Coverage methodology
How EnergyNetWatch separates state coverage status, permit parity, production parity, source cadence, and public sample pages.
What coverage status means
Coverage status summarizes whether EnergyNetWatch currently tracks permits, production, or both for a state. Full means the state has meaningful permit and/or production coverage for app workflows. Permits only means permit automation is available but production is not tracked publicly as a current workflow. Deferred and pending states are listed separately so coverage gaps remain visible.
What coverage status does not mean
Coverage status is not a claim that every possible public record has been captured, that every state source publishes the same fields, or that every workflow has identical depth in every state.
What public pages show
Public pages show state availability, broad dataset categories, source families, selected source caveats, and a small number of lagged dashboard samples. The goal is to make coverage understandable before a buyer requests app access.
Available with app access
Current records, bulk exports, normalization rules, row-level lineage, alert logic, maps, DCA, economics, and deeper workflow outputs are available with app access.
Why states differ
Oil and gas data is published differently by each state. Some states have strong permit feeds, some have better production history, some are better suited for maps, and some need additional validation before high-confidence coverage claims are appropriate.
