Utica Shale – Now a Top-Tier Priority for EOG Resources

For years, the Utica was viewed as a secondary growth engine — a strong basin, but not always at the center of capital allocation discussions. That changed following EOG’s transformational acquisition of Encino Energy.

Today, the Ohio Utica is officially a top-tier priority, standing alongside the Delaware Basin and Eagle Ford in EOG’s 2026 capital framework.

This isn’t incremental growth. It’s a strategic elevation.



A Portfolio Rebalance with Intent

EOG’s 2026 capital plan makes one thing clear: the Utica is no longer optional inventory — it’s core.

The play now competes directly for capital with the company’s most productive oil-rich assets. That shift reflects three structural advantages:

  1. Scale: The Encino acquisition materially expanded EOG’s acreage footprint and drilling runway.
  2. Repeatability: The Utica’s stacked pay and consistent reservoir quality support manufacturing-style development.
  3. Infrastructure Leverage: Existing takeaway and processing capacity reduce bottlenecks and improve realized margins.

The message is unmistakable — this basin can support sustained, high-return growth.


Manufacturing-Style Development Comes to Ohio

EOG’s operating model is built around disciplined execution:

  • Multi-well pad development
  • Optimized lateral lengths
  • Continuous cost improvements
  • Capital efficiency per foot drilled

Applying that model to the Utica changes the basin’s trajectory. What was previously a strong regional play now becomes a scaled development platform integrated into one of the industry’s most efficient operating systems.

Expect to see:

  • Increased rig cadence
  • Larger pad builds
  • Smoother drilling-to-completion transitions
  • More predictable production ramp

This is not exploratory drilling — it’s programmatic development.

2026 Drilling Snapshot (CY to Date)

  • Total Wells Drilled: 16
  • Total Identified Pads (50m grouping): 6
  • Average Pad Size: 2.7 wells per pad
  • Largest Pads: 5-well and 4-well builds

The activity profile confirms scaled development — not scattered or exploratory drilling.


Surface Persona – Structured Pad Development in Ohio

All wells were grouped using a 50-meter coordinate radius to identify true surface pads. Lease name prefixes were used to name each pad.

Pad-Level Execution Summary

Pad NameCountyWellsContractor & Rig
ENGLE HFRHarrison5H&P 385
SHULA TWRTuscarawas4H&P 611
LANDMAN GYGuernsey3Patterson 577
SUNFISH GYGuernsey2H&P 611
NAVY CBRCarroll1Patterson 577
DEERSVILLE HNHarrison1Patterson 577

County Concentration

  • Harrison County – 6 wells across 2 pads
  • Guernsey County – 5 wells across 2 pads
  • Tuscarawas County – 4 wells on 1 pad
  • Carroll County – 1 well on 1 pad

Activity is clearly clustered in Harrison and Guernsey — together accounting for nearly 70% of CY drilling.


Rig Deployment Pattern

Three primary rigs supported the program:

  • H&P 385 – Fully dedicated to the 5-well ENGLE HFR pad
  • H&P 611 – Executed SHULA TWR (4 wells) and SUNFISH GY (2 wells)
  • Patterson 577 – Deployed across three smaller pads

This structure reflects:

  • Dedicated rigs on larger builds
  • Controlled cadence across mid-sized pads
  • Limited rig dispersion
  • Manufacturing-style sequencing

No evidence of opportunistic rig movement or scattered development — this is structured capital deployment.


Strategic Interpretation

The Ohio Utica is no longer a secondary growth lever — it is operating as a disciplined, repeatable development engine.

Six defined pads, concentrated county exposure, and dedicated rigs point to:

  • Infrastructure-backed execution
  • Multi-well pad optimization
  • Capital efficiency through scale
  • Long-term inventory confidence

As EOG prioritizes the Utica alongside its core oil basins, this drilling pattern supports the narrative: Ohio is now a scaled, factory-style growth platform within the company’s portfolio.


Why the Utica Matters Strategically

The Utica provides something increasingly valuable in today’s shale landscape: depth of inventory with strong economics outside the Permian.

That diversification matters.

  • It balances geographic exposure
  • It reduces reliance on a single basin
  • It improves long-term capital flexibility
  • It supports stable free cash flow generation

At a time when many operators are moderating growth, EOG is signaling confidence — not through aggressive spending, but through disciplined expansion in high-return zones.


2026: A Step-Change Year

With the Encino acreage now fully integrated, 2026 is expected to mark a step-change in Utica activity.

The basin is positioned to deliver:

  • Higher production volumes
  • Improved capital efficiency
  • Multi-year drilling visibility
  • Strong returns even in moderate price environments

For EOG, the Ohio Utica is no longer a supporting asset. It is a core growth pillar.


The Bigger Picture

The elevation of the Utica reflects a broader trend in U.S. shale:
Top-tier operators are concentrating capital into fewer, higher-quality basins and executing them like manufacturing operations.

EOG’s decision to prioritize the Ohio Utica signals long-term confidence in the basin’s resource depth, economics, and strategic value.

The result?

A balanced, diversified, infrastructure-backed growth platform capable of delivering production expansion while maintaining shareholder returns.


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *