The following information is provided by EnergyNet. All inquiries on the following listings should be directed to EnergyNet. Hart Energy is not a brokerage firm and does not endorse or facilitate any transactions.
BSO-GRB LLC retained EnergyNet for the sale of a Green River Basin opportunity in Wyoming through a sealed-bid offering closing Oct. 8.
The offering comprises of non-producing leasehold acreage in Carbon and Sweetwater counties, Wyo.
Highlights:
- 13,059.08 Gross / Net Non-Producing Federal Leasehold Acres
- 100% of Oil and Gas Leases (Delivering an Average 86.96% Net Revenue Interest)
- Four Offset Rigs
- 233 Active Offset Permits
- 29 Active | Three Confidential | 36 Drilled/Drilling | 165 Permitted
- 2,514 Active Offset Producers
- Select Area Operators include BP America Production Co., Crowheart Energy LLC, FDL Operating LLC, HRM Resources III LLC and Southland Royalty Co. LLC

Bids are due by 4 p.m. CDT Oct. 8. For complete due diligence information energynet.com or email Ethan House, vice president of business development, at Ethan.House@energynet.com, or Denna Arias, director of transaction management, at Denna.Arias@energynet.com.
Recommended Reading
2025 E&P Meritorious Engineering Awards for Innovation
2025-05-14 - Hart Energy honors 16 technologies that demonstrate upstream engineering excellence.
E&P Highlights: June 16, 2025
2025-06-16 - Here’s a roundup of the latest E&P headlines, including the third major transaction this month for Baker Hughes and an explorer award for Exxon Mobil.
SM Energy Marries Wildcatting and Analytics in the Oil Patch
2025-04-01 - As E&P SM Energy explores in Texas and Utah, Herb Vogel’s approach is far from a Hail Mary.
US Oil Rig Count Rises to Highest Since June
2025-04-04 - Baker Hughes said oil rigs rose by five to 489 this week, their highest since June, while gas rigs fell by seven, the most in a week since May 2023, to 96, their lowest since September.
Lower 48 Well Completions Doubled Since Late 2014, EIA Says
2025-05-13 - Operators have been able to accelerate production and reduce costs by completing multiple wells at once rather than sequentially, the U.S. Energy Information Administration said.