working in shale. Shale clay would absorb the water, swell up and jam up the fractures. That’s what the chemicals were for after all. One superior allegedly promised to eat his diploma if the technique worked. “It’s a stupid idea,” he was told. “It’s not going to work.”

Despite a great deal of opposition, Steinsberger got the chance to experiment, if only because the company couldn’t afford the chemicals. Steinsberger was acting on a hunch- he thought a mix with few chemicals and less sand would create multiple micro-fissures rather than a single large passageway to the surface.

“The idea was crazy at the time. He had guts, no one else would have thought of doing it,” a company executive later recalled. “If the oil business had a gonads on the anvil award, he’d win.”

In August of 1997, with an anxious wife with two young children making contingency plans regarding a possibly soon to be unemployed husband, Steinsberger anxiously monitored the performance of Barnett wells, three of which had used his new mixture. The initial production from the three wells was nothing special, but then Steinsberger’s luck changed. Fracked wells involve a quick spurt of product followed by a sharp decline. The three Steinsberger wells trailed off at a slower rate.

This was just promising enough to save Nick’s hide and to allow him to experiment further. He altered the sand flow, put more horsepower on the pumps, made adjustments. By the summer of 1998, a Mitchell Energy started producing one and a half million feet of gas per day with the revised techniques, and instead of tailing off, it just kept going, and going. Other wells began to do the same. The slick water frack wasn’t just cheaper, it was also better.

Mitchell, a patron of the arts and many charities, was rewarded for his obsession and saved from personal financial ruin was hardly a moment to spare. The global implications of this innovation however were far more significant. Natural gas became abundant and cheap in the United States, abundant and cheap enough to greatly diminish the use of coal, reducing carbon emissions. Companies converted massive gas import facilities being built in American ports into export facilities. The technique worked on oil, and the United States reversed decades of decline in production and then, incredibly, began to export millions of barrels per day. The economic and political ramifications of this change have yet to fully play out, but they are already profound.

Nick did not become incredibly wealthy as a result of his innovation. Today he is still working as the COO of an energy firm. His influence on the global century however will remain long after the wealth of lesser figures has faded away. Nick’s example contains important lessons about innovation- human progress vitally depends on allowing people to follow hunches, to take gambles and to try new things. The urge require and deny permission, to standardize practice and to avoid risk has a largely hidden but staggeringly large potential cost- you likely never know what you missed out on. 

Comment by Buyhigheatchips on Apr 03, 2021 11:46am
Honestly, I'm a bit surprised we're not trading higher. If this drilling successfully verifies an active petroleum system what do you think the sp will be? At least $10 right? My intuition is that success in this regard is very likely ~ 80% chance given the background work and the professionals involved.  So why aren't we at $5 at least? Pretty sure the govt isn't going to ...more  
Comment by TurnToTheRight on Apr 03, 2021 12:32pm
Just my 2 cents, but I would guess that the lack of PR by RECO is creating hesitation and preventing money on the sidelines from jumping in, and if we get positive results from the 3 wells (when all 3 are done) then that money will jump in. I'm guessing the lack of information and results available to investors is what is keeping prices down. As far as what the price will be once/if positive ...more  
Comment by Tarheel89 on Apr 03, 2021 2:04pm
I was in the relatively conservative price camp up until I saw what happened with 88 Energy. They got whiff of 1 Off Shore well with up to 600m barrels of oil and the market gave them a 1 Billion dollar cap within 2 days. We are talking about a buttoned up team doing 3 test wells and a seismic study to indicate potentially 200x as much on shore conventional oil. If 88 Energy could get a 1B ...more  
Comment by Chihuahua on Apr 03, 2021 12:36pm
Our dream team can only find the oil if it is there, this is a very risky investment.
Comment by Buyhigheatchips on Apr 03, 2021 12:52pm
I'm not even talking about finding oil. To me that's a whole next phase.  
Comment by Chihuahua on Apr 03, 2021 4:21pm
Alright, let me rephrase my statement for you. Our dream team can only find the oil in the next phase if it is there, this is a very risky investment.
Comment by Goaweigh on Apr 03, 2021 7:13pm
They are certainly very good at finding money, as to oil I guess we have to wait 3 months or so.
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