Sixth Street’s reported acquisition of Logos Energy for approximately $1 billion points to a larger infrastructure story: investors are once again paying attention to the San Juan Basin and the Mancos Shale.
The map powered by Energy DataLink shows why Logos has attracted interest. The company holds more than 240,000 net acres across New Mexico and Colorado, supported by a dense network of natural gas wells, horizontal laterals, compressor stations throughout the basin.
Rather than viewing Logos as a standalone producer, the map highlights the broader infrastructure system supporting development in the Mancos Shale. Existing gathering, compression, processing, and transportation assets help connect production to downstream markets and reduce the need for large-scale new infrastructure investment.
Recent well results have reinforced the basin's potential. Logos reported that its Rosa Unit #756H delivered a peak IP30 rate of 26.6 MMcfe/d, which the company described as the highest 30-day production rate ever recorded in the San Juan Basin. Additional Mancos wells in both New Mexico and Colorado have delivered production results that compare favorably with some of the leading U.S. natural gas plays.
The transaction also follows growing industry interest in the basin. Mach Natural Resources entered the San Juan Basin through its 2025 acquisition of IKAV assets, while continued development activity has helped shift attention back toward a region that had previously been overshadowed by the Permian, Haynesville, and Appalachian basins.
Why it matters
● Sixth Street's reported acquisition values Logos Energy at approximately $1 billion.
● Logos controls more than 240,000 net acres in the core of the Mancos Shale.
● Recent Mancos well performance has attracted renewed industry and investor attention.
● Existing pipelines, compressor stations, and processing plants provide infrastructure support for future development.
● The map shows how acreage, wells, and infrastructure combine to create one of the largest natural gas positions in the San Juan Basin.
What the map shows
A San Juan Basin infrastructure view focused on Logos Energy's Mancos Shale position.
● Logos Energy acreage
● Operational natural gas wells
● Operational crude oil wells
● Horizontal laterals
● Operational compressor stations
● New Mexico and Colorado portions of the Mancos Shale development area
A deeper dive with DataLink
Using Rextag Energy DataLink, users can:
● analyze acreage positions alongside supporting infrastructure
● identify compressor stations and processing assets serving producing areas
● trace natural gas transportation corridors across the basin
● evaluate relationships between well performance and infrastructure access
● build acquisition, development, and basin analysis workflows