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Page added on August 9, 2013

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Peak oil researcher says shale profits proving ephemeral

FuelFix has a post on Shell’s recent profit decline and asset writedowns, driven by poor performance from their North American shale oil assets – Peak oil researcher says shale profits proving ephemeral. The post points to an article by Art Berman, continuing his long line of analysis questioning the longevity and financial basis of the shale oil boom – Shale boom profits bypass big oil. Even the Wall Street Journal was prompted to ask “So why has Shell just wiped $2 billion off the value of some shale assets supposedly rich in the hydrocarbon liquids that everyone craves?”. They couldn’t come up with an answer.

A prominent proponent of peak oil theory — the idea that global petroleum production will peak and then begin dropping off permanently — says that recent Big Oil profit drops show that profits from shale are more elusive than commonly expected.Many of the oil industry’s big players wrote down the value of their shale assets for second quarter — a move that indicates the continuing challenge of making many of the shale plays financially viable, according to Art Berman, a petroleum geologist and director of the Association for the Study of Peak Oil. Berman, a Houston-area geologist, has been questioning the economics of shale gas for years, particularly in terms of the potential reserves.

Last week, Shell reported a 20 percent profit drop for second quarter, which it partially attributed to write-offs of some of its shale positions rich in natural gas liquids and oil, according to Simon Henry, Shell’s chief financial officer, at the second quarter earnings call.

“Recent revelations and write-downs of shale assets in North America by Shell, ExxonMobil and Chevron support our research that big companies cannot make money on low rate-low volume shale wells,” wrote Art Berman in an article on Petroleum Truth Report. Berman said that when ExxonMobil purchased XTO Energy in 2010, it began the acceptance of shale reserves as a potential income driver, and optimistic estimates were made about the potential production of many of these wells. But falling oil and gas production helped push earnings down 57 percent for the second quarter.

Berman predicts that the companies will begin to move out of the shale plays because of the difficulty in making them profitable. “I believe that we are seeing the slow liquidation of these organizations but they cannot let the investment public know that this is what is occurring,” Berman wrote. “Hence the cornucopian rhetoric about the shale revolution and North American becoming the next Saudi Arabia –pure poppycock, of course.”

 

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3 Comments on "Peak oil researcher says shale profits proving ephemeral"

  1. Arthur on Fri, 9th Aug 2013 2:23 pm 

    What this means is that the price of conventional oil is still too low for shale to compete with. Shale will be back, unfortunately, when conventional oil gets more and more depleted, and shale will be profitable at $150.

  2. bobinget on Fri, 9th Aug 2013 4:11 pm 

    Compare a GOM well producing 250 thousand Bp/d
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thunder_Horse_Oil_Field
    to a wimpy 250 barrels a day from a typical tight oil well. Keep in mind, how our trade deficit is falling quickly on account of ALL those wimpy share wells producing over a million barrels p/d we previously imported.

    All shale oil deposits were not created equal.
    Add 420,000 stripper wells operating in the US.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stripper_well
    Now we get an idea just how much oil needs be produced to satisfy 19.7 million barrels we burn up daily.

    It’s only a matter of time, most of the shale producers will turn into ‘strippers’ as oil companies move on to
    shale deposits in new BOOM Towns.

    If it were not for tight gas and oil, just imagine where our economy would be at this juncture.. Pulled back as it were, from the brink, because drilling ten miles under the ocean is becoming even more prohibitively expensive and fraught with peril, oils sands and tight oil look cheap, by comparison.

  3. Tor on Fri, 9th Aug 2013 5:20 pm 

    The next 2-3 years will be interesting and show if a there will be an “unconventionel” oil bonanza or a big bursting shale oil & gas bubble.

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