Glass Mountain Pipeline David Minielly VP Operations- Rose Rock Midstream 1
Presentation Topics I. Background II. III. Granite Wash Mississippi Lime IV. System Overview V. System Construction VI. System Operation VII. Quality Specification & Rates VIII.Conclusion 2
Structure of the Business Glass Mountain Pipeline, LLC Ownership Chesapeake Midstream Operating, LLC (Chesapeake) Gavilon Energy Holdings II, LLC (Gavilon) Glass Mountain Holding, LLC (SemGroup) Partnership Chesapeake Committed shipper Gavilon Marketing and Cushing destination tanks SemGroup Construction and operation 3
Glass Mountain? Northwestern Oklahoma Major county Selenite crystals 4
Granite Wash Large area spanning the Northern Texas Panhandle through Western Oklahoma and into Southwest Kansas Oil and natural gas found in multiple zones at depths between 11,000 and 13,000 feet, with some natural gas as deep as 17,000 feet The thickness and deposition may vary from 1,500 to 3,000 feet There are currently 3,600 Granite Wash wells and 922 Granite Wash oil producers Current field prices yielding high rate of returns on production Well-known independent companies with stake in Granite Wash Chesapeake Energy Apache Corp Forest Oil Corp St. Mary s Land and Exploration Penn Virginia 5
Granite Wash and Chesapeake Chesapeake is the largest leasehold owner, producer, and most active driller in the Granite Wash Chesapeake owns significant leasehold acres in the following plays of the Granite Wash: Cleveland and Tonkawa Tight Sand (Western Oklahoma, Texas Panhandle) Hogshooter Formation (Western Oklahoma, Texas Panhandle) 6
Granite Wash and Chesapeake Cleveland and Tonkawa Tight Sands Chesapeake owns approx. 525,000 net acres of leasehold in the Cleveland play and 285,000 net acres in the Tonkawa play in western Oklahoma and Texas Panhandle Currently operating 13 rigs in the two plays Hogshooter Wash Chesapeake owns approx. 30,000 net acres in the Texas Panhandle with 3 active wells in production Currently drilling 2 wells with 11 scheduled to spud by end of 2012 Chesapeake has identified approx. 60 potential drilling locations in this play. 7
Granite Wash Takeaway Capacity 8
Mississippi Lime More than 100 years ago, formation was referred to as the Burbank Field For 50 years, saw commercial production from thousands of vertical wells Due to limitations of traditional vertical drilling, these wells ran dry Advanced horizontal and hydraulic drilling styles that revolutionized America s shale formation are now being applied to limestone rock New technique allows drilling past the chat layer of rock and into the tight lime below Due to its hard and porous nature, limestone is well suited for fracking The rock contains natural fissures and fractures that hold pockets of oil Horizontal drilling increases odds of hitting such a pocket Oil producing strata in the Mississippi Lime is just 4,000-6,000 feet deep 9
Mississippi Lime and Chesapeake Chesapeake s approx. 2.0 million net acres of leasehold is the industry s largest position in the Mississippi Lime play in northern Oklahoma and southern Kansas Since 2009, the company has drilled 158 horizontal producing wells Currently operating 18 rigs in the play 10
Mississippi Lime Takeaway Capacity 11
Pipeline System Overview GMPL will be a ~210 mile intrastate joint venture pipeline system. North Segment - 28 miles of 12-inch Alva to Cleo Springs, OK Western Segment 79 miles of 12-inch Arnett to Cleo Springs, OK 103 miles of 18-inch Cleo Springs to Cushing, OK Design Capacity Initial Maximum Northern Segment ~70 MBPD ~90 MBPD Western Segment ~77 MBPD ~85 MBPD Cleo Springs to Cushing ~147 MBPD ~175 MBPD Operated as a batch system with 1480 psig MOP 12
Pipeline System Overview (cont.) Origination Tankage 55Mbbl tank at Alva and Arnett Two 150Mbbl breakout tanks at Cleo Springs Two 10Mbbl injection tanks Western segment One 10Mbbl injection tank Northern segment Destination Tankage Gavilon Terminal 1.0 MMbbl (4X250Mbbl) Direct connections to: Enterprise Plains Rose Rock Midstream Magellan Coffeyville Resources 13
Pipeline System Map 14
Pipeline System Construction Glass Mountain Holdings LLC (SemGroup) Construction Manager Schedule Pipeline Formed May 2012 Estimated construction schedule 18 months To date: Final route selection complete 40% ROW purchased Initial permitting and assessments complete Pipe ordered 75% design engineering complete Major electrical and rotating equipment ordered Construction January 2013 (3 to 4 spreads) 15
ROW & Permitting ROW Enid field office, 8 agents 4 survey crews Origination station land purchased Block valve locations identified Permitting Archaeological and environmental permitting assessment complete Submitted Air Permit Applications to ODEQ for station tankage Evaluating Corp of Engineers Nationwide 12 Permit 16
Engineering Construction EPC contract with Select Engineering (Tulsa) 75% complete with design engineering Tank construction out to bid Pipe Ordered 1/3 delivered October Pumps and Motors ordered 3 to 4 spreads (18 into 2 spreads) On schedule for 4th QTR 2013 17
System Operation Rose Rock Midstream Pipeline Operator Gavilon Cushing Tankage 4.1 MMbbl of existing shell capacity Space to build another 3.0 MMbbl (civil work done) 1.0 MMbbl of this existing capacity dedicated to GMPL. 18
Quality Specifications & Rates Separate Quality Specifications Western segment Granite Wash Northern segment Mississippi Lime Agreements & Rates Long Term T&D with Chesapeake Negotiating additional T&Ds Walk-up rate as space allows 19
Conclusion Pipeline System is well-positioned to benefit from supply/demand fundamentals and expansion opportunities GMPL will provide producers with new and significant take away capacity and flow assurance for two exciting plays Cushing provides multiple market opportunities for shippers Cushing should continue to strengthen with increased capacity to Gulf Coast Pipeline Construction is on schedule 20