Exxon’s Permian Factory Model in Action:RICHARDS-GRISHAM Lease

In today’s Permian Basin, drilling success is no longer defined by isolated wells or individual rigs — it is defined by repeatability.
Exxon’s development of the RICHARDS-GRISHAM lease in Martin County, Texas provides a clear, data-driven example of how large operators have transitioned to a factory-style manufacturing model, where permitting, drilling, facilities, and completions operate on a predictable cadence.

By analyzing permit filings, drilling activity, air permit timing, and subsurface design, a consistent development blueprint emerges — one that can now be used to forecast future activity on adjacent acreage such as the EPLEY-GLASSCOCK lease within the same block.



Step 1–2: Permitting Establishes the Factory Clock

The RICHARDS-GRISHAM development consists of twelve horizontal wells permitted within a highly compressed timeframe.

  • First license date: October 16, 2025
  • Last license date: October 23, 2025
  • Permit window: 7 days
  • Average license date: October 17, 2025

This tight approval window confirms the project was designed as a single pad development, not a series of incremental drilling decisions.
In Exxon’s factory model, the average license date becomes Day 0 — the starting point for predictable execution.


Step 3: Drilling Execution Follows a Repeatable Pattern

Drilling activity began roughly two and a half months after permits were approved:

  • First activity date: December 30, 2025
  • Last activity date: January 21, 2026
  • Total drilling window: 22 days
  • Average drilling pace: ~2.4 days per well

Ten of the twelve wells were drilled during this window, with two permits remaining undrilled at the time of reporting.

This cadence reflects a classic walking-rig manufacturing approach:

  • Continuous operations
  • Minimal downtime
  • High-spec rig utilization
  • Predictable spud spacing

Once drilling begins, the factory line is effectively “on.”


Step 4: Completions Lag — By Design

At the time of analysis:

  • No completed well dates had yet been reported

This is not a delay — it is intentional.

In large-scale Permian development, completions and regulatory reporting typically trail drilling by 30–90 days, allowing operators to:

  • Batch frac multiple wells simultaneously
  • Optimize sand, water, and logistics
  • Align facilities readiness with flowback

The absence of completion dates confirms the project is positioned between drilling execution and frac deployment.


Step 5: Facilities Timing Confirms Production Intent

Surface infrastructure provides one of the most reliable cadence signals.

For RICHARDS-GRISHAM:

  • Tank battery air permit received: January 20, 2026

This occurred:

  • ~21 days after drilling began
  • One day before final drilling activity concluded

This timing is critical. It signals the moment Exxon transitions from drilling execution to production readiness — when volumes, pad design, and flowback requirements are sufficiently defined to permit permanent facilities.


Step 6–8: Surface Location Persona

The surface footprint reinforces the factory model.

Geographic concentration

  • County: Martin County, Texas
  • Block: 36T1N
  • Abstract: 913
  • Section: 24

All twelve permits are confined to a single surveyed section, eliminating infrastructure sprawl and enabling centralized facilities.

Lease structure

Each well carries a distinct lease designation (24A–24L), yet all originate from the same surface development — a naming convention that reflects lateral organization rather than physical separation.

Play identification

  • Permian Basin — Midland Basin
  • Spraberry Trend Area (core fairway)

This is not frontier acreage; it is premium, fully delineated inventory.


Step 9: Sub-Surface Persona — Manufacturing, Not Exploration

The subsurface data removes any ambiguity.

  • Field: Spraberry (Trend Area)
  • Drilling operation: 100% horizontal
  • Substance: Oil or gas well
  • Projected depth:
    • Min: 10,240 ft
    • Max: 10,240 ft
    • Average: 10,240 ft
  • Total footage drilled: 122,880 ft

Every well shares the exact same projected depth.

This uniformity indicates:

  • Single landing zone
  • No pilot wells
  • No bench switching
  • No geological testing

Importantly, there is no evidence of multi-bench co-development.
True co-development would exhibit depth variance across Upper Spraberry, Lower Spraberry, and Wolfcamp targets — which is absent here.

Instead, RICHARDS-GRISHAM represents single-bench batch development executed at scale.

Factory Prediction: EPLEY-GLASSCOCK

With RICHARDS-GRISHAM establishing the template, development on the adjacent EPLEY-GLASSCOCK lease can be forecast with high confidence.

Because it shares:

  • The same block (36T1N)
  • The same geological setting
  • The same operator
  • The same surface layout logic

Exxon is unlikely to alter a proven formula mid-block.

Predicted EPLEY-GLASSCOCK Sub-Surface Persona

  • Field: Spraberry Trend Area
  • Well type: Horizontal
  • Projected depth: ~10,200–10,300 ft
  • Bench strategy: Single bench
  • Co-development: No
  • Development style: Manufacturing mode

Expected well geometry, drilling cadence, facilities timing, and completion sequencing should closely mirror RICHARDS-GRISHAM.


Bottom Line

The RICHARDS-GRISHAM lease illustrates how Exxon has transformed Permian development into an industrial process:

  • Tight permit batching
  • Predictable drill timing
  • Early facilities submission
  • Uniform subsurface design
  • Repeatable execution

This factory approach removes uncertainty from both capital deployment and development timing.

As a result, EPLEY-GLASSCOCK is not a geological question — it is a scheduling one.

The subsurface has already been answered.
What remains is simply when the next factory line starts.


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