A
fracking operation at a Shell site. Shell has developed algorithms to
replicate and standardize the most effective drilling and fracking
methods worldwide.CreditCreditTamir Kalifa for The New York Times
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/03/business/energy-environment/texas-permian-field-oil.html
Innovation, investment and inviting geology have given new life to an
oil patch that once seemed spent. The oil field is now the world’s
second most productive.
Last year alone, the Permian’s production rose by a million barrels a
day, and it could surpass the Ghawar field in Saudi Arabia, the world’s
biggest, within three years. Now producing four million barrels a day,
the Permian generates more oil than any of the 14 members of OPEC except
Saudi Arabia and Iraq
Last year alone, the Permian’s production rose by a million barrels a
day, and it could surpass the Ghawar field in Saudi Arabia, the world’s
biggest, within three years. Now producing four million barrels a day,
the Permian generates more oil than any of the 14 members of OPEC except
Saudi Arabia and Iraq
All
told, domestic oil production increased by two million barrels a day
last year, for a record of 11.9 million barrels, making the United
States the world’s top producer.
Permian
production has quadrupled over the last eight years, in contrast with
the decline of most other established oil fields, for several reasons.
Companies
found ways to lower exploration and production costs in tapping the
Permian’s accommodating shale. New technologies for drilling and
hydraulic fracturing helped bring the break-even price for the best
wells from over $60 a barrel to as low as $33.
The
Permian, as vast as South Dakota, is distinct from other shale fields
because of its enormous size, the thickness of its multiple shale layers
— some as fat as 1,000 feet — and its proximity to refineries on the
Gulf of Mexico. Some shale fields produce too much natural gas, which is
worth less than oil. Others have uneven layers of rock difficult to
drill through. The Permian is rich in oil, and its shales are relatively
easy to tap with today’s rigs.
Today
the biggest risk, at least for producers, is that too much output might
drive down prices too much and jeopardize their profitability. They
could also prompt another round of aggressive actions from OPEC and its
new ally, Russia.
“If U.S. production
grows another two million barrels a day, we could take market share,
but how long would OPEC allow that to happen?” said Scott D. Sheffield,
chairman of Pioneer Natural Resources, a major Permian producer. “You
could have another price war.”
That may be inevitable.
As
many as 15 oil and gas pipelines serving the Permian are expected to be
completed by the middle of 2020, potentially increasing exports from
the Gulf of Mexico fourfold to eight million barrels a day after 2021,
according to a recent Morningstar Commodities Research report.
The
Permian has been producing oil for a century, and provided much of the
fuel the allies needed to win World War II. By 2008, it was a field in
steep decline. Many major oil companies left, selling their land to
smaller ones for a song.
But as the
big companies looked for fields deep under oceans and in the Arctic,
independents like Concho Resources and Parsley Energy pioneered shale
drilling here, giving the field new life.
When
oil prices took a dive, the upstarts experimented. They drilled longer
wells and spaced them closer together in a zipper design to penetrate
more shale. They tinkered with their formulas of chemicals and sands
that they blast through the rocks, and they used computer technology to
steer drill bits more accurately.
“OPEC
changed the price of poker and the Permian had the best hand,” said
Dale Redman, chief executive of ProPetro, one of the basin’s biggest
fracking service companies. “They unleashed our creativity. They forced
us to do things better and cheaper.”
ProPetro
laid off 250 workers three years ago, after oil prices fell below $30 a
barrel. But the company has since hired back those employees and added
hundreds more, including 600 when they completed an acquisition on Jan.
1.
What makes the payroll additions
all the more remarkable is that they come in the wake of the most recent
downturn in oil prices — from $76 a barrel in early October to $42 in
late December before recovering to more than $55 on Friday.
Despite
the ups and downs, there are signs of expansion everywhere in the West
Texas desert. Trucks line up at dawn for half a mile to pick up sand at
local mines for the day’s fracking jobs. Competition for workers is so
fierce that fast-food restaurants have blinking signs advertising their
salaries. Anadarko Petroleum and Plains All American Pipeline are
constructing new regional offices to add to those built in recent years
for Chevron and Apache.
Motel
rates and apartment rents have climbed so much that trailer parks are
the only option for many workers. But few seem to mind.
“I
will have work here forever,” said Mike Wilkinson, a truck driver who
came from Dallas a year ago and moved into a trailer with his teenage
daughter. “As hard a place as this is to look at, they are going to need
guys like me to move equipment around here for years to come.”
Mr.
Wilkinson has reason for enthusiasm, given the giant new investments
that Exxon Mobil, Chevron, BP and Shell have begun to make here despite
all the price uncertainty.
With a
major acquisition in New Mexico last year, Exxon Mobil became the most
active driller in the basin, and projects that it will increase
production fivefold by 2025. Also growing rapidly here, Chevron
estimates that one in six of every barrels it produces globally will
come from the Permian by 2021.
After
regaining a foothold in the Permian last year, BP is expected to invest
heavily, contributing to a total investment of more than $10 billion by
the major oil companies here this year, according to IHS Markit, the
energy consultant.
Royal Dutch Shell
is just beginning to catch up, after buying acreage from Chesapeake
seven years ago. It already has 1,300 wells that produce 145,000 barrels
of oil a day and associated gas, a 200 percent increase since January
2017. The company projects it can increase production to 200,000 barrels
a day by 2020.
Shell’s chief
executive, Ben van Beurden, said Thursday that his company was seeking
to increase its footprint in the Permian, the most recent sign that big
oil companies will continue to snap up smaller ones.
“For
Shell, the Permian is absolutely critical,” said Gretchen Watkins,
president of Shell Oil. “The Permian is massive; it’s a game changer for
U.S. shale. It is the powerhouse field.”
But
the output of shale wells declines quickly, making the drilling here a
never-ending treadmill. And that has been a challenge for the small
companies that have been the innovators here but are now facing demands
from investors to show financial discipline.
Typical
of the smaller producers is Parsley Energy, one of the most active
drillers in the basin with some of the most productive wells. Its share
price was cut in half over the last two years as it outspent its cash
flow grabbing land and ramping up production.
Late last year,
as oil prices fell, Parsley changed course. It is reducing spending on
exploration and production this year by $300 million. It decommissioned
two of its 16 rigs late last year, and two more in January.
“We
all have to be prepared,” said Matt Gallagher, Parsley’s chief
executive, for a six-month slump in prices. “We’re one Twitter message
away from a deal with Iran and $40 oil.”
The multinationals have the wherewithal to stick by their aggressive development plans and take a longer view.
They
bring an arsenal of tools that the smaller companies lack. With their
size and reach, they can make the best deals for equipment like drill
rigs and fracking services. Many have their own pipelines, refineries
and global trading personnel to sell their oil for the highest price.
In
January, Chevron agreed to acquire a refinery in Pasadena, Tex., from
the Brazilian company Petrobras for $350 million to refine more products
coming from the Permian. The announcement came only days after Exxon
Mobil announced a major expansion of its Beaumont, Tex., refinery to
process more local crude.
The major
companies also aim to cut production costs even further with
increasingly sophisticated applications of artificial intelligence.
Shell, for instance, has developed algorithms to replicate and
standardize the most effective drilling and fracking methods worldwide.
“We
are not here through one boom and bust,” said Amir Gerges, Shell’s
Permian general manager. “We are here developing a generational
resource.”
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