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Page added on June 2, 2017

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Has Permian Productivity Peaked?

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The U.S. shale industry might have just received a huge windfall with the nine-month extension of the OPEC cuts. Shale output was already expected to come roaring back this year, but the extension of the cuts provides even more room in the market for shale drillers to step into.

The sky is the limit, it seems. However, there are growing signs that the U.S. shale industry could be reaching the end of the low-hanging fruit. Or, more specifically, drilling costs are starting to rise and the enormous leaps in production that can be obtained by simply adding more rigs also appears to be running into some trouble.

According to the EIA’s Drilling Productivity Report, productivity (as opposed to absolute production) is set to fall next month in the Permian Basin. In other words, the average rig will only be able to produce an estimated 630 barrels per day of initial production from a new well, down 10 b/d from the 640 b/d that such a rig might have produced in May. That is convoluted way of saying that the ever-increasing returns on throwing more rigs at the problem might be hitting a ceiling.

IMG URL: http://cdn.oilprice.com//images/tinymce/Nick3105A.png

This is a very notable development – it is the first time that the EIA predicts falling well productivity per rig since it began tracking the data several years ago. Still, because the rig count has increased so much, there will still be more production coming out of the Permian. It’s just that as drillers gobble up all the best spots to drill, it will become more and more difficult to find easy pickings.

Moreover, simply drilling the wells is only one part of the equation. As Collin Eaton of Fuel Fix notes, companies are drilling wells at a faster pace than contractors can frac them. The shortage of completion crews means that the backlog of drilled but uncompleted wells (DUCs) has shot up over the past year, rising by more than 60 percent to 1,995 in April 2017 from a year earlier.

IMG URL: http://cdn.oilprice.com//images/tinymce/Nick3105B.jpg

The strain on contractors means that drilling costs will also rise. Oilfield service companies bore the brunt of the market downturn over the past three years, forced to slash their rates because of the lack of work. Oil producers have consistently and repeatedly boasted about their “efficiency gains,” but much of the cost-savings came from soaking service companies.

That could be at an end. The rise in drilling activity means that oilfield service companies finally have more leverage to hike their prices. The results could be an upswing in costs for producers. Service costs could jump by 20 percent this year, according to an estimate from S&P Global Platts.

But it isn’t all rosy for service companies either. Fuel Fix notes that they have to rebuild their rig fleets after scrapping so many during the last few years. Also, finding enough people to return to work after savagely cutting payrolls will be a challenge.

Overall, however, production is still expected to increase. Generous financing from Wall Street will ensure that capital is not a limiting factor. Consequently, the shale industry will continue to shower West Texas with money, rigs and people. Oil will flow in larger volumes this year and probably next year, barring another downturn. The Permian, for instance, is still expected to add more than 70,000 bpd of additional output between May and June.

Also, OPEC’s determination to prevent another downturn in prices provides some certainty to shale drillers. OPEC is erasing some of the risk for drillers to deploy resources in the Permian. On an annual basis, the EIA estimates that U.S. oil production will average 9.3 million barrels per day (mb/d) in 2017 and a staggering 10.0 mb/d in 2018.

But if well productivity has peaked, the marginal barrel will be a bit trickier to produce next year than it was in, say, late 2016.

Link to original article: http://oilprice.com/Energy/Crude-Oil/Has-Permian-Productivity-Peaked.html

By Nick Cunningham of Oilprice.com



7 Comments on "Has Permian Productivity Peaked?"

  1. Anonymous on Fri, 2nd Jun 2017 8:30 am 

    (Not directly related to this story, for Rockman.)

    Appallachian gas is coming to get you. Be afraid. If the outlet pipes get build, the Marcellus monster will roam and grow and kill competing gas projects in the Gulf, LA, OK, TX.

    PA is already the number 2 gas state to TX and is 2/3 the volume. It is not impossible to imagine it passing TX. Whodathunk old PA would rise again. Yeeehaw!

    https://rbnenergy.com/in-a-northeast-minute-everything-can-change-marcellus-utica-takeaway-projects-to-the-midwest-canada

  2. rockman on Fri, 2nd Jun 2017 9:13 am 

    A – Yes indeed. And not a new phenomenon. About 9 years ago the Rockman’s company was created to specifically target deep NG+condensate targets in Texas and La. Spent $230 million in 3.5 years. And then NG prices fell below $5/MCF and we haven’t drilled a NG well since. Being private and not a pubco we only drill when the ROR is good.

    NG rig counts. From

    https://www.eia.gov/naturalgas/weekly/#tabs-rigs-1

    Vertical 2008 – 1,200 Hz NG rigs: 400
    ” 2009 – 400 Hz NG rigs: 400
    ” 2012 – 200 Hz NG rigs: 600
    ” 2016 – <30 Hz NG rigs: 190

  3. rockman on Fri, 2nd Jun 2017 9:33 am 

    “… companies are drilling wells at a faster pace than contractors can frac them. The shortage of completion crews means that the backlog of drilled but uncompleted wells (DUCs) has shot up over the past year”

    Very misleading implication: all wells (very and hz) become DUC’s for some prior of time: a few weeks to several months. And typically much longer if the status changes when a DUC becomes a producing well: can take 1 to 3 months to produce a well after it’s frac’d. Very rarely does the drill rig complete any well: it moves off and less expensive “work over” rig moves on. A vertical well: 1 to 3 weeks. Hz frac’d well: 1 – 4 months…takes a while to prepare for a frac.

    IOW a higher drill rig count AUTOMATICALLY increases the DUC count even if frac crews are readily available.

  4. marko on Fri, 2nd Jun 2017 9:46 am 

    The name of the game is print baby print and not drill baby drill. This is only possible because of the free money , lets how long it will last
    Print baby print

  5. marko on Fri, 2nd Jun 2017 9:51 am 

    lets see

  6. rockman on Fri, 2nd Jun 2017 10:27 am 

    “Has Permian Productivity Peaked?” Time will tell but only known for sure many decades down the road. Just like global PO. The PB originally peaked in 1975 @ 730 million bbls per year. Current rate is 870 million bbls year.

    BTW most of the production increase has not come from the new shales plays but from infield drilling of the same reservoir that produced the 1975 peak.

  7. Jerome Purtzer on Fri, 2nd Jun 2017 6:42 pm 

    It’s a good thing that the Ghawar oilfield isn’t/wasn’t located in Texas or North Dakota now. They’d have that 150 billion barrels drilled and out of the ground in 10 years and we’d have manic monkey driving for 5 cents a gallon for 10 years and then off the cliff we go…My teenagers at home did not know what a lemming is? New math?

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