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Carbon Creek Energy in Johnson County, Wyoming: Drilling Activity & Mineral Owners

What Carbon Creek Energy is doing in Johnson County — wells, recent permits, spuds, and DUCs — and what it means if you own minerals here.

Activity data as of July 2026 · public well-header records · CSV · JSON · CC BY 4.0

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3,383
Total wells
3,355
Producing
0
Permits (24mo)
26
DUCs

Carbon Creek Energy's footprint in Johnson County

Carbon Creek Energy has 3,383 well records in Johnson County, Wyoming, which ranks it #1 among operators in the county by well count. Of those, 3,355 are flagged as producing. Its activity here is concentrated in the Niobrara- Mowry play.

On the forward-looking side, Carbon Creek Energy has 0 permits and 0 spuds filed in the last 24 months and 26 drilled-but-uncompleted (DUC) wells in the county, with its most recent permit dated July 2017 — signals that production, and royalties, may be coming.

What this means if you own minerals here

Producing wells drive the checks you receive now; permits and spuds point to potential future royalties; a DUC count signals production may be near.

Operator quality matters. A strong, active operator like the ones leading a county tends to develop and pay more reliably — one of the inputs a buyer weighs.

Your tract is what counts. County-level activity sets the backdrop, but your lease royalty, decimal interest, and exact tract determine your actual royalty. See how to track drilling near you and net mineral acres vs. net royalty acres.

Frequently asked questions

Is Carbon Creek Energy drilling in Johnson County, Wyoming?

Carbon Creek Energy has 3,383 well records in Johnson County, Wyoming (ranked #1 among operators in the county by well count). Recent forward activity includes 0 permits and 0 spuds in the last 24 months and 26 drilled-but-uncompleted (DUC) wells. Figures are from public well-header records as of July 2026.

What does Carbon Creek Energy's activity in Johnson County mean for my royalties?

New permits and spuds point to potential future royalties; a rising DUC count signals production may be near; and producing wells (3,355 here) drive current checks. Carbon Creek Energy's scale and activity in Johnson County is one input a buyer weighs when valuing minerals there — but your specific tract, lease royalty, and decimal interest determine what you actually receive.

Can I sell my Johnson County minerals under a Carbon Creek Energy well?

Yes. Buckhead Energy is a direct buyer of mineral and royalty interests in Johnson County, Wyoming, including interests under Carbon Creek Energy-operated wells. We provide a free, no-obligation written offer and explain how the operator's activity factored into it.

Own minerals under a Carbon Creek Energy well in Johnson County?

Buckhead Energy buys mineral and royalty interests in Johnson County, Wyoming directly — own capital, no broker commissions, and a free, no-obligation written offer that factors in Carbon Creek Energy's activity nearby.

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Activity figures are compiled from public well-header records and refreshed periodically; they are general information, not legal, tax, or investment advice. Confirm specifics against current state-agency data for any tract.