Brookside Energy Limited Successfully Completes Bruins Well Stimulation, Sets Stage for 2Q2025 Flow-Back and First Sales Milestone

Tuesday, May 27, 2025
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8:20 am
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Brookside Energy Ltd. has successfully completed its Bruins Well stimulation on time and within budget. With flow-back, testing, and first sales slated for Q2 2025, the company marks another key milestone in its SWISH Play development, potentially boosting future cash flow.

Brookside Energy Limited announced that it has safely completed stimulation operations on its Bruins Well, its ninth operated asset in the SWISH Play within the southern SCOOP region of the Anadarko Basin. The company reported that the high-intensity fracture stimulation on this Woodford Formation well was executed in 42 stages, with real-time monitoring confirming that pressures, sand, and fluid volumes closely matched the pre-completion design parameters. The completion of these stages was achieved on schedule and within the allocated budget. Following the successful stimulation, composite plugs that had provided zonal isolation have now been drilled out and production tubing has been installed. Operations are set to progress into the flow-back and testing phase, with first sales anticipated in the second quarter of 2025. Brookside Energy Limited’s Managing Director expressed pride in the team’s diligent work, emphasizing that the Bruins Well represents an important step in further developing the company’s SWISH Play acreage, while also contributing positively towards future cash flow. Market sentiment can be viewed from both bullish and bearish perspectives based on the announcement. On the bullish side, the on-time and on-budget completion, along with the technical success in meeting the design parameters, suggests effective operational management and the potential for improved short-term cash flow when first sales commence. In contrast, bearish sentiment may stem from inherent market uncertainties common to forward-looking statements, including volatility in commodity prices, regulatory risks, and potential external economic factors that could delay performance metrics or impact production outcomes.

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