RE: Interested in some more technical discussion?16 Feb 2025 18:46
Isa, The 2nd thing you have said that i agree with, you would certainly not be getting a lobster at the Marcliffe from me.
I rather thought you might be a desk jockey, thanks for confirming, i guess that’s the difference between us, you sat at a desk your whole career and in my first 20+ oilfield years i spent working at rig and platform locations throughout the world, you learn a lot in the field, obviously as a desk jockey you would not be aware of that.
Yes i read your overly long slugging posts which contained all the usual buzz words one expects from a desk jockey with no real onsite oil experience, heard this language many times before, usually around a conference table from engineers that talk the talk but in reality have limited experience, i think it fair to say you fall within that category.
However, back to your overly critical review of H1 and my counter claim that the most likely scenario is the well will stabilize itself, I think this even more likely as we have around 6 to 7 weeks of winter yet until spring in Mongolia, in that time we will extract another 8,000 or so barrels from the reservoir, by the start of April H1 will have been in production for just under 6 months, more than enough time for the well to stabilize and those pressure spikes to have diminished to manageable levels, if not I am quite sure Mr Buck will take whatever actions are necessary to correct the situation and bring H1 up to its full production potential.
Might I suggest you read my 10.34 & 10.35 posts again, you might learn something.
In all honesty I believe your posts are designed to fool the gullible who have little if any knowledge of oilfield operations, I also believe your posts are placed out of spite as a few MATAD poster have crossed to the THX board and said nasty things, so in a purely childish reaction you decided to start posting here.
Again I categorically state that from the very limited data we have it would be quite impossible for any engineer to make a “competent” assessment of the well and make the critical diagnosis you have come up with, that tells me all I need to know about your level of competence or to be more accurate, incompetence.
I am reasonably sure most investors are quite happy with our Mr Buck who is a bona fide genuine oilfield engineer and geologist who started his career back in 1979 (just 5 years after me), while your field experience might fill the back of a stamp MBs could probably fill a book.