GULF OF MEXICO DISCOVERIES, RESERVES AND PRODUCTION

A Guest Post by George Kaplan

chart/

Part I Discoveries and Reserves

The following are a few charts and observations concerning the US Gulf of Mexico production, with data mostly taken from BOEM for the OCS and a bit from EIA. The BOEM data site has been updated and makes it easy to get the raw data, but not in a very easily discerned way. This post is intended to make it a bit easier to follow and come to your own conclusions concerning the likely future of GoM production.

I’m sure I’ve made a few mistakes in getting and downloading the data, but the relative trends are probably more informative than absolute values so there will need to be follow up revisions as new data is available and hopefully any issues will get smoothed out. Reserve data is available for 2015. New data for 2016 is likely not available until the end of the year, but when it is it will be interesting to see what changes there are. The main focus here is on oil but gas data is also presented. Production data is issued twice monthly but some, such as for BP, is up to six months late so I’ve just assumed daily flow stays constant to fill in any gaps.

”https://www.data.boem.gov “

Every year BOEM issues a report for the previous year’s reserves (i.e. December 2016 covers 2015): ”https://www.boem.gov/Reserves-Inventory-Program-Gulf-of-Mexico-OCS-Region/”

The reserves given are 2P, with the description:

“Reserves in this report are proved plus probable (2P) reserves estimates. The reserves must be discovered, recoverable, commercial and remaining. Reserves, starting with the 2011 report, now include Reserves Justified for Development. “

The first figure below shows cumulative backdated oil and gas reserves by discovery year (shown as produced and remaining, and stacked to give total discovery). Finding new oil and especially gas is now a struggle. However one problem with the chart may come from the way BOEM record production against lease but reserves against fields. Lease and fields and fields are associated with exploration blocks, but also split by ownership. One field may cover several leases, and that is easy to accommodate but equally one lease may contain several fields and then, as far as I can tell, but there may be arcane knowledge to which I am not privileged, the reserves are logged against a common field number. Hence later discoveries might be recorded against older fields. For example recent tie-ins for South Deimos and West Boreas to the Olympus Spar are not shown as separate fields but rather against Mars-Ursa, and would show as reserve growth on the older discovery. A bigger impact is that there are discovered fields, mostly since 2010, which do not have confirmed development plans yet, and so do not get counted as reserves by the SPE methods that BOEM uses. Therefore the flattening in new discoveries is not really as severe as shown, at least for oil. However, as discussed later, discoveries currently are declining towards zero.

Condensate is included in the oil numbers and associated gas from oil fields with the gas reserves. NGLs are also included with the gas. The GoM is, or has been, particularly gas prone so these represent significant proportions of the total reserves, so it will only increase as a result of newly sanctioned projects, while there are some available.
chart/
Note this chart shows the situation in 2016 – i.e. the backdated reserves discovered and remaining for all the years up to the one shown; it isn’t a record of cumulative production to that year. Total discoveries for oil so far total 23.1 Gb and for gas 34.5 Gb (based on conversion rate of 5600 mcf / bbl). The curves above are really made up of a series of similar shaped asymptotic growth curves for shallow, deep, deeper – Jean Laherrere shows and discusses them well in his work.

The following charts show how the remaining reserves have evolved historically. The start in 1974 is because of the recording and reporting methods, not because that’s is when production suddenly started. Similarly the jump down at 2008 /2009 is, I think, because of changes in SPE reporting methods for reserves introduced in 2007.
chart/
chart/
Produced and remaining reserves and production history are given in the following two figures: as of December 2015 oil reserves remaining are 3.5 Gb and gas 1.3 Gb. Note the reserves are reported according to SEC rules so they can be developed or undeveloped provided there is a development plan that will allow production within five years. There is a relatively large volume of resources that will be developed but are not included yet (see further below).

Most of the remaining oil is in fairly recent discoveries. Annual production and active drilling rigs are shown for recent years where break out GoM data has been available. I fitted three cycle Verhulst equations to both the oil and gas for discoveries and production. The fits are pretty good except for oil discoveries, which I think are heavily skewed by a couple of really high years. Hubbert logistics curves are symmetric versions of Verhulst equation. To some extent they are just convenient curves that start low have a hump in the middle and then tail off – like production and discovery profiles, But there is some mathematical basis in that they are derived from population growth, so that the production (or discovery) irate is a function of the oil remaining to be produced (or discovered) times that so far produced, which is a kind of proxy for the number of existing facilities or rigs, and that kind of makes sense. The three-cycle agreement matches the shallow, deep and deeper discovery cycles (not all that close though). I don’t know how the skewedness from the non-symmetric curves might be explained in actual physical things, but am looking into it. Hubbert curves from production are used to predict ultimate recovery and peaks, but here the peaks are obvious, and the discovery known.

The fits for production could be used to project the future, but I prefer a bottom up method as below, if data is available, and certainly for oil the Verhulst fit does not do a very good predictive job. Obviously the fit does not predict the sharp increase that occurred through 2016 and is just about peaking now (it is declining while actual production is sharply rising). It would suggest there would have been a peak around 2010 or before if there hadn’t been the drop from the 2008 recession and then drilling hiatus caused by the Deep Water Horizon explosion, which might be true, but isn’t much use for prediction. Short term boom-and-bust upsets like that make curve fitting quite difficult, it would probable need another two or three cycles to get a good match, at which point any pretense that there is some physical basis to the fitting has gone.
chart/
The remaining gas is looking pretty sparse, mostly associated gas, which is therefore controlled by oil production and development. Only Hadrian South and Otis are significant recent gas fields. I haven’t seen news of offshore pipelines and onshore gas treatment plants being decommissioned but presumably something like that must be happening or on the cards.
chart/
As well as the number dropping the average discovery size has been falling slightly after jumps for oil when deep and ultra-deep fields were first explored. The distribution of discoveries recently has been for few larger discoveries and a number of smaller ones, so a rising proportion of recent developments have been tie-backs. Sometimes these are to new “hub-and-spoke” facilities that just collect several small fields (e.g. Delta House, Na Kika, maybe Chevron’s Tigris in the future), but often the tie-backs are to mature facilities and don’t add to overall production, rather they just extend an existing facility’s plateau production period or reduce the decline rate. However even the smaller discoveries have been drying up over the last couple of years.
chart/
The next two figures show the remaining reserves and depletion rates (i.e. percent remaining removed per year at the expected production rate) for the larger or more recently developed fields and for which production data is given later. The rate used in the calculation is taken as the oil production average for the last six months for which there is data. This is therefore a bit out of step with the reserve data – i.e. the production is about 6 to 9 months later than the reserve data, but it’s OK for a rough indication. Note the open bars are used for Stampede and Big Foot as they are not in production but due next year.

Some fields are predominantly gas and the depletion rate counted against oil is not meaningful and probably changes significantly: i.e. Otis, Longhorn, Hadrian South, Mad Dog, Baldpate and Salsa, and partly Na Kika. Some other high depletion rates may be because not all the reserves have been included. For instance Baldpate includes Salsa, Cougar, Deep Penn State and Enchilada, but the last three of those fields do not have reserves listed. Deep Penn State came on line this year, but doesn’t appear anywhere in BOEM numbers (the production is against a combined Baldpate and Salsa lease number). Devil’s Tower numbers may be similar in that Kodiak was bought on line as a new lease but may not show in earlier reserve numbers.

Coelacanth and Son of Bluto 2 have ridiculously low reserves for the size of development, I don’t know if they have been written down from early production data, or maybe the operator was initially very conservative (however early production for Son of Bluto 2 wasn’t very good). Marmalard may reflect missing reserve data. Cardamom doesn’t look to have performed well with high water cut, which might have knocked down the recoverable estimate. Blind Faith has very low production for the available reserves: one lease has been offline for several years and the other is declining fast; the reserves may be overestimated. Overall the depletion numbers should be taken with large error bars; hopefully the next release of 2016 data may sort out a few of these issues.
chart/
chart/
For all the effort needed to get these fields on line some of the reserves are pretty low – e.g. for Julia and Stones, but it might be there are phase 2 projects planned which are more than five years out and therefore wouldn’t be included – Julia certainly has one such.

Now we should consider EIA reserve figures. They have “proved” reserves from the end of 2015 (C&C) of 4.27 Gb, with change over the year of 10 mmbbls for revisions and adjustments, 108 acquisitions and discoveries, and a drop of 557 for production. They define proved as “… reserves are estimated volumes of hydrocarbon resources that analysis of geologic and engineering data demonstrates with reasonable certainty [defined as 90%] are recoverable under existing economic and operating conditions.” So they would likely include discoveries that might be developed more than five years out. They don’t give field-by-field data so it’s difficult to go much further than that, but see below for further discussion. Over the last two years have been some big potential fields written off (Logan, Kaskida, Hadrian North, Moccasin) and others downgraded (Hopkins, Shenandoah), it will be interesting to see if these have been included in the EIA numbers as their annual update is released; as well as what impact oil price might have had in reserve revisions.

Part II Current Production

The following figures present the BOEM production data for the fields that are shown in depletion estimates above. Some fields have been quite unsteady, which may contribute to some of the anomalies above (though it might be expected that the depletion rates would be shown as quite low if the wells are offline). The results are through April though a few numbers are missing and have been estimated (just by assuming constant daily flow from the previously known month).

The first chart shows oil from fields with leases that have started up since late 2014, followed by their water production. Strictly speaking Mars-Ursa started in the 1990’s but with a second development to the Olympus spar starting early 2014. However it took a bit of time to ramp up and has had a couple of new tie-backs added since, so I’ve included it here.

The average water cut has held steady as more fields have been added, but it would be reasonable to expect it now to increase, as there are few new fields now due. This would usually be accompanied by declining oil production. Some of the fields look to be declining without water support (either from injection or an aquifer), presumably these have solution gas and/or compaction drive, and just go into continuous decline. I do not have the data to be able to identify the drive strategy for each field, though it probably can be found with a bit of searching. The recently announced Kaikias tie-back will go to the Olympus Spar with Mars-Ursa, so some decline must be expected there to make room. Heidelberg, Julia and Stones are still not at their design capacity. Stones has been slow to ramp up and has about 10,000 bpd still to go to meet design. Julia and Heidelberg may have another 40,000 combined but this may wait for later, second phase developments, possibly dependent on initial production results. There has been a phase II development for Jack that will show up in the next few reports through June. Coelacanth is about 25,000 bpd below capacity, but was designed to allow for future tie-backs, so it’s not clear how much of the spare can be filled from current on-line fields. Dalmatian South looks like a waste of money, but there are plans to add multiphase pumping on the Dalmatian fields next year that may have an impact.

Note that a numbers after the name shows how many drilling rigs are currently active on the field.
chart/
chart/
The next two charts show oil and water for BP operated fields. Note Tubular Bells is a new field included in the chart above. Na Kika is a collection of production of many small and dispersed oil and gas fields (hence the name which refers to an octopus god who created the land out of the sea). Although I’ve collected fields together elsewhere this is the only place I’ve used the facility name for the aggregate as the list of all the fields, e.g. with separators, is too long.

Thunder Horse South came on line early in 2017 and should show in the results for February and March, which have not yet been reported (BP is generally slower than other’s, except sometimes Chevron, with their numbers). I don’t know in which lease it would appear.
chart/
chart/
The next two figures show oil and water production for Caesar/Tonga/Tahiti, which are blocks in Green Canyon. Three leases are operated by Chevron and go to Tahiti, which was Chevron’s flagship before Jack. Anadarko operates the other four, and its production goes through the Constitution spar, which also processes the Ticonderoga and Constitution fields. It has nameplate capacity of 40,000 bpd and currently looks to be at or slightly over this. There have been two recent fires with shut down and muster on the spar in late March and late April, which might impact production figures. Next year the Constellation field (which was Hopkins when BP operated it) is due to be tied in, so either they expect some decline on existing fields or have done some significant brownfield debottlenecking. For both operators production has been fairly flat and even slightly increasing overall, it looks like gas handling might be the main concern there rather than water – maybe something to look into after the next issue of production numbers.
chart/
chart/
The final production numbers are for the remaining fields with stated oil reserves above 10 mmbbls. There was a general, and fairly high, decline through 2015 and early 2016, which was arrested after the 2016 hurricane dip. New production came into Shenzi, K2, Baldpate and Devil’s Tower. The Devil’s Tower increase came from a new lease, Kodiak, also shown in the first production chart above. Baldpate tied in Deep Penn South – there is no individual data for this that I can find – and added one other production well. For Shenzi it looks like development wells were added in May 2016 and January 2017, the latter added about 8,000bpd. I think I’m missing something for Shenzi as it has much higher flow than warranted by its stated reserves. BHP, which operates Shenzi, announced neighbouring discoveries at Shenzi North in 2015 and Caicos in 2016, so maybe they just tied them in immediately. K2 added about 12,000 bpd in June 2016, as two leases came back on line and the third increase flow significantly due to the addition of gas lift at the subsea templates.

Tobago includes the Silvertip field. I think there was a plan for a subsea tieback from there in 2016, but the general decline in production suggests maybe not. They are both processed with the Great White field on the Perdido Spar (Shell operator, start-up in 2010). Great White (shown in the chart for new leases) has been increasing, but development drilling was planned to be complete in 2016, so it may now join Tobago in decline.

Of particular note in April: overall there was a big production drop, mainly from Cardamom, Great White and Kodiak going offline; there was a large (five fold) increase in reported water on one Na Kika lease. This may be a reporting revision rather than reality; most lease reports are up to date except Coelacanth, Tubular Bells, Atlantis, the Thunder Horse complex seems to be missing February and March data but have April numbers, it’s not evident that Thunder Horse South start-up has yet added much production yet; Stones ramp up isn’t going well; some of the other small recent new fields aren’t looking great either (Dalmatian, Otis, and Odd Job, which has just started cutting water); Lucius reversed recent declines but the water cut is still increasing rapidly; Julia and Heidelberg are steady but well off their nameplate capacity. Julia and Stones have active drilling rigs, Heidelberg doesn’t. Cardamom goes to the Augur platform, which is well over twenty years old. I don’t know if that might reduce their availability through equipment failures or the need for more planned maintenance – usually older platforms are at low flow and have plenty of on-line redundancy, but Cardamom is a significant proportion of the facility’s nameplate value.

Of the 40 rigs listed by BSEE in the GoM for the past week, thirteen are running tools (some may be exploration wells), four are drilling exploration wells, two are appraisal wells (Phobos and North Platte), two are pre-drilling on Stampede, one each are pre-drilling on Appomattox and Mad Dog (or might be further appraisal) and the others are working on development wells. Eleven rigs are for Shell, five Chevron, four Anadarko, two BP, three Hess and three ExxonMobil.
chart/
Altogether the four oil production charts here cover about 90% of total deep water production. There are a large number of other smaller producers in deep plus over 200,000 bpd still from shallow fields. Production from these other fields has actually been holding up pretty well over the last couple of years.
chart/
Overall there has been a recent plateau in production from the large mature fields: without the added production to arrest the decline in these fields the GoM would not now be exceeding previous production rates, even with all the new fields that came on line in 2015 and 2016. Some of this will be due to continuous development drilling within a field and other to new tie-backs; facility bottlenecking may also be involved (e.g. K2). Much of this is likely due to investment decisions made in high price era of 2013 and 2014.

With high depletion and low discoveries, and the current investment hiatus, then at some time decline has to start again, and will likely look like 2015 in the chart above. If planned maintenance has been cut back then future decline may actually be worse. The oldest fields are obviously limited by well and reservoir performance, but for some of the middle aged ones, especially those with throughput close to nameplate capacity, the surface facilities may be or are becoming limits. Typically facilities are designed for maximum total liquids at around 50% water cut after that either the oil production falls naturally as the wells water out, or they have to be cut back to allow the production facilities to function correctly (i.e. to stay on line and produce on-spec oil and water), but that’s not hard and fast. Sometimes gas compression will present a lower limit.

The biggest operators in the GoM, and therefore those most likely to influence production in near and medium future, with their average production from January to May in kbpd, are as follows:

Shell Offshore Inc. 232
BP Exploration & Production Inc. 189
Anadarko Petroleum Corporation 159
LLOG Exploration Offshore, L.L.C. 77
Union Oil Company of California 57
Chevron U.S.A. Inc 50
BHP Billiton Petroleum (GOM) Inc. 48

(Union Oil is a subsidiary of Chevron.)

Part III Future Scenarios

The following chart presents an educated guess at a scenario for future production, comprising all fields that are identified as probable developments plus estimated decline rates for existing fields based on their expected depletion rates. The total recovery from developed fields, excluding Stampede and Big Foot, is 4.4 Gb, with another 3.5 Gb from new fields. So, given there has been about 0.6 produced in 2016, it may be an overestimate, but equally there may be some additional near field developments that are not yet listed as reserve numbers, or straight reserve growth (e.g. BP recently added over 200 mmboe through improved seismic methods). Note that any of the putative 3.5 Gb additions is currently “undiscovered” it would get added to the cumulative discovery curve against the year of discovery (i.e. the first successful exploration well) when it is approved for development, there isn’t a sudden blip against, say, 2019, should oil prices increase and a number of projects suddenly get approved. However a lot of the recent discoveries are in deep water explored since 2010 so the third cycle in the three cycles of curves mentioned above would become more obvious. These projected recovery numbers are fairly well in line with the EIA reserve numbers, i.e. 7.3 2P compared with 4.3 Gb 1P from EIA, so maybe another 3 Gb of probable, which would reasonable. There are other, I think generally pretty small, ‘discoveries’ that could be added (Sicily, Winter, Samurai, Tortuga, Magellan), but equally some of the fields shown may prove non-commercial.

There may be additional discoveries but with recent discovery size around 10 to 20 mmbbls there’d need to be a lot to make much difference, and therefore a lot of looking, and that isn’t happening at the moment, or opening up a new frontier somewhere. The resources required to meet the start-up profile shown would be extensive, and might not be available in the period shown, especially as the profile implies a sudden price increase and hence completion from other areas to develop delayed projects.

The bracketed number against the field name is the nominal nameplate oil capacity for any development. I’ve also included the curve fit for data through 2015 (black line) – obviously it’s a poor prediction from the start as it misses the 2017 peak.
chart/
EIA also provide future projection. Recently these have pretty much consisted of extending the current month’s production for about six months, putting in a dip down for hurricane season if appropriate, and then adding a growth curve of about 300,000 bpd over eighteen months. They have never correctly explained where this extra production comes from – and change their theory with each release, and seem never to allow for any mature field declines. Any largish fields due to produce extra production in 2018 should show in current BOEM reserve data – and only Stamped and Big Foot (which is due for installation late in 2018 and unlikely to be on line) do. I think reality will be closer to my scenario: allowing for new discoveries and increased brownfield and in-fill activity it might be nearer a plateau than shown in the short term, but there will not be growth before, at minimum, 2021 and then only if there are major discoveries.
chart/
The GoM is a mature basin, the deep-water fields less so than shallow, but it looks currently that oil is in slow terminal decline and gas mostly exhausted. Many other offshore basins (and probably onshore) are in a similar state or soon will be: UK, Norway, Mexico, Azerbaijan, most Asian countries and Australia. Less so for Angola and Nigeria but the current hiatus in investment will hit their production soon – likely their final production profile will look like a two or three cycle Verhulst fit, a bit like the GoM oil, with a coming dip. It has good data availability, even if the basis using lease numbers can be confusing, therefore it is quite interesting as an indicator of what happening in other, less well documented, basins. I also find it amusing to follow the knots that the EIA, the industry media and the E&Ps tie themselves into in order not to openly admit there might ever be a peak.

268 thoughts to “GULF OF MEXICO DISCOVERIES, RESERVES AND PRODUCTION”

      1. Thanks for putting this together George. It’s great.
        So your estimate of GOM ultimate cumulative production would be about :
        7.3 (current deepwater cum) + 4.4 (remaining deepwater production from existing fields and sanctioned projects) + 3.5 (future deepwater production from unsanctioned projects + future discoveries) = 15.2 Gb (deepwater total), + about 14 Gb (total shelf to date = ~ 13 Gb + ~1 Gb remaining) = 29.2 Gb.
        Do I have that right?
        If so, that is pretty much in line with the 30 Gb low estimate I came up with last September.
        In my mid case and upside estimates (37 and 47 Gb), I included more exploration successes, and better recoveries from existing and future projects.
        Note – I’ll have sketchy internet service for another week so I won’t be replying too promptly to comments.

        1. SLG – sorry I missed this when you first posted it. Yes I think I’d agree with your lower case estimates. For the shelf I don’t really know – it has remained on a plateau or shallow decline for a few years, and I don’t know why, or if it will continue. Of course it’s all stochastic so higher cases are possible with new discoveries as well, it’s what makes following this stuff interesting – you geologist types have all the fun with that though. After the Atlantis improvement higher recoveries look like they might have an impact as well. But equally it looks to me like some of these developments just aren’t as good as they should be and wouldn’t have been developed unless there had been the really high oil prices in the 2011 to 2014 era (and might not be again with the lessons learned since) and/or they just haven’t lived up to expectations.
          I put something together on Brazil that might come out next week – I’d be interested in what you think the possibilities there are as well.

  1. The level of detail is overwhelming! Thank you. It extremely enlightening.

  2. GOM prompted me to go look for what happened to that drilling offshore Cuba. Repsol and two others drilled exploratory offshore Cuba. All three dry 2012. Initial talk that this would not be the end of it.

    Was. No more drilling.

    Oddly, Cuba does flow oil.

    1. Oil production is from a large heavy oil field located near Varadero, and a few small scattered fields. Cuba is part of a small mini continent that drifted between north and South America, and broke up. A few chunks crashed against South America, for example the big rock in Paraguana, Vehezuela. The largest piece hit North America. Cuba also sells oil it essentially steals from Venezuela, its semicolony. This of course was ignored by Ben Rhodes, the 30 year old speech writer who developed Obama’s Cuba policy in secret, without consultation with the state department, or state intelligence agencies, once he decided to go into geopolitics.

      1. Consumption and production numbers hard to get. 150K bpd floats around. Production apparently covers about half that.

        China anted up $6B to expand their refinery up to 150K bpd PLUS an LNG import plant PLUS an electricity generation plant. Money flowed in 2011. Should have been done by now.

        1. That’s all BS. These regimes thrive in secrecy and love to announce deals they never act upon.

          What we do know is that production in Cuba AND Venezuela is dropping. Cuba’s production is heavy, and their main refinery at Cienfuegos is an old Soviet design, can’t process heavy molecules.

          Venezuela sends medium crude to Cuba, which is used internally, and the Castro Mafia sells the heavy crude. Pdvsa makes a huge sacrifice when it sends thus crude to Cuba, because it imports lighter crudes to blend with the 8 degree faja crude. This happens because the Venezuelan dictatorship us now controlled in part by Raúl Castro and his son Alejandro Castro Espin, who appears to be in charge.

          Alejandro Castro is a psychopath, in charge of all security and spy services, which explains why Maduro’s security services are so vicious. We are seeing scenes in Venezuela that appear to be something out of a horror movie, and some of it appears intentional. We know chavismo has now a wide open split, with important figures from the Chavez period calling openly for a rebellion.

          I mention this because what happens in Venezuela impacts Cuba, and viceversa. Venezuela is Cuba’s prized colony, and they will try to hang on to it by brute force.

          Meanwhile we see an odd alliance of red obamites and corporate interests trying to cover up the Cuban involvement and doing propaganda against Trump’s very smart shift in sanctions to target the Cuban military’s business empire, known as GAESA.

  3. Bloomberg – 10 July 2017
    Output at older fields from China to North America — making up a third of world supply — fell 5.7 percent last year, the most since 1992, according to Rystad Energy AS. It’ll drop about 6 percent in 2017 if oil stays at current prices, the consultant said.

    Consultant Wood Mackenzie Ltd. estimates decline rates at older fields at about 5 percent in 2015 and 2016, compared with “just below” 4 percent from 2012 to 2014.

    A decline this year at the pace predicted by Rystad would remove about 1.8 million barrels a day from the market.
    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-07-09/oil-fields-pumping-third-of-world-supply-die-fastest-in-24-years

    1. Perhaps investing in CO2 fill, water injection or infill drilling has stalled with the low oil prices. It’s not so cheap to squeeze out the last barrels of an old field – activity for sure will heaten up when oil prices climb again. It’s a little bit like shale oil – you can ramp up production with smaller and faster projects than bringing a new deep sea field online.

      At least at the chinese old giant field they stated last year the reduced investing in recovery technic due to low prices.

      1. Eulenspiegel,

        Tertiary recovery suffers from the same ailment that the Gulf of Mexico does. It’s just too high-cost to be competitive with shale and OPEC conventional.

        According to a study conducted by the Boston Consulting Group, there’s still plenty of “yet-to-find” potential in the Gulf of Mexico, almost 200 billion BOE.
        http://gaffney-cline-focus.com/will-mexico-be-competitive

        But who in the heck is going to invest in this high-cost, long lead time oil when oil prices are in the $50/ barrel range and so volatile?

        Deep water Gulf of Mexico is one of the areas replete with projects that Goldman Sachs has identified as having become “so uneconomic, so stranded, that we almost don’t see any scenario under which they will be developed.”

        “New shale production and OPEC are fighting for market share and the rest of the market, really, is fighting for relevance,” adds Goldman Sachs’ Michele Della Vigna.

        Lower for Longer? The Impact of the New Oil Order: Goldman Sachs
        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zilqznc5LCc

        1. Hi Glenn,

          An estimate of barrels of oil equivalent yet to find tells us very little.

          It is oil that may be scarce in the future (probably before natural gas), if most of these barrels of oil equivalent are natural gas it will not help the situation very much, and that study is quite old from 2012.

          And who is the Boston Consulting Group?

          The Boston Consulting Group is a global management consulting firm with over 80 offices around the world.

          https://www.bcg.com/

          Oil and Gas is not really this company’s area of expertise, so perhaps this “Yet to find” estimate is very speculative.

          Gaffney Cline is an oil and gas consultant, perhaps they found the study credible.

          Part two of the study gives a relatively negative outlook for Mexico, due to the nature of Mexican laws and the resulting lack of foreign investment.

          http://gaffney-cline-focus.com/will-mexico-be-competitive-part-2-fiscal-balance-and-stability

          1. Dennis,

            Regarding Part 2 of the Gaffney Cline study, whether to implement a “regressive” fiscal regime or a more “progressive” fiscal regime is probably the least of Mexico’s worries when it comes to attracting foreign investment, given the current highly volatile, $50/barrel oil price environment.

            The “yet to find” estimates are also not terribly relevant in the current price environment, since most of that “yet to find” oil and gas is high-cost and cannot compete with shale and OPEC.

            1. Hi Glenn,

              I agree low prices may eventually reduce output as fewer investments in oil sands, deepwater and other high cost barrels of output. In addition some “low cost” output from LTO plays might not be developed as the core areas of current LTO plays run out of space for new wells and EUR per foot of horizontal lateral completed starts to decrease. At some point there is a limit to how many frack stages and how much proppant can be stuffed down those wells and see a decent return on that marginal capital spending. That point is likely to be reached by 2020 for the Permian basin. Much of the apparent increase in Permian well productivity is a combination of increased lateral length, increased proppant volumes and an increased number of frack stages all of which leads to higher cost wells (where land cost should be included).

              When this occurs is difficult to guess precisely, but I think by 2025 is pretty likely (greater than 50% probability).

            2. How much of this expensive oil can be neglected?

              Can the US expand shale oil production by 20 MB/d to replace all the aging oilfields and another 10 MB/d for all the deep sea oil?

              Opec will be hard pressed to provide the growing demand alone.

              Or do we only have a monentary oil price hole because everyone on the whole world started big projects during the high price enviroment, inclusive shale oil, which all complete these years and weight down on oil prices alltogether. And when they run out and get into decline alltogether, while consumption is growing, we’ll see the one or another supply hole.

              And when oil price again is at 100$, we’ll see the same again – frackers will frack marginal rock which is nowadays seen as “dry hole”, GOM and all deep sea will be explored and drilled again, old fields will be nitro injected, and all this new supply will get online roughly the same time…

            3. Hi Eulenspiegel,

              It is doubtful that US output will rise above 11 Mb/d even in a high oil price environment, LTO output might rise to 6.5 Mb/d, but output from US onshore conventional is likely to decline by 4 to 6% per year especially at oil prices under $60/b. So over the next 3 years we might see about 400 kb/d decline in onshore conventional and another 400 kb/d decline in GOM output so that net US output would increase by about 1.2 Mb/d from April 2017 levels in 3 years (assuming LTO output increases by 2 Mb/d over those three years). Under this scenario US output is 10.9 Mb/d in 2020.

              Whether OPEC, Russian, Canadian, Brazilian, and US output can offset declines elsewhere in the World remains to be seen. I think it will be a challenge for World C+C output to rise to more than 85 Mb/d for any 12 month period in the future. The highest World C+C output average over any consecutive 12 months to date has been 80.7 Mb/d (12 months ending March 2016 based on EIA data). The most recent 12 months ending March 2017 the trailing 12 month World C+C output average was 80.5 Mb/d. The 85 Mb/d is near my high estimate, the range is 82 to 86 Mb/d for the one sigma range (about a 70% probability the peak will fall in this range in my opinion somewhere between 2021 and 2028.)

            4. Eulenspiegel,

              Yours is a very old, but I believe legitimate, critique of free-market fundamentalism.

              Simonde de Sismondi, who was for a time the only heretic among Adam Smith’s disciples, put it this way:

              Sismondi visited England and had been struck by the misery resulting from industrial progress. Why did the seemingly beneficial production of goods by machinery bring on “poverty in the midst of plenty”? The answer was: free competition keeps wages low, free enterprise makes for overproduction, which leads to recurrent “crises” — shutdowns or failures entailing unemployment and starvation….

              But Sismondi does not urge revolutionary massacre. What is needed is protective legislation.

              Sismondi does not oppose machinery; he rejects the idea that the economic situation is the inevitable effect of a law of nature, as the orthodox then affirmed. He saw the evils as the result of social and legal arrangements that could be changed.

              — JACQUES BARZUN, From Dawn to Decadence

            5. Hi Glenn,

              Do you agree with Barzun’s assessment?

              I ask because you often complain about government interference, which suggests you believe the market should rule.

              Or is it that the market should rule unless it affects you negatively and in that case there should be government intervention?

              Your position is not clear or perhaps even contradictory.

            6. Dennis,

              It is one thing to make a legitimate critique of a situation. It is quite another to propose a solution that is both 1) politically possible and 2) will work.

              In the case of overproduction of oil, just what would you propose the federal
              government do?

              Any workable solution would have to be multilateral, because oil markets are global in nature these days and if the US government were to unilateraly mandate produciton limits on US producers, this would only hand more market share over to OPEC and Russia.

              So what is your solution? Do you propose that the US join OPEC?

              What do you believe would be the political possiblities of that happening?

            7. Hi Glenn,

              So is that a long winded way of saying you agree with Barzun?

              A yes or no answer would suffice, rather than a dodge.

              Is government intervention sometimes necessary or not?

              It seems as long as the government is not interfering with the oil and gas industry, you are ok with government intervention.

              And yes the US should join OPEC,Russia and others in controlling output as was done for the good of the oil and gas industry from 1935 to 1970 by the RRC of Texas and other state agencies (Oklahoma and Louisiana.)

              Volatility in oil and gas prices leads to a poor allocation of capital resources.

            8. Dennis Coyne said:

              “And yes the US should join OPEC,Russia and others in controlling output as was done for the good of the oil and gas industry from 1935 to 1970 by the RRC of Texas and other state agencies (Oklahoma and Louisiana.)”

              And just what do you believe to be the political possiblities of that happening?

              Some folks are hopelessly idealistic. Others, like Reinhold Niebuhr, are more realistic.

            9. Oil price volatility is damaging to the economy. Most developed countries recognized this in the 70s, and started heavily taxing consumption to limit the damage it caused. Trying to control production is a chump’s game.

    2. By a simple geometric progression, say one third production is 10 Gb per year, at 5.7% continuing decline rate that would give 175 Gb to be recovered. However the rate looks like it’s accelerating so probably less. Note that an accelerating decline rate is exactly what would be expected if in fill drilling and brownfield expansion has been used extensively to maintain or accelerate production in response to high prices and limited alternative (‘cheap’) sources. With 175 Gb here, only about 75 Gb left of conventional discovered and undeveloped, discoveries falling (I think likely about the same this year as last for oil at current pace, maybe less for gas), and XH oil done for the time being at least, then the big question is how much is remaining in the other two thirds on line at the moment? And will it sometime (soon?) start to look like the older one third?

      1. 10 Gb/year? check numbers again, please.
        Even 1.6Mb/day*365 is only ~1/2 Gb/year

        1. Global production is 30 Gb per year (to one significant figure), one third of that is 10. The sum of an infinite geometric series declining at r per year is X0/r. Checked.

      2. 5.7 % is only achievable if there’s continuous investment in EOR, redrills, sidetracks, connection of small remote satellites, installation of beefier artificial lift systems….I’ve been there and eventually we hit the wall. In one offshore case the decline rate shot up to 38% per year.

      3. Hi George,

        It is not clear what you are talking about, World conventional C+C output (about 26.6 Gb per year)?
        So one third would be about 10 Gb/year and at a 5.7% annual decline rate, I see the 175 Gb. The question would be what about the other 16.6 Gb of World output. If reported BP statistical review proved reserves are roughly equal to actual World 2P reserves and we deduct Canadian Oil Sands and Orinoco belt oil we have about 1300 Gb, in addition there has been about 1300 Gb of cumulative conventional C+C output (excluding LTO and extra heavy oil). This suggests about a 2600 Gb conventional URR if there were no more discoveries or reserve growth in the future.

        Let’s assume no reserve growth or discoveries and that 1300 Gb is roughly World 2P reserves. That suggests the other 16.6 Gb would decline at about 1.33% per year.

        Decline rates in this scenario start at 3%/year in 2017 and fall to 2%/year by 2044.

        1. So if or when higher decline rates are seen in the newer production that would tend to further undermine the BP figures I guess.

          1. Hi George,

            I agree.

            Also I realized that the BP figures include NGL, which Laherrere estimates at 300 Gb URR, so probably 2300 Gb for conventional C+C is a better estimate than 2600 Gb.

            1. Hi George,

              In addition Laherrere estimates that OPEC reserves are overstated by about 300 Gb, so a more conservative URR estimate would be 2000 Gb (with the assumption that there are zero discoveries and zero 2P reserve growth in the future).

              To me the 2300 Gb estimate is more reasonable for conventional C+C World URR, but clearly such an estimate is speculative, it could be 2000 Gb or 2600 Gb and it’s possible the USGS estimate of about 3000 Gb may prove correct.

              The lack of clarity on OPEC reserves makes accurate World URR estimates quite difficult to achieve.

  4. Mike

    Third update today on icewine 2 well in the HRZ shale north slope Alaska.

    16% frac fluids now recovered.

    Icewine#2 Operations Update

    Flowback operations have continued, with fluid composition comprising 100% water. After analysing the performance of the well to date, and comparing to results from other plays, a decision has been made to shut the well in for six weeks to allow for pressure build up and imbibition to occur. Imbibition (or soaking) has proven to be effective in other plays by allowing frac fluid to be absorbed, displacing in-situ water that may be blocking hydrocarbon molecules from being able to flow through the reservoir.

    Post the shut in period, the well may then be swabbed.

    Further analyses are required to determine the impact, if any, of the performance of the Icewine#2 well on the probability of success for the HRZ play at the Franklin Bluffs location and over the wider acreage position.

    Further updates will be made as and when appropriate throughout the testing program.

    1. They could try running a jet pump, that’s fairly easy to rig up, they have to fly in a sliding sleeve, the pumps, and hook up with chiksan from the cementing unit. I assume the wellhead and casing can take a 5000 psi hydrotest. I’m surprised that’s not in their contingency planning. Swabbing in the north slope is very complicated by regulations.

  5. World’s Top Oil Traders Bet American Shale Is Here to Stay
    http://www.rigzone.com/news/oil_gas/a/150923/Worlds_Top_Oil_Traders_Bet_American_Shale_Is_Here_to_Stay

    The world’s biggest energy traders are betting shale oil production is here to stay.

    European trading houses from Trafigura Group Pte. to Mercuria Energy Group Ltd. and Vitol Group have invested in U.S. infrastructure and struck supply deals to secure flows of shale oil and gas. The agreements show the traders see long-term opportunities in an industry that has already upended global energy flows….

    “Shale, barring a major environmental issue, has become the new reality,” said Jean-Francois Lambert, a former commodity trade finance banker with HSBC Holdings Plc and now an independent consultant. “It brings more optionality for oil trading and this is exactly what traders need.”

    Shale oil and gas has transformed global energy markets. The production boom provoked the Organization for Petroleum Exporting Countries into a market-share war that drove crude prices down from above $100 in 2014 to below $50 today. Through a combination of technological advances and more efficient production methods, the industry proved more resilient to the downturn than most people expected. So when OPEC changed tack in November and started cutting production to boost prices, U.S. output surged again to the highest since 2015….

    Traders are showing their confidence about the future of shale, said Lambert, the independent consultant.

    1. Hi Glenn,

      We will see if these investments pay out at under $50/b. Eventually investors will become tired of losing money. This may be a matter of “irrational exuberance” on the part of these investors.

      1. Dennis,

        Traders profits aren’t based on the absolute price of oil. They are more interested in having a dependable future supply of oil that needs to be traded. They make their money on the juice, not the absolute price of oil.

        1. Hi Glenn,

          My mistake. Traders are more gamblers than investors, I am not much interested in what traders think, the investors in oil companies (either through equities or bonds or direct lines of credit) are far more important in my view.

          Though traders do influence the oil price so may be important as well, I am just less focused on short term price movements.

    2. Whether it is a reality or just an illusion that the Permian can supply low cost oil for the foreseeable future, it works for me in that it kills interest in projects elsewhere, especially those in environmentally sensitive areas.

      And if the net result is under-investment in oil and gas projects, and, as a result, much higher prices at some point in the future, those high prices might be an added incentive for societies to come to grips with needing to find more non-carbon ways to power the world.

      It’s a two-step process. Very low prices, which kill projects, and then very high prices, which force new energy ideas.

      1. Hi Boomer,

        If it happens gradually (the increase in oil prices) at maybe 15% to 20% annual price increases over several years, your scenario is great. A fast spike in oil prices may create economic turmoil and a great deal of suffering for those that are less fortunate, so I hope that is not what occurs.

        The scenario below has prices increasing by 17.5% per year from 2017 to 2023 and then by 5% per year from 2023 to 2028. A price increase like this might be gradual enough for the World economy to adjust without a depression.

  6. George. I took a little time and looked at well by well production for Energy XXI, a company that specializes in shallow GOM production. Energy XXI went through BK and I lost track of them.

    Surprising to me how many offshore wells in GOM are producing under 100 BOPD. I know little about operations offshore. However, when I do know that onshore deep wells begin to become tough in terms of economics once they fall below the 50 BOPD threshold, I begin to wonder how many GOM wells are being operated at a loss, and have been for 3 years now? I assume plugging these wells is very expensive, and therefore limping along at a slow burn may be preferable.

    I’d appreciate your insights here. Have to wonder if maybe this story is playing out offshore in other parts of the world too, with most selling oil for $40 or less.

    1. Unmanned, shallow water platforms might work at 100 bpd with a few wells, I can’t imagine deep water, manned platforms being economic at that sort of flow, if nothing else I’m not sure many deep wells would be easy to restart if that is all they are producing, at least in water flood reservoirs. I don’t know where else there would be the same sort of density of shallow production in mature fields as GoM – maybe parts of Brazil and Saudi, but I think their fields are much larger. The shallow gas in GoM is a few years ahead of the oil fields for maturity and I have seen almost nothing concerning how that infrastructure is being or has been decommissioned. In the UK decommissioning costs are huge, I think estimated over $80 billion and growing, and the costs are tax negative so, as of last year, the North Sea is a net cost to tax payers. I had thought the recent announcement of lower GoM lease costs was to benefit existing small producers but it looks like it is only for leases in the next round. In the UK lower royalties and taxes were introduced in recent years to keep the low producing fields on line, for higher recovery and to allow for future tie backs, but it hasn’t always worked – e.g. Brent is being decommissioned which means the Shell Penguins tie back now has to be shut down and a new FPSO sought to complete the field recovery.

  7. Victor Davis Hanson: We Should Show A Little Gratitude For The Fracking Industry
    http://www.investors.com/politics/columnists/victor-davis-hanson-we-should-show-a-little-gratitude-for-the-fracking-industry/

    Less than 10 years ago, America’s energy future looked bleak.

    World oil prices in 2008 had spiked to more than $100 per barrel of crude….

    “Peak oil” — the theory that the world had already extracted more crude oil than was still left in the ground — was America’s supposed bleak fate. Ten years ago, rising gas prices, spiraling trade deficits and ongoing war in the oil-rich Middle East only underscored America’s precarious dependence on foreign sources of oil.

    In 2012, when gas prices were hitting $4 a gallon in some areas, President Obama admonished the country that we “can’t just drill our way to lower gas prices.” That was a putdown of former Alaska governor and vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin’s refrain, “Drill, baby, drill.”

    Obama barred new oil and gas permits on federal lands. Steven Chu, who would become secretary of energy in the Obama administration, had earlier mused that gas prices might ideally rise to European levels (about $10 a gallon), thereby forcing Americans to turn to expensive subsidized alternative green fuels.

    But over the last five years, frackers have refined their craft on private properties, finding ever cheaper and more efficient ways to extract huge amounts of crude oil and natural gas from shale rock.

    In 2017, despite millions of square miles being off-limits to drillers, America is close to reaching 10 million barrels of crude oil production per day, the highest level in the nation’s history. The U.S. may soon surpass Saudi Arabia as the world’s largest petroleum producer….

    When OPEC and other overseas producers tried to bankrupt frackers by flooding the world with their supposedly more cheaply produced oil, the effort backfired. American entrepreneurs learned to frack oil and natural gas even more cheaply and undercut the foreign gambit. The result is a windfall for all sectors of the American economy.

    From 2014 to 2016, fracking helped cut the price of gasoline by $1.50 a gallon, saving American drivers an average of more than $1,000 per year.

    Due to the fracking of natural gas, the United States has reduced its carbon emissions by about 12% over the last decade, according to the Energy Information Administration — a far greater rate than the environmentally conscious European Union.

    Fracking and cheaper gas are allowing a critical breathing space for strapped American consumers, as alternative energy production and transportation slowly become more efficient and competitive.

    Fracking has created a national savings of about 5 million barrels of imported oil per day over the last decade. That translates to roughly $100 billion in annual savings by avoiding foreign oil.

    Fracking has allowed the U.S. to enjoy some of the lowest electricity rates and gas prices in the industrial world. The result is that cheap energy costs are luring all sorts of energy-intensive industries — from aluminum to plastics to fertilizers — back to the U.S., with the potential of creating millions of new, high-paying jobs.

    Fracking has given America virtual energy independence, freeing it from the leverage of unstable and often hostile Middle East regimes. The result is less need to interfere in the chronic squabbling in the oil-rich but unstable Persian Gulf.

    Fracking has reduced oil prices and radically weakened America’s rivals and enemies. Desperate oil exporters like Iran, Russia and Venezuela are short about half the oil income that they enjoyed 10 years ago….

    The once-feared OPEC oil cartel, the longtime bane of the United States, is now nearly impotent.

    Friends such as Israel have gained energy independence by fracking. In contrast, some European allies who have banned fracking out of environmental worries are more vulnerable to Russian, Iranian and Middle Eastern pressure than ever before.

    Fracking is not easy. It requires legally protected property and mineral rights, a natural entrepreneurial spirit, environmental concern and a free market. In other words, it is an American way of doing business.

      1. Today’s mentality. You see it on the internet, and you can assume it is true. Independent thought not required. Just regurgitate.

      2. Consumption is 19.5 mbpd and grew last year. Production is less than 10 and declined last year. Not clear how that equates to independence.

        1. Products supplied in EIA weekly last week 22.225 million BOPD. Highest since stat began to be tracked by EIA in 1990.

          Will be interesting to see if this was just an outlier.

          1. Here’s an eyebrow raiser:

            Cruise ship industry, about 12,500 ships in the world.

            They burn 140 tons of fuel per day. X 7 for barrels is 980 barrels.

            12500 X 980 = 12.25 million bpd.

            REALLY hard to believe, but those are the numbers. Maybe something wrong there. The X7 may be wrong because the fuel is much more dense than plain crude?

            Regardless, 63% of all passengers originate in North America and 37% of trips are Carribean and GoM.

            Most discussion is about envirowacko whining how 16 ships pollute the same as all cars in the world combined. Zero importance. Oil will be burned.

            1. There aren’t 12500 big cruise ships, more like 250 to 350. There might be a lot of small boats that carry less than 10 people (e.g. sailing cruising) but they wouldn’t burn much oil.

            2. Nah, 140 tons of fuel/day is average. Bigger ships is more.

              Guys going to Antarctica use less. 140 – 150 tons is specified as avg. Water is viscous.

              The literature has talk of LNG. Then it is all dismissed for safety. Too easy to ignite.

            3. Over the past 30 or so years I have been on multiple ocean and river cruises, including one on the Yangtze. In my opinion there is no better vacation. Their demise will be a great loss. The cruise lines did bow to pressure to eliminate ocean skeet shooting.

            4. Doing the numbers wiki lists about 320 cruise ships as operating – I was comparing ‘big’ cruise ships with ordinary boats like cabin cruisers or even river sightseeing vessels.

            5. Hi Watcher,

              I think 140 tonnes per day might be the average for the big ships, but there are only 70 of those.

              Where are you getting your data from?

              I found this

              Total number of 2014 cruise ships is 410 (including river cruise boats), total number of berths is 467,629. More than 300 of those are sea-going, with capacity to accommodate a total of over 300,000 passengers per day.

              http://www.repositioncruises.com/cruise-industry/

              The riverboat cruise ships are pretty small, so my guess is the 145 tonnes of fuel would be for the 300 oceangoing ships.

              So 145*7*300=304 kb/d used by ocean going cruise ships. Though this may assume the boat travels continuously, which is usually not the case.

          2. Hi Watcher and Shallowsand,

            I think the more important metric is net crude inputs to refineries and blenders. I also don’t think the weekly numbers are very accurate.

            The monthly data for net crude inputs to refineries and blenders was about 17 Mb/d in April 2017. The four week average for June 30 for net crude inputs to refineries was also about 17 Mb/d, US C+C production was about 9 Mb/d so if we cut our petroleum liquids consumption by 47% or raised output to 17 Mb/d, then we would indeed be crude independent.

            I do not expect we will be independent of crude until we reduce consumption, maybe by 2040 or 2050. Of course output may fall faster than consumption, hard to guess for sure.

            1. Hi Dennis,

              Re: “hard to guess for sure”

              Please clarify. Do you mean that it’s possible to guess for sure though difficult — but actually possible? And, how about “guess for sure”? What does that mean? For sure it’s a guess, I’d guess? 🙂

            2. Hi Doug,

              LOL. Yes poor wording no doubt. The meaning was supposed to be that even I am not going to make such a guess, for it is likely to be far from the mark.

              Any future scenario is a guess, to be sure.

              And it is not hard to guess, but it is difficult to be correct, about one in a billion (but that might be too optimistic).

            3. In short, accurate guesses about the future are difficult to produce.

        1. Hi Glenn,

          We are talking about oil, that chart is for all energy.

          Let’s compare apples to apples.

          Chart below shows US net crude imports in the EIA’s AEO 2017.

          No case has the US as a net exporter of crude by 2050.

          So much for US oil independence.

            1. Well, it depends who’s in charge and at the moment the entire head office is out to lunch, eating KFC and tweeting, and nobody is in charge. Example #331: I thought we might need these heavier crudes to blend with LTO here in America, but nooooooooo: http://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News/World-News/Worlds-Third-Largest-Oil-Importer-Secures-Deal-With-US.html

              I know, lets IMPORT heavy oil from Columbia instead. Out one door, in the other. Its another Forrest Gump moment!

            2. in that article they say they are getting Mars Blend Crude. It comes from GoM.

              Assay is API 28.8. Yo, GoM guys, how do you get that thick stuff to flow from down there.

              Interesting distillation yields:

              Naptha and C1-C4 15%
              Diesel and Kerosene 33% (!!)
              50+% Atmos Residue (more processing to get heavy stuff)

              Maybe India boils it with coal. They got coal.

            3. 28.8 API isn’t heavy – it’s the middle of the medium range. Neither is it likely to be thick, which describes viscosity. How well it flows depends much more on the reservoir properties, GOR and depth than on the stock tank oil. It looks like it’s a pretty good fit for the India refineries, and a good price. There currently isn’t a shortage of any sort of oil so everything is running on arbitrage.

            4. A tad surprising so little gasoline?

              The reporter called it heavy.

              He didn’t go get the assay.

              Ya you’re right. I remember seeing far lower API from Orinoco.

            5. API 28.8 is actually a pretty good fit for lots of EF condensate and its close. In the mean time inventories of LTO continue to swell in America and the only reason they are not higher than ever is because of exports. You guys are missing the entire damn point and that point is we are full up with condensate right now, its coming out of our ears and the stupid US shale oil industry keeps adding to the pot. There is no gasoline demand this summer. We need to leave some of it in the ground as a savings account. The shale industry needs to be put on a short leash.

              I’ve spent a lot of time in Australia, the comments here about that article also miss the point, entirely. Its always something else other than what the article says, unless of course you can use it to promote your agenda, then its a relevant article. Shale development in the Cooper has been an economic disaster. Gas in the Carnarvon is getting exported all away without any internal infrastructure to spread it around Australia. Big gas runs the show in Australia and it has left its own country behind in the name of money.

              My x-box works so I am glad Mr. Stehle commented. It means he is not on his way to Washington to assume some role in implementing energy policy in the US. Its bad enough as it is.

            6. Note the Prime Minister of Australia’s declaration that he would block some exports until local needs were met. But, I guess, he doesn’t know what the hell he is talking about with regards to his own country; some internet experts here on POB do, however. This Aussie thing, by the way, is a perfect example of Jeffrey Brown’s Land Export Model at work. And, by the way, Jeffrey estimates volumetric decline of gas in America at something like 17 BCFPD.

              Exporting America’s last, limited remaining hydrocarbon resources, under the false narrative of shale abundance, is stupid.

              Dennis Coyne: go ahead and cram all the TRR unconventional shale reserves you want into the mix (recovery of those reserves, in the absence of over 75-85 dollar oil prices, will all be a function of available capital and a favorable American monetary policy), please, HOW MANY MORE BBLS. OF UNCONVENTIONAL SHALE RESOURCES ARE AVAILABLE IN THE U.S., AT CURRENT SHALE OIL PRODUCTION RATES, HOW MANY YEARS DO WE HAVE LEFT, and DO YOU BELIEVE WE WILL HAVE ENOUGH TO GET US, OUR KIDS, TO THE END, ENOUGH TO BE EXPORTING IT AT THE MOMENT ALL AROUND THE GLOBE AT $40 DOLLARS A BARREL? Thank you.

            7. Watcher,

              Here’s a graph form the EIA that shows where some of the various crudes, including Mars, fit in the scheme of things.

              As the EIA goes on to explain:

              “Crude oils that are light (higher degrees of API gravity, or lower density) and sweet (low sulfur content) are usually priced higher than heavy, sour crude oils. This is partly because gasoline and diesel fuel, which typically sell at a significant premium to residual fuel oil and other “bottom of the barrel” products, can usually be more easily and cheaply produced using light, sweet crude oil. The light sweet grades are desirable because they can be processed with far less sophisticated and energy-intensive processes/refineries.”

              https://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.php?id=7110

            8. Watcher,

              And as this graph from the Colorado School of Mines shows, Bakken and Eagle Ford LTO have almost the same yields as WTI and Brent.

              LTO, despite what the shale bashers say, is a light sweet crude and is one of the most valuable and desirable crudes in the world.

            9. Mike

              I posted another update on the HRZ well near the top of the comments. Fernando has already replied.

            10. Howdy from a hot S. Texas, Lights; I read the report. Its not good. If they are now shutting the well in for BHP buildup tests it is pretty much a dead duck, IMO. Trying to now artificially unload frac fluid in that area of Alaska will cost a fortune. I would say the pilot test failed and it will be interesting now to see if they even drill a HZ test. Thanks much.

              Mike

            11. Thanks for the reply Mike.

              I agree it looks like a dud they claimed in presentations it would flow at such a prolific rate it would offset the extra costs associated with Alaska.

            12. Mike,

              It depends on refinery design.

              Some refineries are designed to refine light sweet. Other refineries are designed to refine heavy sour.

              We export light sweet becaue that’s what most foreign refinerares are set up to refine.

              We import heavy sour because that’s what US refineries are set up to refine.

              It’s all totally logical for anyone who understands the refining business.

            13. What you have just said makes no sense because the US didnt build gazillion new refineries since the export ban lifted. So they are designed to do higher API liquids as well as heavier since until recently only condensate could export and thus LTO and heavy both had to refine here.

              As for Colorodo School of Mines chart, pls post a date. I posted a link a few weeks ago of a WTI assay, which after decades of quoting API 39.5, now quotes 40.7. It has changed because LTO flow into Cushing has dragged the number up. The yardstick changed so don’t compare to it.

              Look for Statoil’s or Marathon’s Capline or BP’s assay page to get up to date stuff.

              Oh and repeat to yourself often “This Is Not An Investment Blog. It is a Peakoil blog.”. Oil’s value is not measured in money.

            14. The wholesale price of electricity in South Australia is A$188/Mwh this moment, down from about A$350/Mwh a few minutes ago.

              This entire Australian situation can provide an enormous education to everyone with an interest in learning about these crucial issues.

              As the above referenced article clearly, repetitively states, the restrictions on additional gas development, as well as the premature terminating of existing, carbon based generation. (“… as other steady power sources are shutting down”) play a significant role in the current crisis.

              There are MANY other factors that have prioritized wind and solar adoption in the Aussie power generating industry, along with stifling more hydrocarbon output.
              An objective accounting of the myriad factors involved could be enlightening to all, most especially, perhaps, to the staunch advocates of renewable power generation.

              As an aside, Saint Musk’s 100 Mw battery can provide only a few minutes juice to the SA grid which currently needs 1,600 Mwh as these words are typed.

              4 months out, SA hits its peak summertime power consumption for which the grid operator, AEMO, projects there is simply insufficient supply … at any price.

            15. Dennis

              Thanks for the opportunity to engage with Island Boys sources.

              Battery about to run out and I’m not particularly enthralled to spend time researching, but I most assuredly will.

              The tone, verbiage of IB’s snippet seems to convey a slanted perspective to the max, but I will gladly engage ‘the Other’ and let the facts/data determine the right and wrong of these issues.

              Meantime, checking in on Aussie’s RET, RECs, Hazelwood and Northern shutdowns might give you a ‘bigger’ view of the current situation down in Oz.

            16. projects there is simply insufficient supply … at any price.

              The future in a phrase.

            17. Dennis

              Just spent more time than I readily have closely going over the 23 page pdf right from the AEMO describing the Feb. 10, 2017 overload incident in New South Wales for about 90 minutes from 5:00 PM to about 6:30 PM.

              I sure wish someone WAY more knowledgeable than I could weigh in because there seems a ‘lot more’ to the story than the MSM (Guardian – Feb. 22, 2017) accounts would have one think.

              Couple of points …

              Super hot day, 43C or so for 4 hours.
              One gas plant, Torrawa (sp?) 440Mw tripped offline for 2 hours.
              4 natgas plants called in as emergency had no natgas supply.
              One other plant seemed down for maintenance.
              Wind generated 500Mw at 1:00 PM. Dropped off to 284 at 5:00.

              Here’s an interesting item …
              Rooftop solar generated almost 900 Mw at 1:00PM and dropped to 271 at crunch time (5:00 PM).

              All of which leaves me with wondering how much economic impact the Ra and Zephyr boys are/have been exerting on the coal/gas burners.

              I don’t know, but to claim that the hydrocarbon outfits dropped the ball may be a skewed evaluation.

            18. It doesn’t make economic sense, and is impossible, to make a complex system 100% infallible. Electrical supply systems are usually better than most – and this was a controlled event where they just cut off some of the big users for a relatively short time, from what I can see. The USA, or at least Texas which I think is separate, uses rolling brownouts regularly during high demands, it is also the least reliable system I have ever experienced due to outages from storm damage. But would it make sense to pay the huge costs needed to make it more reliable?

              The issue with the Australia outage that I got is that the heatwave contributed. As things heat up we are going from 3 and 5 sigma high temperature or drought or flood events being rare to never, to them being monthly and yearly, so all the legacy plant will turn out to have the wrong design envelope, and eventually we’ll get longterm, uncontrolled and/or unrecoverable failures. And that will be news worth reading.

            19. 100% is not possible, but nearly 100% should be tried in an industry country.

              There are lots of productions that don’t “like” being browned out – they need lots of time to get them running again, and produce lots of wastage during this process.

              Or it’s a security thing – it’s possible but not recommended to brown out high speed trains, airports etc.
              And it’s not economic,too, for everyone to have a backup electricity generation besides very critical installations like hospitals or big IT centers.

              In a rural area with only small commercial districts it is normal to have electricity interruptions. Most of them due to severe weather conditions.

            20. Don’t wanna beat this SA power situation into the ground, but the unfolding situation may prove highly instructive.
              Right now, 02:30 on Saturday, wintertime, spot SA wholesale juice costs A$105/Mwh.
              This is ‘down’ from A$250 just a few hours ago.

              These costs are wildly unsustainable in maintaining any sort of modern industrial society.
              The Hazelwood and Northern coal burners recently shut down.
              Meanwhile, as described in the NY Times the other day, 1,600 coal burners, worldwide, are in some stage of being built.

              If anyone can justify this turn of events, I’m all ears to learn.

            21. Quick edit …

              Using the 5 minute metric rather than the default 30 minute on the AEMO Data Dasboard page, spot price pegged at A$338/Mwh.

              Insane.

            22. Mike,

              Right, the blackouts which have occured, despite some of the highest electricity prices in the world, are all the fault of those evil fossil fuel producers.

              Banning fracking, $0.60 cent feed-in tarriffs for solar, huge up-front subsidies for solar and wind instalations, grid problems caused by a surfeit of intermittent wind and solar, none of that had anything to do with causing the problems.

          1. Unless the government gets a brain and starts taxing gas at the pump hard enough to cut consumption. But I’m not holding my breath.

          2. Dennis,

            If you will follow the threading, I was responding to Fernando Leanme, who claimed “The USA has no energy independence.”

            Leanme, in turn, I assume was responding to the original article, which said “fracking has given America virtual energy independence.”

            You, however, changed the subject from energy independence to oil independence.

            This manipulaiton of content is a rhetological fallacy that actually has a name: It is called moving the goal posts.

            1. The above guy doesn’t seem to understand that crude oil is but one line in a set of dominoes. Non-renewable, finite resources such as crude oil have interesting properties, some of which include being non-renewable in supply and finite in extent. Thus, the rationale for this blog — to get a handle on these intrinsic properties. Too bad that you think the act of doing this analysis is somehow evil.

            2. Hi Glenn,

              The opinion piece you quoted was mostly talking about the increase in LTO output, any objective person would read it as such.

              Yes you moved the goal posts, by changing the subject to all energy rather than oil output which was clearly the focus of the opinion piece.

              I am used to that, and I will counter your charts with a chart that shows that the US will not be oil independent.

              Here is the quote:

              Fracking has given America virtual energy independence, freeing it from the leverage of unstable and often hostile Middle East regimes. The result is less need to interfere in the chronic squabbling in the oil-rich but unstable Persian Gulf.

              Does it not seem that “energy” in this quote refers to oil.

              If not why the focus on the middle east which exports very little natural gas to the US, but is very influential in the World Oil market?

            3. Dennis Coyne says:

              The opinion piece you quoted was mostly talking about the increase in LTO output, any objective person would read it as such.

              Nah. The article talks equally about oil and natural gas.

              From the article:

              But over the last five years, frackers have refined their craft on private properties, finding ever cheaper and more efficient ways to extract huge amounts of crude oil and natural gas from shale rock….

              Due to the fracking of natural gas, the United States has reduced its carbon emissions by about 12% over the last decade, according to the Energy Information Administration — a far greater rate than the environmentally conscious European Union….

              Fracking has allowed the U.S. to enjoy some of the lowest electricity rates and gas prices in the industrial world. The result is that cheap energy costs are luring all sorts of energy-intensive industries — from aluminum to plastics to fertilizers — back to the U.S., with the potential of creating millions of new, high-paying jobs.

              Fracking has given America virtual energy independence….

            4. While many of the folks who follow this site observe oil related matters primarily, specifically the actual or potential amounts in existence, it may behoove readers to step back a bit and observe a few ‘downstream’ effects of shale-inspired production.

              At about $200 billion investment, the biggest expansion by FAR in the US petrochemical industry is underway.
              Multi billion dollar facilities are being built with continual downstream manufacturing plants being announced to take advantage of the world’s lowest cost feedstock and electricity.

              This is why companies like Samsung, LG, Foxconn (!), Haribo, BMW are expanding or creating plants making white goods, cars, candy, and on and on.
              A single power plant in Ohio, the Guernsey Power Station – one of dozens being built in the Appalachian Basin – will produce enough electricity (1,600 Mw) to power virtually all of South Australia’s baseload.
              Juice in SA is A$97 at midnight, now, whereas it is US$22 in Ohio 8:00 AM.
              This is why manufacturers are locating here.

              The 16 trade Western Pennsylvania Building Council is actively seeking 20,000 apprentices for their paid 3 to 5 year programs so as to ensure sufficient skilled workers for what is described the biggest, long term build out of commercial projects in that area’s history.

              Brand new, ultra modern schools and hospitals have been built in tiny western North Dakota towns due to oil sourced revenue.

              The impact of vast, vast amount of hydrocarbons is widespread over a broad range of activities, and is barely getting underway.

            5. maybe those allocating the $$$ have a bit more insight than the “experts” that post here, just a thought ?

              then again it is easier sit in front of a computor telling others they don’t know what they are doing and making excuses than to get out of the chair and start being productive.

            6. TT

              To me, simply staggering.

              Minute, but highly instructive point … the creation, from SCRATCH, of an entirely new industry – bulk, ocean borne transportation of liquid ethane.

              Never even existed before.

              So, you have executives with decades of experience, pondering countless variables, and deciding to invest tens of billions of dollars to design, build, and operate what is now a fleet of several dozen huge ships.
              The infrastructure at Morgan’s Point and Marcus Hook is not even completed yet the ‘virtual pipeline’ out of MP to the new cracker in India is underway.

              Running out soon?
              Uneconomic?

              Puhleeze.

            7. Hi Glenn,

              But as I showed, the part of the quote after “energy independence” (that you leave out for some reason) clearly points towards the Middle East which exports very little coal or natural gas to the US.

              Yes fracking has produced both oil and natural gas and more natural gas has helped to reduce electricity prices. The US is natural gas independent and may remain so for some time.

              The US will only become independent of imported oil (which has always been the focus of “energy independence”) if we reduce out consumption to 10 Mb/d or less.

              How do you propose we do that?

            8. >How do you propose we do that?

              Taxing gas at the pump would be an excellent start. Infill development instead of sprawl would help a lot as well.

            9. Hi Glenn,

              Also the chart you posted includes coal.
              So if you want to interpret the piece as oil and gas, then post a chart on that.

              The quote on energy independence referred to the middle east which is much more important in oil markets but affects the US natural gas market very little.

              Oil is the appropriate chart. All energy much less relevant, a red herring.

            10. Dennis,

              So if we’re talking about energy independence, a chart about oil indpendence “is the appropriate chart”?

              I don’t think so.

      3. Good luck trying to convince anyone in America of that.

        It funny these guys have two modes they switch between. Sometimes its the heroic frackers that caused low oil prices, and sometimes it those sneaky dirty Arabs trying to destroy America.

  8. What Oil Bulls Don’t Know About Global Inventories | OilPrice.com: “The problem is that, as has been the case over the past year, stockpiles aren’t coming down because the oil is being used, it’s just being moved overseas. And nowhere is this more visible than in the record amount of oil exported overseas.”

    “U.S. demand did hit a record in the last week of June, but more than half of the week-on-week increase came from the volatile ‘other oil products’ category, not core fuels like gasoline, diesel or jet fuel. In fact, Lee writes that gasoline demand has lagged last year’s level all year and still shows little sign of exceeding it. Over the weekend, we presented BofA’s amazement at the failure of gasoline demand to rise during the peak of driving season, prompting the bank’s energy analyst to ask ‘Where Is Driving Season?’, more specifically, ‘is this year’s driving season over before it began?'”

    1. BoA’s only evidence of falling consumption is a lower price. Once you reject that silliness, things become more clear.

      The numbers are right there in the bible. US consumption last year up. US production last year down.

      1. Watcher,

        It depends on what one means by consumption, if we focus on gasoline diesel and jet fuel, you are correct at least for April consumption is up YOY. I don’t trust the weekly data, it is not very good. The 4 week average for the end of June also shows consumption is up YOY by 1% for gasoline, distillate and jet fuel combined.

    1. Hi Texas Tea,

      Nobody expects the World will run out of oil, simply that there will be a peak in crude plus condensate output between 2020 and 2030, though some believe this may happen sooner or has already occurred.

      Yes oil output has been resilient, but this is not likely to continue beyond 2030. As the cheap oil becomes scarce an oil prices rise, oil use may get replaced more and more by other energy sources providing electricity to battery powered vehicles. Personal transport will be replaced first, then society will move on to freight moved by electrified rail and battery powered trucks (from rail terminal to factory or store). Personal transport by 2050, land freight by 2070. After that there will be little need for oil except maybe ships and planes and these uses may be replaced by 2090.

      1. Another example of an “oil industry geophysicist” posting at WUWT misrepresenting the facts. So often it turns out that people like Middleton that deny that oil is a finite resource also deny that AGW can occur. Middleton spends most of his time on WUWT writing anti-AGW posts. There is something about the oil industry that indoctrinates their workers.

        The Eugene Island case shows rapidly diminishing returns regardless of the fact that secondary production peaks occur. Middleton says that “Most of the growth comes from well performance, field extensions and economic revisions.”

        The main revision being that somehow, some way, the oil industry will redefine renewable energy as oil, lol.

  9. Solo una pregunta ¿A quien pertenece esos yacimientos? ¿Pertenecen a México o a Estados Unidos?

  10. THERE’S STILL A MAJOR REASON WHY OIL COULD JUMP BACK TO $120, EXPERTS SAY

    http://www.cnbc.com/2017/07/07/theres-still-a-major-reason-why-oil-could-jump-back-to-110-experts-say.html

    With Libya and Nigeria not being impacted by internal conflict I think we have almost no oil off production for non oil industry reasons, (unless you count the lack of maintenance in Venezuela) – I’m not sure when last that happened, if ever. So all the risks are likely to be on supply upsets now.

    “Venezuela’s 2 million barrels of oil a day could literally go any day. Mexico looks poor. Azerbaijan’s in trouble. China’s own production is collapsing rapidly,” he told CNBC’s Squawk Box on Friday.

    “One only has to have one mistake and the only thing you’ll be talking about all morning is oil at $120.”

  11. BLOG: NEW PROJECT SANCTIONS ON THE RISE

    https://www.woodmac.com/ts/tech-services/2017/06/22/blog-new-project-sanctions-on-the-rise/

    When we look at the numbers, the bias appears clear. Of the 8.0 billion boe sanctioned across 15 projects, 5.5 billion boe is gas versus 2.5 billion boe of liquids.

    Eleven of the 15 project sanctions year-to-date are either brownfield expansions on existing fields or subsea tiebacks.

    I missed this a couple of weeks back. Didn’t see it posted here. 2.5 Gb would only support about 400 kbpd, but as most of it is brownfield or tieback it wouldn’t necessarily be added production but either extending a plateau or ameliorating decline rates. Overall this just means any oil supply shortfall after 2018/2019 will be longer and sharper.

    1. 2.5 billion _BOE_ liquids.

      BTW. thank you for a very interesting and well researched article/post.

      1. Thanks – I’m not sure what you are saying concerning the BOE number. I use Gb which is confusing probably, but so are most things to do with units in the oil industry.

    2. From the Aramco CEO speech yesterday:

      https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-07-10/aramco-to-spend-300-billion-as-ceo-frets-about-world-oil-supply

      Saudi Aramco, which plans what could be the world’s biggest initial public offering, will invest more than $300 billion over the next decade to maintain its spare oil-production capacity and explore for more natural gas, President and Chief Executive Officer Amin Nasser said.

      I still don’t get why he thinks it’s his job to tell the ret of the industry how much they should be investing, but reading the above I’d say they have no more oil to find. $30 billion per year is about $8 per barrel production, which is a pretty good operating cost for mature fields, I don’t see that number representing too much new, greenfield development.

      “Investments in smaller increments such as shale oil will just not cut it. Yet without those higher investment levels, the energy transition — and therefore energy security — may be fatally compromised.”

      1. Sometimes reporters presume things. The only part of that article that strongly suggests Aramco is talking about domestic is the blurb about spare capacity, but even that could be Aramco spare and not purely KSA spare. Lots of national oil companies go elsewhere. Maybe they have run out.

      2. Nasser said:

        Current oil prices won’t affect the company’s decision for a planned share sale, Nasser told reporters at the conference. Brent crude, the international benchmark, has slid 17 percent this year and was 5 cents higher at $46.94 a barrel at 7:10 a.m. in London….

        “Investments in smaller increments such as shale oil will just not cut it.”

        Could Nasser be talking his book? Oil price does play some role in determining the share price of oil companies’ stock, though it is of course not the only thing that plays a role.

        And Nasser has no way of knowing whether US shale will “cut it” or not. The Saudi oil ministers severely underestimated US shale once before, a miscalculation that cost them dearly.

        From his comments, it’s pretty clear Nasser believes he is fighting a battle on two fronts, one against US shale and the other against renewables.

  12. Global energy investment fell for a second-year in 2016 as oil and gas spending continues to drop
    11 July 2017
    Global energy investment amounted to USD 1.7 trillion in 2016, or 2.2% of global GDP. For the first time, spending on the electricity sector around the world exceeded the combined spending on oil, gas and coal supply. The share of clean-energy spending reached 43% of total supply investment, a record high.
    IEA – https://www.iea.org/newsroom/news/2017/july/global-energy-investment-fell-for-a-second-year-in-2016-as-oil-and-gas-spending-c.html

    1. Lots of monthly O&G reports due soon
      EIA’s STEO today, OPEC monthly report on Wednesday. IEA on Thursday. North Dakota Director’s Cut on Friday.
      Next week, EIA’s DPR on Monday and JODI release their data on Tuesday.

      Some weekly inventory data on Twitter, hubs like ARA and Singapore release data weekly along with Japan and the USA.
      https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DEcS3kiXsAEcGeo.jpg

      1. Cheap energy only seems like a good thing if you’re a net buyer, not a net seller. There are a lot of detached homeowners in Florida who could be net sellers.

  13. The next couple of months might be interesting. Today more major banks cut their oil price forecasts below $50 for 2018. So, I would expect to find out whether these shale operators can drill with borrowed money with forecasts under $50. I just do not see how increased drilling can continue with all of the detailed analysis disclosed here [some sourced from other sites] that shows most of these wells unprofitable below $50. Many of us here do not believe that they can grow production without using borrowed money, and projections should show that at those projected prices, the borrowings cannot be paid back unless drilling is curtailed.

    It seems that the banks are throwing in the towel until they actually see higher prices.

    1. The banks facilitate the loans. They don’t lend them. Collect a commission, too.

      Welcome to the world of ETFs.

  14. Dennis, here’s an article from Rigzone that I believe you should like, because it makes many of the same arguments you frequently do.

    Oil Fields Pumping a Third of Supply Die Fastest in 24 Years
    http://www.rigzone.com/news/article.asp?hpf=1&a_id=150946&utm_source=DailyNewsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_term=2017-07-11&utm_content=&utm_campaign=feature_2

    The tussle for supremacy between OPEC and U.S. shale drillers is killing off older oil fields [read Mike and shallow sand] at the fastest pace in almost a quarter century. That could hurt the industry once the current glut has faded.

    The three-year price slump triggered by the battle for market share choked off funds for aging deposits elsewhere, accelerating their decline. Output at older fields from China to North America — making up a third of world supply — fell 5.7 percent last year, the most since 1992, according to Rystad Energy AS. It’ll drop about 6 percent in 2017 if oil stays at current prices, the consultant said.

    Oil fell from above $100 a barrel in 2014 to as low as $26 in 2016 as the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries opened the taps in an effort to stem the surge in shale production. That set off the worst industry downturn in a generation, forcing cost-cutting companies to focus on higher-margin assets at the expense of older, costlier fields. While OPEC changed course last year and curbed output to boost prices, shale was the main beneficiary and resurgent U.S. output has kept crude below $50.

    “A lot of the focus is on OPEC and shale and not on the decline at these mature fields, where supply is struggling,” said Espen Erlingsen, a partner at Oslo-based Rystad. “We’re starting to see the long-term impact of lower oil prices.”

    Though new projects mean total global production continues to rise, the slide at aging fields may give OPEC a helping hand by reducing surplus supply today, according to Erlingsen. The danger for major oil companies — many of which are gathering in Istanbul this week for the World Petroleum Congress — is that the decline may be difficult to reverse, increasing the risk of future supply shortfalls as spending cuts take their toll for years to come.

    “About $1 trillion in investments has been lost in the current downturn,” Saudi Aramco Chief Executive Officer Amin Nasser said Monday at the congress….

    Central to the trend is China, where aging fields provide about half the total production, Rystad said. Volumes from those deposits sank 9.5 percent last year, three times the rate of 2015. Even in the U.S., where shale has risen to prominence, about a third of output comes from fields that began pumping last century. Their supply fell 8.3 percent in 2016 and 11 percent in 2015 compared with an average 4.1 percent in the previous five years, Rystad data show….

    In the longer term, the implications for global supply give cause for concern. International Energy Agency Executive Director Fatih Birol has said lower spending on new production will probably result in a shortfall in the next few years. Conventional-oil project approvals dropped to a 50-year low in the past two years, Birol said in January….

    For the time being, enough new projects are keeping oil flowing, said Patrick Gibson, research director for global oil supply at Wood Mackenzie. “The key question is how long it will take for the lack of investments to have a greater impact on global oil supply.”

    1. 6% is a reasonable measure of natural decline.

      Other countries don’t have HYG surrogates.

      Maybe the most important consideration in this stuff is to reject the notion of even distribution. If there is scarcity, everyone doesn’t share and share alike in insufficiency. That’s just absurd.

      Someone will take from someone else. Why would they not?

    2. Hmm, a third of world production is roundabout 30 Mb/d – and 6% decline is then 1.8 Mb/d.

      That can’t be replaced by pure fracking oil, even optimistic scenarios don’t assume this speed of growth about several years, and not with the current price scenario. Other sources have to be scaled up here, Iraq/Iran + some deep sea oil. But investing in these projects is reduced now, not increased.

      The big relieve this time was the ramping up of Nigeria and Lybia production – without this we would see much higher prices today. This rebound was not really on the plan.

      So for a desparate oil nation – giving a few million $ over black channels to rebel groups would give a big return on each $ invested.

      1. Eulenspiegel,

        US shale oil production grew from about 1 million bopd in 2011 to almost 5 million bopd in 2015.

        That’s a growth rate of almost 1 million bopd per year, with a drilling and fracking technology far inferior to what we have today, and before the IOCs jumped into the fray in any significant way.

        I wouldn’t underestimate US shale.

        1. Hi Glenn,

          The technology does not create new oil, it mostly allows it to be removed from the ground more quickly.

          Remember that the longer laterals in the Permian are a big part of the story for higher well productivity. If we go from a 5000 foot lateral to 10,000 foot lateral for the average well for any given number of acres, then the number of wells that can be drilled falls by a factor of 2, ceteris paribus for that number of prospective acres.

          I think it is unwise to overestimate US LTO output, the peak will probably be about 6.5 to 7 Mb/d, in the meantime conventional and GOM and Alaskan output will continue to fall by 4%/year or more, especially at $50/b oil prices.

          1. Devon just reported a record producing well in the STACK and the wording used in the announcement was interesting.

            Mention of increased reservoir stimulation via proprietary completion techniques makes me wonder if the reference is to microproppant use.

            The CEO of Core Lab felt the recent, successful introduction of this stuff would have big impact on production.

            1. coffeeguyzz,

              I hadn’t heard the one about micropropant, so had to go look it up.

              According to Core, the use of micro proppant during the pad stage of fracturing can boost production by tens of thousands of barrels with little added cost.

              I’d also never heard of unconventional EOR — yielding an “increase of about 50% over primary recovery” — either, so that’s a new one on me too.

              So there’s still a lot of new technology on the drawing board for shale.

              Core Lab Exposes Four Trends Shaping the Industry’s Future
              https://www.oilandgas360.com/core-lab-exposes-four-trends-shaping-industrys-future/

            2. Seeking Big Oil Production Gains By Fracturing With Microproppant
              https://www.spe.org/en/jpt/jpt-article-detail/?art=2715

              At this stage the only company reporting results is Halliburton, which pumps microproppant as part of its MicroScout service. “Field results for MicroScout have shown a positive uplift of production in most of the wells that we have field trialed,” said Philip Nguyen, the chief technical advisor for Halliburton’s production enhancement line. “To be frank, there are lots of unknowns with the application of microproppant as we are only beginning to scratch the surface of using this material in shales.”

              That paper (SPE 184863) and others from Halliburton dating back to 2015 offer examples of wells with double-digit production gains when a relatively small volume of these particles are pumped early in each stage, and can reduce the treating pressure required while pumping a job.

              “We have seen about a 15% uplift in production over 12-month time frame,” said Mark Parker, technology manager for the Mid-Continent area at Halliburton, which includes the South Central Oklahoma Oil Province (SCOOP) in Oklahoma, where it has been used on nearly 20 wells.

              In the Permian Basin, gains have ranged from 15% to 30% where this has been pumped during the early part of each stage. “Theoretically, you are getting secondary fractures [propped] and getting added flow from reservoir to the well,” said Dean Prather, area technology manager for Halliburton’s production enhancement business line.

              In a sense this is the logical next step. Over time operators have slowly embraced the idea that using higher percentages of 100-mesh sand to prop early in the job can open smaller fractures and reduce the required pressure needed to treat stages.

              Calvin described the production gain by saying: “We placed it in the secondary fracture network and it can go where 100 mesh cannot go. It can keep the secondary fracture network open through production and help minimize the production loss.”

              When cumulative production is charted between wells with equal amounts of conventional proppant use, the ones with microproppant added show little gains at first, with a widening advantage as they reach the 1-year mark….

              It…does not fit neatly into the current industry focus on maximizing early production as the testing suggests that the benefits of microproppant become apparent later in the life of a well.

              Slower production declines could be a sign that these ultrafine grains are creating a larger productive network by holding open fractures that otherwise would have closed after pumping….

              “The surface area of induced, unpropped fractures can be at least an order of magnitude more than that of the main propped fracture,” according to a paper by Sharma (SPE 174946). “This implies that if it is possible to keep these fractures open by some means we may be able to achieve a significant increase in well productivity.”

              But it is not likely to work in every formation. Montgomery said a critical variable is the clay content. Too much clay (which swells when exposed to fracturing fluids) and the proppant will be embedded in the rock rather than serving as a pillar. The ideal reservoir rock has high quartz and carbonate content….

              Zillur Rahim, a supervisor in the technical study unit of Saudi Aramco’s gas reservoir management department, said the company was beginning to evaluate whether microproppant could be useful in the hard rock of its formations. But quick change is not likely.

              “This is a change of philosophy. It is hard to get anyone to do anything different,” Parker said. Rapid drilling and completions are based on complex routines that companies are reluctant to change, but he added, “Some operators are now looking at it seriously.”

            3. As an SPE member, this bullshit is pretty good bullshit, but only as to how it creates bigger IP’s and more impressive IP180’s…micro-proppant is the new, vogue shale idea of the year but there is NO evidence whatsoever that it will increase UR. Look at the realized production data and the decline rates so far. Good grief. I’ll tell you what all this micro proppant hoopla DOES do, that you won’t hear about from the SPE, for the benefit of all you internet jocks sitting in the comfort of your own homes pretending to be oilmen, this 100 mesh stuff is a bitch to keep out of laterals during flowback and ensuing 180 production periods. It requires constant, very expensive CT wash outs. Its adding a half million dollars to well costs is what it is doing. They can’t use resin-coated tail ins’ because it does not set up, it does not work, so the stuff is sloughing in the hole, all the time, causing nightmares with even getting the well to unload to get it tested, when those wells go on ESP ( a spoon full of 100 mesh talcum powder will destroy a $200K ESP), and even after month 6 when they are on rod lift. Its a nightmare.

              I thought you were an engineer, Stehle?

              Oh, I forgot, you are a RI that does not have to worry about operational issues, and costs. So, you ignore them. My bad.

              Oil prices are going down, gas takeaway is getting worse in the Permian; in spite of all this amazing internet research you guys do in your abundant free time, you know what?
              NOBODY IS MAKING ANY MONEY OUT THERE, OR UP THERE, OR DOWN THERE, OR ANYWHERE ELSE ! Its still not working.

            4. Mike,

              I appreciate the INSIGHT in the business. I find the same thing looking at the financial data. Even though I am not on the ground in the oil industry, I don’t know how in the hell anyone believes the industry is making money.

              Lastly, Global Oil & Gas debt has ballooned from $1 trillion in 2006 to $3 trillion in 2015. Even at $100 barrel oil, debt surged.

              I wonder when people are going to wake up.

              steve

            5. Mike,

              The horse and buggy oil field that you cherish no longer exists, and no amount of crying over spilt milk will make it come back.

              Try as you may, you can’t stand in the way of progress.

            6. Its not making any money, Steve. You are a voice of reason to many with your reports; please do not get caught up in all the lies about shale abundance. For it to play a significant role in our energy future, we must stay focused on its lack of profitability, its massive debt, rising interest rates and declining productivity. Two of the three shale basins in the country have already peaked, man; now they are sliding down the hill into the abyss.

              We need shale oil and shale gas. But lying about it all the time does nobody any good. Its deceiving the American public. Shale is totally dependent on credit. Its only going to work (by private enterprise) if they figure out a way to pay all that debt back and cut the cost of extraction by 50% or more. That is the ONLY way.

              We’re relying on a faction of the oil and gas industry for our future that cannot stand on its own two feet without… credit. That’s a pretty flimsy plan.

              Thank you!

              Mike

            7. Mike said:

              ….we must stay focused on its…declining productivity.

              Oh lordy! What will you come up with next? Great strides in well productivity have been achieved over the past couple of years, all with the help of technological progress that shows no signs of abatement.

            8. Mike said:

              Two of the three shale basins in the country have already peaked, man; now they are sliding down the hill into the abyss.

              Well, not exactly.

            9. Hi Glenn
              Your chart proves Mike’s point.

              So far the peak output for both the Eagle Ford and Bakken are in the past.

              The Bakken might surpass its previous peak by 200 kb/d by 2022 if oil prices reach $100/b by 2021.
              Doubtful that the Eagle Ford will reach its previous peak.

            10. Sure, Dennis.

              So if you call production that is going up “sliding down the hill into the abyss,” then what do you call production that is headed down?

  15. Venezuela’s PDVSA Guarantees Investor Security Amid Uncertainty
    http://www.rigzone.com/news/oil_gas/a/150958/Venezuelas_PDVSA_Guarantees_Investor_Security_Amid_Uncertainty?utm_source=DailyNewsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_term=2017-07-11&utm_content=&utm_campaign=industry_headlines_1

    Venezuela’s state oil producer, PDVSA, said in a statement it is guaranteeing “legal security” for all foreign companies in the leftist-run nation, rebuffing a government adviser’s suggestion that their operations could be nationalized….

    [A] prominent government-allied lawyer said a new legislative body could rewrite parts of the constitution to ensure the state has full ownership of the oil industry…, [sparking] fears that President Nicolas Maduro’s unpopular administration could take aim at joint venture partners, which include large oil companies Chevron Corp and Rosneft….

    Venezuelan oil laws enacted under Chavez allow for minority participation of private companies in oilfield joint ventures, and numerous companies formed such partnerships despite nationalizations in the sector….

    Nationalizing oil ventures would worsen a severe drop in production in Venezuela, home to the world’s largest crude reserves. That would hurt the country’s already ailing coffers, which depend on oil sales for more than 90 percent of their revenue.

    And PDVSA has been offering more stakes in joint ventures to foreign companies, including key Russian ally Rosneft and ONGC Videsh, the overseas investment arm of India’s top explorer, Oil and Natural Gas Corp, as it tries to minimize operating costs, Reuters has reported….

    Still, as Venezuela’s political crisis worsens, a half-dozen oil industry sources consulted by Reuters said the situation was becoming more uncertain.

    “Imagine justifying to your board of directors that you put more money into Venezuela when there was an announcement from the president’s top adviser that he was going to nationalize companies,” said Francisco Monaldi, fellow in Latin American energy policy at the Baker Institute in Houston.

    “This will pour cold water (on investments).”

  16. EIA is at it, again. They say, that because of the current low price, they are lowering the end of the year 2018 estimate to be 9.9 million barrels of day production. Not counting any GOM decline, and using only their posted numbers, it seems far fetched. Their posted April numbers show 9.083 million. Or, an increase of 817k by the end of 2018. That would be a 25% increase if it were all in Texas.

  17. I am posting this not as a potentially accurate prediction, but an example of market sentiment. If investors and lenders don’t put money into gas and oil companies, production will likely decline for financial reasons. It might also decline for geological reasons, but I’ll let the folks here who post those numbers make that call.

    Oil prices may fall below $40 without a clear buy signal, Goldman says: “Oil prices could soon fall below $40 a barrel if investors don’t get a clear catalyst that prompts them to start buying the commodity, Goldman Sachs said on Tuesday.”

    1. Hi Boomer,

      US output is not likely to average more than 9 Mb/d for the year if oil prices fall to $40/b.

  18. I get a laugh at people who continue to believe that Shale will be profitable at $30-$40. If it wasn’t profitable at $100, why in the living hell would it be profitable at $30-$40?? This is pure delusion.

    A perfect example of what is wrong with Shale Oil is Continental Resources. Continental is one of the larger players in the Bakken. Before Continental ramped up production in the Bakken, it had $165 million in debt in 2007 and paid $13 million in interest payment.

    In 2016, Continental Resources paid $321 million in interest expense (third of a billion) on $6.5 billion in debt. So, all Continental Resources has to show for all that shale oil it produced, is $6.5 billion in debt and they have to pay nearly a third of a billion dollars in their MINIMUM CREDIT CARD INTEREST PAYMENT just to keep afloat.

    When are the optimists going to wake up??

    steve

    1. Steve.

      Do you have any insight on why Pioneer Natural Resources states they will spend over $10 billion 2017-2021 on new wells, yet in their estimate of future cash flows, they project spending less than $600 million in development costs 2017-2021?

      This has to be an accounting tactic? I suspect they are trying to minimize amortization on undeveloped acreage.

      Would be happy to hear some thoughts on this from you or others.

      1. Shallow,

        It certainly sounds like an accounting tactic. I am not too familiar with Pioneer’s breakdown in their future CAPEX spending. However, if we look at their free cash flow since 2007, it hasn’t been much to brag about.

        As we can see, there were only two years that Pioneer enjoyed positive free cash flow… 2009-2010. However, I noticed that Pioneer’s Long Term Debt didn’t increase since 2012, even though they racked up five consecutive years of negative free cash flow.

        Then I looked at Pioneer’s Outstanding Shares. In 2012 they had 126 million shares, but by March 2017 it had increased to 170 million shares. While Pioneer’s stock price has fluctuated since 2012, the average was approximately $110 a share. Assuming they sold 44 million shares at $110 since 2012, that’s a cool $4.9 billion. This is precisely why their Long Term Debt hasn’t really increased since 2012… even though they had five years of negative free cash flow.

        Basically, they abused their shareholders to fork out the funds to continue drilling and producing oil at a loss.

        I don’t know how they are going to make money now that oil is at $45, when Pioneer reported $155 million in negative free cash flow Q1 2017, when the price of oil was $51.

        steve

    2. SRSrocco said:

      I get a laugh at people who continue to believe that Shale will be profitable at $30-$40. If it wasn’t profitable at $100, why in the living hell would it be profitable at $30-$40?? This is pure delusion.

      Nah, it’s not “delusion.” It’s called technological progress — proved and demonstrated ability to improve rig and well productivity.

      Those who have it in for the oil and gas industry find this hard to believe, but the oil field doesn’t stand still. It progresses right along with the rest of the world.

      It truly is a brave new world.

      1. Glenn,

        You are a funny guy. Even when the numbers are put right in front of your face, you still can’t see the obvious. Furthermore, you never seem to address the massive DEBT WALL now facing the Shale Oil & Gas Industry.

        So, either you are unable to CONNECT THE DOTS, or somehow the Shale Industry PR departments have totally destroyed the ability for you to understand basic ECONOMICS 101.

        steve

        1. SRSrocco,

          You are a funny guy. Even when the numbers are put right in front of your face, you still can’t see the obvious.

          So, either you are unable to CONNECT THE DOTS, or somehow your hatred of the oil and gas industry has totally destroyed the ability for you to understand basic ECONOMICS 101.

          The Reuters article accompanying the graphic I have attached below says:

          Fifteen independent producers with operations focused on the United States reported a combined net loss of $3.7 billion in the first three months of 2017 (tmsnrt.rs/2uxKwbb).

          But most of the losses were attributable to Marathon Oil, which reported a net loss of $4.9 billion, mostly as a result of an impairment charge linked to its Canadian oil sands businesses.

          The other fourteen companies in the sample reported total net income of almost $1.3 billion, up from a loss of $9.9 billion in the first quarter of 2016.

          Ten companies in the sample reported positive net income during the first quarter, up from just two in the previous quarter and none in the first quarter of 2016.

          Financial performance for the companies in the sample has been steadily improving since losses peaked at $23 billion in the third quarter of 2015.

          Shale producers have benefited from a combination of cost reductions, improvements in drilling efficiency and well productivity, and a significant increase in oil and gas prices.

          http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-shale-kemp-idUSKBN19S1R0

          In addition to Marathon’s $4,907,000,000 income loss from discontinued operations in 1Q2017, CLR wrote off $51,372,000 in impairments against its properties and PXD $285,000,000.

          As to your histrionics over the “debt wall,” are you aware that the ability of a company to borrow depends on the market value of its assets and its ability to pay? If you don’t believe it, go down to your local bank and try to borrow a couple of billion.

          Do you realize that ‘net income’ is income after deducting interest expense?

          1. Glenn,

            That’s a very nice Net Income chart you got there. However, it doesn’t take into account the rising amount of debt on the energy companies balance sheets or the negative free cash flow.

            I would imagine you are going to continue being optimistic right up until the point the U.S. oil and gas industry disintegrates.

            steve

            1. Hi Steve,

              I always get a good laugh from your comments. If you join Amazon Prime. I’m sure you can receive a fire extinguisher in time to put your hair out. I always wonder if you spent to much time in college with the beer bong and most of your mornings in your econ class tuned out.

              The beauty of capitalism is when there is an excessive profits or shortage of production in an industry. The entrepreneurs step in and balance the market. A similar force steps in when excessive losses happen. The weak will get kicked to the curb. No one ever said capitalism is always pretty. Think of it as partying all night and hugging the toilet in the morning.

              Don’t get trapped in a binary of free cash flow and amount of debt. The devil is always in the details. There’s always more information on an industry available than any one person can digest.

              Now tells us how well your gold investment clients have been doing for the last 5 years compared to the stock market ?

            2. HuntingtonBeach,

              Actually, I didn’t smoke WEED, but I did enjoy a good drink every now and again.

              However, the notion that we shouldn’t get trapped in the DEBT and the Free Cash flow mumbo-jumbo is an interesting rebuke. If we stayed awake in ECONOMICS 101, we would have realized that WEALTH = Assets minus Debts.

              But of course, the Global Oil & Gas Industry tripling its debt in 10 years is just BINARY DIGITAL hocus-pocus. This has nothing to do with the Falling EROI. Nothing to see here… let’s just move on.

              Then of course we can make believe that the Central Banks haven’t dished out $30-$40 trillion since 2008 in CURRENCY SWAPS, ASSET PURCHASES and MONEY PRINTING.

              I am amazed at the complete lack of COMMON sense by some in this blog. Oh well.. you know the saying…

              GOD HATH A SENSE OF HUMOR…

              Lastly, your wisdom on the Gold & Silver Market for the past five years is quite similar to the typical German who thought things weren’t too bad under the NAZI regime from 1933 to 1941. Let’s see how things unfold over the next 3-5 years before we get a bit cocky.

              steve

            3. Steve,

              Who said anything about marijuana ? But with that response, I believe you.

              Debt is all about who owns the assets under a state of laws. The loaners will become owners and the market place will still set supply, demand and the price. Like I said, “The weak will get kicked to the curb”. I’ll just buy an EV and solar panels. You come across like you’ve been sucking at the Tverberg nipple a little to long.

              So your gold sales pitch is protection from Nazi America. Well if the specialty metal thing doesn’t work out for you. I’m sure you can do well in the life insurance biz.

              I forgot. Which one is it, gold or silver that pays a dividend ? Even marijuana at $400 an ounce pays dividends. But of course you wouldn’t know that.

              Coming to your neighborhood soon, maybe if we could get those Nazi’s to learn how to smoke. They might chill a little.

              Peace & Love

  19. George

    Just released this morning.

    Premier oil, together with its joint venture partners Talos Energy (Operator) and Sierra Oil & Gas, is pleased to announce that the Zama-1 exploration well in Block 7, offshore Mexico, has made a world class oil discovery. The Zama-1 well is the first offshore exploration well drilled by the private sector in Mexico’s history. Premier holds a 25 per cent interest in the block.

    Preliminary analysis indicates:

    Initial gross original oil in place estimates for the Zama-1 well are in excess of 1 billion barrels, which could extend into a neighbouring block

    A contiguous gross oil bearing interval of over 335 metres (1,100 feet), with up to 200 metres (650 feet) of net oil bearing reservoir in Upper Miocene sandstones with no water contact

    Initial tests of hydrocarbon samples recovered to the surface contain light oil, with API gravities between 28° and 30° and some associated gas

    The well spudded on 21 May 2017 utilizing the Ensco 8503, a moored floating drilling rig. Located in 166 metres (546 feet) of water and approximately 60 kilometres (37 miles) offshore Dos Bocas, it has reached an initial shallow target depth of 3,383 metres (11,100 feet). The Operator is currently setting a liner to protect the discovered reservoirs, prior to drilling deeper exploratory objectives to a total vertical depth of approximately 4,200 metres (14,000 feet).

      1. Every find over about 150 mmbbls gets described as “huge” or “massive” these days.

  20. This is an interesting slide from a recent TransOcean investor presentation and shows the boom in 2011 to 2014 investments (I think a lot of it for US LTO) and the subsequent bust, both in investments and rapid decline in some of the earlier production. The 2012 investments must be mostly oil sands to give the late peak there. To produce the (about) 1 mmbpd excess that has produced the glut and dropped prices required about 12 mmbpd new investment over 4 years. for the last three years, including this one, we are probably getting no more than 4 mmbpd.

    1. George

      In other news the Stena Icemax spudded the Druid/Drombeg well this morning in the Porcupine basin targeting multiple fan structures estimated to contain 5 billion barrels oil.

      1. Be interesting to see how it turns out. I think that play is an extension of the one offshore Newfoundland, where Statoil just hit two dry holes. If they miss I reckon the Icemax is going to get a name as a bad luck ship.

  21. I thought China had nearly filled it’s 2nd phase of SPR but the latest news headlines says they are still building it. Also a chart of commercial inventories from the latest OPEC MOMR

    2017-07-12 CHINA STATE PLANNER SAYS WILL ACCELERATE CONSTRUCTION OF 2ND PHASE OF STRATEGIC OIL RESERVES, PUSH FORWARD CONSTRUCTION OF 3RD PHASE

  22. Saudi Aramco Chief Predicts Oil Shortage as Investment Falters

    http://peakoil.com/production/saudi-aramco-chief-predicts-oil-shortage-as-investment-falters

    About $1 trillion in investments have already been lost since a decline in oil prices from 2014. Studies show that 20 million barrels per day of new production will be needed to meet demand growth and offset natural decline of developed fields over the next five years, he said.

    (Only Two New Saudi Arabia’s worth of production needed in the next five years)

  23. Bloomberg – 12 July 2017
    Nigeria will support a cap on its oil production, the country’s oil minister Emmanuel Kachikwu told reporters in Abuja.
    The production cap would come into play when Nigeria can stably pump 1.8 million barrels a day, Kachikwu said. That’s 100,000 barrels more than it’s currently producing.
    Nigeria and Libya were exempted from cuts agreed to by OPEC and other large producers in an effort to trim a global glut.
    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-07-12/nigeria-will-support-cap-on-its-oil-production-minister-says-j51crdeo

    1. I’d say 1.8 mmbpd is pretty much their exact capacity if everything is online, and will be declining until Egina comes online next year.

  24. Big stock drop last week according to EIA twip, crude down 7.6 mmbbls (about 1.5%), gasoline down 1.6, diesel up 3.1. One more week like this and crude stocks will be negative y-o-y; gasoline and diesel are bumping around there now.

    https://www.eia.gov/petroleum/weekly/

  25. The Oil Age may come to an end for a shortage of oil.

    -Former Saudi Oil Minister Sheikh Yamani,

    1. And the question is: Will that investment result in an oversupply that keeps prices low and bankrupts companies?

    2. This article has that same graph, but also says this.

      Shale Investment Booms, But Global Oil Has A Big Problem | OilPrice.com: “Meanwhile, falling investment in oil and gas combined with cheaper renewable energy meant that the electricity sector surpassed fossil fuel supply as the largest source of energy investment in 2016 – for the first time in history. And within that electricity component, renewable energy captured the largest slice of investment at $297 billion in 2016.”

      1. And also from that article.

        “For the oil industry, however, the main takeaway is the increasing divergence of the oil industry into a sort of two-track market: an ongoing slump for non-U.S. production, and a sharp rebound in U.S. shale. The flip side of that is that the cost of production is also different in different places. Globally, costs will continue to fall by 3 percent this year, led mainly by falling costs in the offshore sector. U.S. shale, however, will see costs rise by 17 percent, which is mainly the result of higher drilling activity and a tighter market for oilfield services.”

  26. “The U.S. shale revolution shows no sign of running out of steam and its effects are now amplified by a second revolution of rising LNG supplies,” said Fatih Birol, the IEA’s Executive Director, in a statement Thursday.

    “Also, the rising number of LNG consuming countries, from 15 in 2005 to 39 this year, shows that LNG attracts many new customers, especially in the emerging world,” Birol added.

    The U.S. is already the world’s largest producer of natural gas and the IEA estimated that by 2022 the country’s production will be 890 bcm, more than a fifth of global gas output.”
    http://www.cnbc.com/2017/07/13/us-become-worlds-largest-natural-gas-exporter.html

  27. Demand for crude oil is forecast to continue growing, especially in countries like India and China…

    IEA raises 2017 oil demand growth to 1.4 million b/day following strong growth in 2Q17. This puts demand at 98 million b/day average for 2017
    chart demand growth https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DEmgu5kUMAAAbY1.jpg

    (Bloomberg) — India wants $300 billion in investments over the next 10 years to satisfy accelerating demand in the world’s fastest-growing oil market.
    “India is the place where there is incremental demand,” Pradhan said. “Our per capita energy consumption is one-fourth of the world. In India, there is an emerging middle class and they are aspirational. Per capita energy consumption is going to increase. So, we need energy. There is no shortcut around that.”
    https://www.bloombergquint.com/business/2017/07/12/india-wants-300-billion-in-oil-spending-to-meet-growing-demand

    China crude oil imports up to June (China General Administration of Customs)

  28. (Mexico City, July 12, 2017) Mexico’s first offering of shale acreage in the Burgos Basin far exceeded the federal government’s expectations.

    In total, in the morning sale (Round 2.2) and afternoon sale (Round 2.3), there were 13 tracts in the Burgos Basin offered. Of these, 10, or just under 80%, found takers. The government said it would have considered a ratio of 25% to 30% a successful sale, given the low price of oil and gas.

    Oil companies from China, Canada, Brazil, Spain, Mexico and the United States competed for the acreage.

    http://www.elfinanciero.com.mx/economia/ronda-22.html

    http://www.elfinanciero.com.mx/economia/ronda-23.html

    1. U.S. oil and gas producers look favorably upon a lot of what Trump is doing, but his clashes with the Mexican oligarchy (which Mario Vargas Llosa aptly called “the perfect dictatorship”) give them pause. From this article, one can see why. Mexico is not only a big customer for U.S. natural gas, but U.S. companies would like to get in on Mexico’s future shale development too.

      Do You Believe In Magic – Can Mexico Spur Gas Production In Its Burgos Shale Play?
      https://rbnenergy.com/do-you-believe-in-magic-can-mexico-spur-gas-production-in-its-burgos-shale-play

      It may take a number of years to pan out, but Mexico is taking steps to accelerate the development of its natural gas-rich Burgos Shale region, which lies just across the Rio Grande from South Texas’s newly resurgent Eagle Ford play….

      If the effort to juice Burgos drilling activity and production proves successful, it could affect how much natural gas Mexico needs to import from the U.S….

      In the past few years, exports of natural gas from the U.S. to Mexico have soared, driven by a combination of rising Mexican demand for gas (mostly to fuel a fast-growing fleet of new gas-fired combined-cycle power plants) and declining Mexican gas production.

      The statistics are eye-catching. In 2016, exports of U.S. natural gas to Mexico via pipeline averaged almost 3.8 billion cubic feet/day (Bcf/d), compared with only 913 million cubic feet/day (MMcf/d) in 2010, and in the first four months of 2017 pipeline-gas deliveries from the U.S. to Mexico averaged 4 Bcf/d.

      Mexico also has been the Numero Uno recipient of liquefied natural gas (LNG) shipped from Cheniere Energy’s Sabine Pass LNG facility since the southwestern Louisiana liquefaction plant and export terminal started up last year, receiving more than two dozen LNG cargoes to date….

      Earlier this week, in Part 4 of It Was Good Living With You (W)aha — our series on the Waha gas hub in West Texas — we zeroed in on CFE’s [Mexico’s national electric company] brand new Waha header, with its 6 Bcf/d of capacity and multiple pipeline interconnects. Mexico clearly is planning on receiving a lot of Permian, Eagle Ford and other U.S. natural gas for years to come.

      Still, the Mexican government has been itching to reinvigorate the country’s sagging hydrocarbon production sector, which for several years has experienced production declines in both crude oil and natural gas….

      It would be one thing if Mexico, like an aging slugger in baseball, simply lacked the physical resources to keep producing like it had been. However, Mexico is blessed with extraordinary resources (for oil and gas alike) that remain largely untapped (and, in many cases, unexplored), mostly for the lack of investment dollars — and, in the case of shale gas, the lack of technological expertise to wring large volumes of trapped gas from rock formations….

      The Burgos Basin, considered to be Mexico’s best shale prospect, is actually an extension of South Texas’s Eagle Ford — geology doesn’t stop on a dime at international borders. It is said to hold several hundred trillion cubic feet of recoverable natural gas within its source rock, but thus far Pemex (which since 1938 held a virtual monopoly on oil and gas production in Mexico) has done only limited horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing in the play.

      As part of its push to attract outside investment (both from the private sector within Mexico and from abroad), the Mexican government since 2013 has implemented a variety of market reforms aimed at gradually transforming the country’s energy sector into an open market — ideally, much like the U.S.

      Among other things, Mexico’s energy ministry (SENER) has been overseeing a number of bidding rounds in which E&Ps compete for the right to drill for and produce oil and gas on blocks of acreage (both in Mexico’s part of the Gulf of Mexico and on land) that for nearly 80 years had been the exclusive domain of Pemex.

      Given that this is SENER’s first big offering in the gas-focused Burgos, Round 2.2 has attracted a lot of attention — not just from prospective bidders but also from the U.S. side of the border, where E&Ps need to keep track of potential competitors for serving all those new Mexican power plants….

      Notably, six of the nine Burgos blocks include gas wells that are currently producing, with connections to existing pipelines in the region (black lines in Figure 1), which suggests that at least a few of the winning bidders could hit the ground running with new production in their blocks within a few months.

      Despite the Burgos Basin’s promise, E&Ps entering the fray there are taking a number of risks. For one thing, as U.S. shale producers have learned (many of them the hard way), each shale play (and each subregion within each play) has its own, unique geological characteristics. Cracking the code to produce the largest possible volumes of gas, NGLs and crude oil often requires extraordinary expertise, as well as trial-and-error, patience and deep pockets.

      And then there are Burgos’s other challenges, which, to name a few, include the fact that the region has very little water (a must for large-scale hydraulic fracturing); minimal supporting infrastructure such as roads and gas pipelines; and a “Breaking Bad” level of drug cartel-related violence. All that doesn’t mean Mexico’s efforts to open up its energy sector won’t eventually turn the Burgos into another Eagle Ford –– and thereby reduce Mexico’s need to import natural gas from the U.S. — but the winning bidders in Round 2.2 (and Round 2.3) do have their work cut out for them.

  29. Mexico Oil Privatization Pays Off With Billion-Barrel Find
    http://www.rigzone.com/news/article.asp?hpf=1&a_id=150981&utm_source=DailyNewsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_term=2017-07-13&utm_content=&utm_campaign=feature_2

    Mexico’s decision to allow private companies to explore for oil and gas started to pay off after the discovery of at least a billion barrels in a new offshore field.

    A consortium of Premier Oil Plc, Sierra Oil & Gas S de RL de CV and Talos Energy LLC made the discovery in the shallow waters of the southern Gulf of Mexico just two years after winning the exploration license. It’s the first new find by a private company in the country in almost 80 years, according to consultant Wood Mackenzie Ltd., possible only after the government ended the monopoly of state-run Petroleos Mexicanos.

    The Zama discovery “is the most important achievement so far of Mexico’s energy reform,” Pablo Medina, the senior upstream analyst for Latin America at Wood Mackenzie, said by email. “It is one of the 15 largest shallow-water fields discovered globally in the past 20 years.” ….

    Mexico “took a really difficult decision for them politically after 40 years of 100 percent Pemex-ownership,” Durrant said. The opening up of the country’s industry “caught them at absolutely the worst time because of the collapse in oil prices. But to be fair to them, they persevered and they have now got very strong industry interest.” ….

    Talos Energy, the operator on the block, owns a 35 percent stake in the venture. Sierra — backed by Blackrock Inc., Riverstone Holdings and EnCap Investments — holds 40 percent, while Premier has a 25 percent share.

    1. We just covered this up thread.

      Spend some time on the Reserves wiki.

      OOIP is not the total recoverable. And world oil consumption is 35 billion barrels/yr.

  30. Oil woes are still spilling into bankruptcy courts

    The number of Texas companies seeking to restructure their debt and reorganize under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code hit a record high during the first six months of 2017. So did the number of bankruptcy filings in Houston.

    Bankruptcy data show that 649 businesses sought protection in Texas federal courts from creditors and lenders during the first half of 2017 – a 44 percent increase over the same period a year ago and 12 percent more than in 2009 when bankruptcies peaked during the Great Recession, according to new research conducted by Androvett Legal Media.

    http://www.houstonchronicle.com/business/article/Oil-woes-are-still-spilling-into-bankruptcy-courts-11284990.php

    1. good find mastermind. of course, it won’t stop production. these guys go through bankruptcy like I change out batteries. if the fed raises rates, or the ECB/BOJ et al cutback on QE, then look out below.

      1. “these guys go through bankruptcy like I change out batteries”
        Apparently many of them are graduates of Trump Univ school of economics [bankruptcy].

    2. These appear to be small and medium sized firms, which is not surprising.

      Likely a lot of smaller service oriented firms that borrowed to grow only to have demand for services drop precipitously and rates likewise crash.

      Rates got so low that companies have been taking in less revenue than operating costs, with nothing left to pay overhead or debt payments.

  31. OIL BOSSES SEE MORE PAIN AS PRICE RECOVERY SLIPS TO 2020

    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-07-12/oil-bosses-see-more-pain-as-price-recovery-slips-back-to-2020

    Three years into the biggest oil downturn in a generation, industry bosses see the recovery slipping further from view. It could easily take until the end of the decade for better times to return to an industry that’s already endured a longer slump than most people expected, according to Total SA Chief Executive Officer Patrick Pouyanne and Weatherford International Plc head Mark McCollum. Executives gathering at the World Petroleum Congress in Istanbul said they’re still focused on repairing battered finances and resetting their operations to withstand low prices.

    These bosses and pundits don’t have a clue what’s going to happen any more than they did in 2014. And the Bloomberg and Reuters reporters no even less what they are talking about – nice shiny teeth though.

    That’s an enormous turnaround from the last World Petroleum Congress in Moscow in 2014, when people were speculating oil could rise as high as $125 after the precursor to Islamic State seized parts of northern Iraq. Three years on, Iraq has driven the Islamist extremists out of the city of Mosul, but the U.S. shale industry that triggered the slump to below $30 has survived and thrived. Even as OPEC curbs production, banks including Goldman Sachs Group Inc and BNP Paribas SA are cutting their price forecasts for the years ahead.

  32. So we have investors cutting back in the oil and gas industry. We also have the oil and gas industry itself cutting back future investments. Combined with near record low new discoveries, and old depleting developed oil fields. = we are screwed

    The Oil Age may come to an end for a shortage of oil.

    -Saudi Oil Minister Sheikh Yamani

    1. Sounds increasingly like a Seneca Cliff mode of decline.

      Past time to look at local resilience…

      1. That’s not how it plays.

        It plays with non uniform distribution of whatever is available. A world points at average per capita consumption and demands that everywhere consuming more than that average be allocated less. Those countries will obviously refuse.

        Then you start to hear things like:

        “Oil is so important that it should be considered a global resource. No country can lay claim to a global resource that happens to exist under its territory.”

        “We have oil. We are willing to share it. But there must be quid pro quo of a behavioral sort. We’ll start with the size of armed forces.”

        “It is not only a matter of food. It is a matter of life expectancy. We will not accept an oil allocation that erodes our life expectancy (which derives from “wealth” — this is advocated by the rich folks in that country).”

        This is the sort of thing that makes it so clear how absurd it is to sequence presumption that looks like . . . . oil scarcity — price rises — life is fine.

        Rather it is oil scarcity — unavailable at any price for months or years — seek dominance to get whatever there is — kill whoever objects.

        As likely is: oil scarcity — unavailable at any price — completely throw out all norms of economics or governance in general and do whatever it takes to feed your people (i;e. flow or confiscate oil) — whatever it takes involves killing, but only after manufacturing justification (and thus erasing guilt) — then restore some flow and aggressively embark on a process of pretending it all never happened.

    2. I don’t know where you are getting your info. but in his most often quoted interview (Daily Telegraph, 2000), he said the exact opposite:

      SHEIKH YAMANI, the former Saudi oil minister, has told The Telegraph that he expects a cataclysmic crash in the price of oil in the next five years.
      In an unprecedented personal interview, Sheikh Yamani also predicts that, within a few decades, vast reserves of oil will lie unwanted and the “oil age” will come to an end.
      In an interview with Gyles Brandreth, he says: “Thirty years from now there will be a huge amount of oil – and no buyers. Oil will be left in the ground. The Stone Age came to an end, not because we had a lack of stones, and the oil age will come to an end not because we have a lack of oil.”

    1. texas tea,

      Carlos Slim, Mexico’s richest man who made his fortune in telecom, cell phone and internet services, seems to have had a similar epiphany.

      A few months ago he was lecturing Donald Trump, telling him he was hopelessly trapped in the “old civilization.” And yet this past week Slim was buying leases in Mexico’s latest oil and gas sale.

      Could these guys have finally woken up to the fact that their hallowed “new civilization” won’t run on scarce, expensive energy?

        1. Several of the DAPL protectors acknowledged that they responded to Craigslist ads that offered the following compensation …
          $1,500 sign up bonus.
          Roundtrip airfare from home city to Fargo
          $19/hour

          One of the reasons ND prosecutors wanted serious indictments against many arrestees was to plea bargain down in exchange for who was paying them.
          State officials then intended to await 10-99 tax forms to be filed by the protectors’ sponsors to pursue legal action. (The expected omission of filing 10-99s is, itself, a crime).

          The sincere protesting of anti fossil fuel development is but one component to a global dynamic …one which carries life and death consequences for some overseas dynasties.

        2. texas tea,

          Well the Democrats have certainly done their fair share to sow the wind, what with all their Russiagate hysteria. Now they’re fixin’ to reap the whirlwind.

          Democrats introduce new bill on Russia and Iran sanctions
          http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-russia-sanctions-idUSKBN19X1ZV

          Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives introduced a new version of a Russia and Iran sanctions bill on Wednesday, hoping to send a message to President Donald Trump to maintain a strong line against Moscow.

          Seeking to force Republican House leaders to allow a vote, Democrats on the House Foreign Affairs Committee introduced legislation unchanged from what passed the Senate by 98-2 on June 15 but has been stalled ever since….

          Trump’s attempts to mend relations with Russia have been hindered by allegations that Moscow interfered in the 2016 U.S. election and colluded with Trump’s campaign.

  33. For the folks smitten with whirley juice, Dominion Energy just agreed to put two whirleys 27 miles offshore Virginia for a trial run.

    I won’t post many eye-glazing numbers, but the 12 Mw operation was bid at $400 million cost, but DONG stepped in for $300 million to get the show on the road.

    600 foot tall, 500 foot rotor diameter … don’t know water depth that far out but imagine 100 feet or so.

    These guys are beyond desperate if they try to compete against CCGT juice from the Mighty Marcellus.

    1. Coffeguyzz- you portray the building of wind turbines as competition with Nat Gas. I see it as complimentary.
      Good to have lots of both.
      A diverse portfolio.
      Its not all or none.

      1. Hickory

        One of the big reasons GE is one of the world’s largest wind turbine manufacturers as well as amongst the biggest builders of gas turbines is exactly that … diversity of supply.
        Very few people – including moi – get into the details of these developments, but it can be a heck of an ejumacashun.

        Utilities are not apt to sign supply agreements with whirley juice providers sans backup from dispatchable, reliable sources (can you say natgas supplied boys and girls? I knew ya could). Enter GE and their smaller gas plants.
        Win win for those guys.

        Part of this issue, Hickory, is cost.

        Granted, this Virginia deal is pilot and all, but still … some numbers …

        Recently completed CCGT plant in Brunswick county, VA has 1,360 Mw nameplate capacity. Cost, little over a billion bucks.
        Even bigger plant, 1,600 Mw capacity being built a few miles away for 1.3 billion bucks.

        Now, the offshore whirly will have nameplate capacity of 12 Mw … that’sa one and a two as in twelve … for market cost of 400 million bucks before DONG stepped in to eat the construction cost loss ($300 million firm to build).

        So, at 50% ( generous) capacity factor, VA ratepayers will pay 1/4 the cost – $300 million – to obtain less than 1/250th (1,600÷6) the juice.

        Now, while I am being somewhat skeptical in presentation, I mean no disrespect to the readers who are open minded, sincere, and inclined to embrace renewables with varying degrees of intensity.

        But …

        When I took up Dennis’ prompting and delved into the Australian energy market, specifically New South Wales and South Australia, I waded through numerous sources of data that ranged in tone from carbon centric through fervent Ra/Zephyr advocates.
        Truly a great way to learn of contentious issues, most especially by the information the ‘Other’ provides concerning one’s cherished choice.

        Bottom line, H, is that the economic cost of these renewable options are not only significantly higher than industry advocates (and the supportive headlines) might suggest, the competition from CCGT plants in the US, at least, will prove to be crushing.

        (One reason for the amped up demonization of fossil fuels is that the renewable market is fighting for survival. Just starting to learn more of ITCs and PTCs, the coming expiration of which will be the death knell of the American solar and wind industries).

        1. coffeeguyzz,

          Australia’s prime minister Malcolm Turnbull has for all intents and puroses nationalized the country’s natural gas fields. This could result in default on agreed contracts of supply with foreign countries, mainly to China, Japan and South Korea.

          This is nothing short of banana republic stuff. Turnbull is a first class demagogue.

          Malcolm Turnbull = Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro

          Last month Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull slapped the gas sector with export controls effective from January 1, 2018….

          [Then today Turnbull said] “The principal reason for the recent increase in energy prices has been the big increase of the price of gas and that has been driven by a shortage because more of the gas is being exported and there is not a mark now for the domestic market.” ….

          The head of global energy giant Santos [ Kevin Gallagher] says he is worried about sovereign risk and warned the Turnbull government that retrospective intervention in the gas sector could see Australian mimic Argentina in crippling its own gas industry….

          Former Resources Minister Martin Ferguson also said sovereign risk is a live issue.

          “One of the hallmarks of our nation for many, many decades has been that we are a reliable supplier in terms of our contractual obligations.”

          “To potentially put at risk the capacity of our exporters to meet the requirements of our customers raises very serious issues about sovereign risk in Australia and that is a major problem for Australia,” he said….

          [Gallagher said] “Australia’s quite unique because I go all over the world to talk to investors and everywhere I go gas is good.”

          “Then you come to Australia and we’re having this crazy debate about a clean resource that we have in abundance,” he said.

          Mr Ferguson said the shortage of gas domestically was not the fault of the private sector.

          “We got here through a lack of political leadership, that is the start and end of the debate.”

          He took aim at the Victorian Labor government, which in March banned fracking until 2020. At the time, Premier Daniel Andrews said the ban was a “triumph of one of the most amazing community campaigns that our state and indeed our nation has ever seen.”

          But Mr Ferguson said the decision had contributed to the squeeze on gas supply domestically driving up electricity prices.

          “If the Victorian government had not put the moratorium in place then we would not have the problems that we currently have on the east coast of Australia because we would have more than sufficient gas both for the purposes of exports and energy security,” Mr Ferguson said.

          http://www.smh.com.au/business/energy/santos-chief-says-australia-is-at-risk-of-becoming-another-argentina-with-its-gas-policy-20170712-gxa57k.html

          1. coffeeguyzz,

            And you gotta take a look at this report by one think tank, the Australia Institute, and the glorious future that’s just around the corner:

            [I]n the 21st century, as the electricity system transitions to renewable generation, South Australia’s abundant wind and solar resources will eliminate, and may even reverse its current generation cost disadvantage.

            http://www.tai.org.au/sites/defualt/files/NEEA%20Electricity%20Update%20July%202017%20final.pdf

            1. Glenn

              Time permitting, I’m going to try to get a fuller understanding of why Oz’s east coast gas production has plummeted.

              What the Aussies call CSG – Coal Seam Gas (CSG) – we Yanks and Canadians call Coalbed Methane (CBM).

              In the Appalachian Basin, there are thousands of CBM wells that generally cost $200/$250 thou to drill, are shallow, and produce 50k/day on average.
              Many of the fracturing tools and processes actually were started in CBM related work, especially by the ever resourceful Canadians.

              If, in fact, the prohibition of frac’ing in Oz inhibited further CBM/CSG development, it would naturally follow that shortages would occur.

              Also, it would naturally follow that scapegoats be found.

            2. Good article.

              It looks like a good many things work in Australia the same way they do in the United States:

              1) Three separate entitites can be involved in the chain between the electricity end-user and the company that actually produces the natural gas:

              Natural Gas Producer => Pipeline Company => Electric Utility

              2) Natural gas is often sold pursuant to long-term contractural agreements in which the spot market price of gas means nothing.

              3) The term of these contracts can be up to 20 years. The quantity of gas required to be delivered and the natural gas price are stipulated in the contract, as are take-or-pay provisions.

              4) These agreements are made both between the natural gas producer and the pipeline company and between the pipeline company and the electric ultity. Vertically integrated oil companies frequently own both the natural gas wells and the pipeline.

              5) A company, either the buyer or the seller, that is a party to a natural gas sales contract and that does not meet its contractual obligations is in default.

              6) The harmed party can seek a judgment against the defaulting counterparty in the courts of law.

              Malcolm Turnbull evidently believes the sales-purchase agreements that Australia’s LNG providers have with their international clients mean nothing, and can be defaulted on willy nilly and with no consequences.

              For a wonderfully detailed primer of how all this works, there’s this article from the Texas Monthly about the high-flying Oscar Wyatt, Jr. and his Coastal States Gas Corporation, and how they defaulted on their natural gas sales contract to the City of San Antonio and its city-owned electric ulitity, City Public Service.

              The article is forty years old (this was a time when Texas Monthly actually did some hard-hitting investigative reporting and before it became one of the state’s main purveyors of fake news), but the precedents are there and much remains the same to this day:

              Power Politics: How one company’s wheeling and dealing brought the energy crisis into your life.
              http://www.texasmonthly.com/politics/power-politics/

            3. LO

              Thanks for the informative link.
              Glen touches upon a lot of the ramifications in his comment, but I’ll briefly add.

              Seems like the supply was impacted by restricting new development.
              The potential damage to Australia by having the government negate supply contracts could be more severe than one might think.

        2. Coffeeguz, re wind turbines vs gas, I suppose the other factor in the generation of energy is the supply of fuel. Now I know gas is cheap but wind is cheaper.

          Then there’s the cost of scaling. How much to put 100 wind turbines out there using the same equipment, and what running costs?

          Then finally, what costs to the environment do we add in each case from any extra global warming and resultant problems?

          1. Mr. Mason

            All good points.

            This Dominion Energy project has many indications of just being ‘for show’ as the evaluation period is to last many years after operations commence.
            Evaluations pertaining to effects on whale migration, hurricane durability, overall operational feasibility, etc.

            However, you might be surprised at some of the challenges the wind industry, most especially the offshore US wind energy is now and will continue to face. (Headwinds, ya might say).

            Land based whirleys will continue to meet opposition in the eastern US due to local resistance … some irony there, no? (Check out the current status of Massachusetts’ wind power contributions.)

            Prior to a few months ago, I knew virtually nothing about wind generated power, but – due to comments on this board – I started researching and, frankly, was very surprised at what I learned.
            The continuing advancements in the technology is breathtaking, ranging from newer gearbox lubricants from Shell, to the space age composite material fabrication which includes flexible rotors to maximize wind direction shifts.
            These fuzzy heads are definitely getting the most whirl per twirl, so to speak.

            But, still, 20 year lifespan, Mr. Mason? Really?
            Actually having their own decline rate of 1.6% a year?
            I thought, as I guess many do, that you just stick these things out there, give ’em a shot of grease every so often, and sit back, like, forever, and watch the juice flow.

            Aww kontrair, mez amee, LOTS more downside to the situation.
            Dennis found and posted the operational costs of various electric producers categorized by source. Offshore wind was WAY high relative to others. It might be very enlightening to become familiar with the particulars in this area and numerous organizations cater to this very specific task, ie., maintenance of wind turbines.
            Actually expected to increase from current $15 billion /year industry to $28 billion in a decade.

            Which brings into focus the operational cost of offshore – US, especially – wind turbines.
            Mr. Mason, while I am ignorant of all things wind power related, I have extensive experience in working in marine environments, including this area of the Dominion whirleys, the proposed Maryland and New York wind farms, and even the existing Block Island wind operation as I have worked offshore nearby or precisely in these environs.
            Buddy, it ain’t cheap.

            A mundane item like ferrying crews morning and evening 27 miles out and back from, where is the loading dock again?, adds enormous costs and logistic headaches in these kind of endeavors.

            No, Mr. Mason, at the end of the day, the reality of many decades of inexpensive Appalachian gas, fueling state of the art Combined Cycle Gas Turbines with 62%+ efficiency, will be the insurmountable foe for eastern US wind power.
            Much more so as tax credits go bye bye.

            Hence, as your comment indicates, the fierce, all encompassing disparagement of fossil fuels offer the most viable path forward for the whirley advocates.

            1. coffeeguyzz said:

              Hence, as your comment indicates, the fierce, all encompassing disparagement of fossil fuels offer the most viable path forward for the whirley advocates.

              Yep. Breaking the kneecaps of the fossil fuel competition with draconian regulation, decreed and enforced by unelected bureaucrats who are given political cover by very vocal but fringe protest groups, seems to be the only way forward.

              From Lightsout’s link:

              Roberts says that, at a time when Victoria has a moratorium on gas exploration and NSW has switched to a new environmental protection regime for unconventional gas (coal seam and shale) that is prolonging the development process, the east coast has become more reliant on unconventional gas.

              “Ninety per cent of the gas produced on the east coast is unconventional gas, and 40 per cent of gas consumed on the east coast is unconventional. There is no more cheap gas in this market. Victoria needs to lift its moratorium.”

              Roberts says the Metgasco decision to pull out of its development of gas fields in the NSW Northern Rivers region in 2015, because of ongoing protests – and the NSW government’s $25 million compensation package for Metgasco to suspend operations – had been a blow to the expected supply of gas.

              It came as NSW rejigged its development approval system for unconventional gas exploration and extraction, which placed the Environmental Protection Authority at the head of the process.

              Roberts says that leaves the Santos Narrabri project as the last large unconventional gas project in NSW, under a new approval system.

              “The consultation phase has been extended twice,” he says, “so it started at 30 days and is now 90 days. The longer the process takes the more we see the costs and risks increase.” ….

              “The costs and risk of unconventional gas exploration are already greater than conventional gas,” he says. “If we add sovereign risk to that equation it might be too risky for some investors.”

              Read more: http://www.afr.com/news/special-reports/energy-future-of-australia/supply-the-biggest-issue-in-the-east-coast-gas-market-says-industry-20170511-gw2c8z#ixzz4mv74cEFi

        3. Hi coffeeguyzz

          In areas where wind and solar resources are good they are competitive with natural gas.

          Also the natural gas resource is not unlimited.
          It will be great if all the coal fired power is replaced with a combination of natural gas and renewable power.

          Eventually natural gas will deplete just like oil will. Probably the World peak for natural gas will be between 2030 and 2040.

    2. Back when I did some reading into wind aquisitions, 1gw was worth $1.5B. 12mw for $400M ? madness

    3. Yair . . .

      ” These guys are beyond desperate if they try to compete against CCGT juice from the Mighty Marcellus.”

      And the wind stops blowing when the gas stops flowing? . . . is that whatcha mean? (grins)

  34. OPEC MOMR- OPEC up 393,500
    Algeria down 900
    Angola up 66,000
    Ecuador down 2100
    Equatorial Guinea up 1400
    Gabon down 7700
    Iran up 16700
    Iraq up 60600
    Kuwait down 200
    Libya up 127000
    Nigeria up 96700
    Qatar down 1200
    Saudi Arabia up 51300
    UAE down 700
    Venezuela down 13600

    1. http://www.iraqinews.com/business-iraqi-dinar/iraqs-oil-production-36-2017-official/

      Late last March, Iraq’s petroleum exporting company, SOMO, said Iraq had cut down its oil production by 300.000 barrels per day to 4.46 millions.

      Iraq plans to increase its crude production to five million barrels per day before the end of 2017. Its reserves soared in February to 153 billion barrels.

      Wait a minute

      Oil Minister Jabar Ali al-Luaibi [Allibi] (pictured) has announced exploration and rehabilitation projects for nine exploration blocks in Iraq.

      These include the onshore exploration blocks of Khudher Al-Mai, Jebel Sanam (Jabal Sanam) and Umm-Qasr on the Kuwaiti border; the Sindbad, Huwaiza, Shihabi, Zurbatia and Naft Khana blocks on the Iranian border; and the offshore exploration blocks in the Iraqi regional waters of the Arab gulf.

      Then
      http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2016/12/american-oil-company-exxon-mobil-iraq-kurdistan.html

      Smells a bit Iraqi central govt political but likely exploration in Kurdistan did stand down.

      So where the reserves bump is coming from is hard to see. There is only talk about new exploration grants, nothing from last year.

  35. U.S. to offer 76 million acres in new Gulf of Mexico lease sale
    Offshore Energy Today – July 14, 2017

    U.S. Secretary of the Interior Ryan Zinke on Thursday said Department would offer 75.9 million acres offshore Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida for oil and gas exploration and development.

    The region-wide lease sale scheduled for August 16, 2017 would include all available unleased areas in federal waters of the Gulf of Mexico and provide a reduced royalty rate for shallow water leases to encourage exploration and production under current market conditions, the Department of the Interior said.
    http://www.offshoreenergytoday.com/u-s-to-offer-76-million-acres-in-new-gulf-of-mexico-lease-sale/

      1. Price is down since 2014.

        Production globally is up.

        That’s 3 yrs. Not transitory.

        Price doesn’t matter.

        1. It does to the extent that companies are picking where they drill. Less activity in the Bakken, for example. And some Arctic projects haven’t gone anywhere. And oil sand projects have become less attractive.

    1. Trump Administration Reduces Royalty Rates In First US Oil, Gas Lease Sale
      http://www.rigzone.com/news/article.asp?hpf=1&a_id=151016&utm_source=DailyNewsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_term=2017-07-14&utm_content=&utm_campaign=feature_2

      The Interior Department said it will lower royalty rates for shallow water leases in the August sale to encourage drilling by oil companies, which have faced lower profits during years of sustained low global crude prices.

      Energy companies will pay 12.5 percent royalty rates for leases in less than 200 meters (656 feet) of water, instead of a rate of 18.75 percent that had been proposed earlier.

      “The rate change reflects this Administration’s willingness to swiftly respond to economic indicators,” said Vincent DeVito, counselor to Zinke on energy policy. “The 12.5 percent royalty rate is closer in harmony with the current market and federal onshore lease sales,” he said.

    2. I welcome drilling in the Permian because it is less disruptive than these new leases would be, and as long as prices stay low enough, there won’t be a rush to drill these new leases.

      1. Longtimber

        Yeah, Florida.
        Boomer and his neighbors kicked the Awl boys outta Colorado, and – word has it – truck laden rigs are piling into the Sunshine even as we sit here.

        Check out the maps of Florida oil/gas wells and the write ups and you might be surprised to learn FL ranks about 25th in US hydrocarbon production.

        Main prospects are in the Pensacola area – onshore and off – but historical production runs the length of the state.

        Few years back, when Tuscaloosa Marine Shale hopes were running high, detailed legislation was being drawn up to address the anticipated full scale development.

        Gotta keep the air con running with something, no?

        1. My bet is that tourism and coastal retirement and vacation homes matter more to Florida than oil drilling, so if anything threatens those, there will be a fuss.

          1. This is about the eastern coast of the state, but the same thing will happen if any new drilling presents problems for big parts of the Florida economy.

            Florida House Members Oppose Offshore Oil Drilling ~ Shark Tank: “In a very rare moment of bipartisanship, Florida’s entire congressional delegation has come together to ask President Donald Trump not to open up oil drilling off the eastern coast of the state.”

          2. Boom

            My bet is that your bet is 100% correct for many years far off into the future.

            Already, the Carolinas, New Joisey, and Florida residents and legislatures are making noises so as to impede hydrocarbon exploration and development.

            Absolutely fascinating how many players and varying interests come into play in these situations with money usually playing some kind of role.

            1. That’s what happened in Colorado. As long as drilling happened away from population areas, everything was fine with most Colorado residents. Once drilling and housing developments collided, there were protests.

              The government still favored gas and oil until recently. But with the explosion blowing up a house, low oil prices transferring interest to the Permian, and a booming Colorado economy not at all tied to gas and oil, the state and local governments are getting tougher on drilling standards.

        2. Bet share was higher than 25th in the 70’s and 80’s when the Jay Field was
          in it’s Prime. IIRC Jay was one of the Largest sweet Finds in the 2nd Half of the Century – and it’s Gone.
          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Maa0K4ycASo
          https://youtu.be/2fEUNUVt5j0
          A Captain buddy of mine hired for shallow GOM surveys in the 80’s ( 70’s ? ) said there was much excitement with the datasets east of the state line. Beach protection mindset here is resolute, would not expect serious action until Price locks above $120 and the cat finishes Mickey mouse.

  36. Oil Rises As Robust Chinese Demand Seen Helping Drain Glut
    http://www.rigzone.com/news/oil_gas/a/151017/Oil_Rises_As_Robust_Chinese_Demand_Seen_Helping_Drain_Glut?utm_source=DailyNewsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_term=2017-07-14&utm_content=&utm_campaign=industry_headlines_2

    Oil prices rose 1.3 percent on Thursday after much stronger demand in China overshadowed a downbeat report by the International Energy Agency (IEA) that showed higher production by key OPEC exporters.

    Brent crude settled up 68 cents or 1.42 percent at $48.42 a barrel. U.S. light crude settled up 59 cents at $46.08 a barrel….

    [T]here is evidence world oil demand is picking up, notably in the United States and China, the world’s two biggest oil consumers.

    China imported 8.55 million barrels per day (bpd) of oil in the first half of this year, up 13.8 percent from the same period in 2016, making it the world’s biggest crude importer ahead of the United States.

    “We are definitely seeing robust demand growth (in China),” said Neil Beveridge, senior oil analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein.

  37. North Dakota crude production declined by 10kb/day m/m to 1,040kb/day in May
    “We’re definitely seeing a shortage” of frack crews in North Dakota
    Core of Bakken is more gassy than originally thought, producers expected 1-to-1 gas to oil ratio, its now 2-3x more gas – North Dakota’s Lynn Helms.

      1. https://www.dmr.nd.gov/oilgas/directorscut/directorscut-2017-07-14.pdf

        https://www.dmr.nd.gov/oilgas/

        Ron Patterson usually does a post around now with OPEC and Bakken numbers summarised – maybe tomorrow.

        Permitting and drilling have been up quite a bit in the last three months, less so completions. Any trend in production was messed up by the weather in December and January but maybe now back to normal. The May production numbers only came out in pdf, not Excel that I can find, so difficult to analyse much more.

        1. George, copy and paste the Bakken oil data into Excel. Highlight the column and then under data select “Text to columns”. The oil data comes out perfectly. You just have to fix the date column which is easy.

          1. OK thanks, still a lot of blank lines and headings every so often to deal with.

      2. Most of the press release was covered by the Bismarck Tribune but the gas ratio was tweeted by a Platts reporter.

        Worker shortage slows Bakken oil development
        AMY DALRYMPLE – Bismarck Tribune – July 14th 2017
        http://bismarcktribune.com/news/state-and-regional/worker-shortage-slows-bakken-oil-drilling/article_255e4b9c-5286-53d6-9731-23f70035f081.html

        Reporter for S&P Global Platts
        tweet https://twitter.com/BrianJScheid/status/885943683446702082

        chart on twitter
        https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DEyjVNQXoAEZopd.jpg

        1. Looks like there have been 3,613 ND Bakken wells placed on production since June, 2014 and Bakken production is down slightly from June, 2014.

          OAS is probably the best company to use for Bakken per barrel costs as they are 100% Bakken. Whiting is probably next best, as they are vast majority Bakken.

          I figure DD&A is probably understated some if they are writing down per unit, as EUR likely higher than what will ultimately be recovered. I think $28-30 per BOE is probably closer, but just an educated guess on my part. Add that to LOE, gathering, production taxes and general and administrative, should get you to “Break even”. Of course, you will have to figure a gas price into that. Also, can debate whether interest should be factored in.

          I’d say they need $65+ WTI up there pretty bad, although that may come down with more pipeline capacity.

    1. That article is from May 2016, I haven’t seen much change in their business models except a slight switch towards natural gas.

  38. US ‘will become one of the world’s top gas exporters by 2020’
    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2017/jul/13/us-worlds-top-gas-exporter-2020-iea-russia-norway

    The American shale gas revolution will enjoy a second wind as rapid growth in domestic production sees the US join the world’s club of top gas exporters, a leading energy authority has predicted.

    Fracking has already opened up US shale oil and gas deposits, leading to a fall in gas prices and a drop in greenhouse gas emissions as power generation switches from coal to gas, as well as reducing America’s historical reliance on fossil fuel imports.

    But an increase in US gas production over the next five years will cause another revolution as the country begins liquefying and shipping gas to Asia, Europe and the Middle East, the International Energy Agency said.

    In a report published on Thursday, the IEA forecast the US would generate almost 40% of the rise in global gas output between 2016 and 2022.

    Come 2022, the US will produce more than a fifth of the world’s gas, putting it on the same level as top gas exporters such as Russia and Norway, the agency predicted. As an exporter of liquefied natural gas (LNG), it would become second biggest in five years, behind Australia but above Gulf state Qatar.

    “The US is already the largest gas producer in the world and will increase production more than any other country over the next five years,” said Keisuke Sadamori, director for energy markets and security at the IEA. “US gas production will grow by nearly 3% a year.”

    More than half of that new production will be turned into liquefied natural gas for exports, he added….

    Overall, Sadamori said the key factor in the gas market in coming years would be production growth in the US and its emerging role as an exporter.

    “The ability of the gas fields in the US to provide large quantities at competitive prices will be the most important feature [of the gas market], not only to keep gas competitive for US power generation and industry customers, but also to further increase pipelines exports to Mexico, Canada and deliver LNG to the global market.”

    1. http://mazamascience.com/OilExport/

      This is a great graph site that relies on The Bible of oil (energy).

      Select gas. Select US in the dropdown.

      2016 showed an increase in gas IMPORTS for the US by 319%.

      Like all such things, consumption outruns production. This is the stuff of scarcity. You don’t export when you face scarcity (if rational).

        1. Granted, the United States is a net natural gas importer. But the EIA estimates it will become a net exporter by 2018 because of this:

          1. But here’s the best part. This production increase is being achieved with a far smaller number of rigs than what were running in the winter of 2014.

            1. Glenn

              To your point … the Pennsylvania DEP just released the May production figures a few hours ago.
              Something is going on up there that – sooner or later – mainstream analysts are apt to highlight with in depth perspective.

              Specifically, the productivity of wells this past year has been nothing short of astonishing.
              The T Kropa 10 from Cabot has surpassed the 1 Bcf per month mark two months running (1.2 Bcf May, April – 1.3 Bcf which I believe is a state record).
              This well, online 68 days, is not even the highest producer of the 6 new wells on the pad. T Kropa 8 is at 2.8 Bcf cum for 82 days versus #10’s 2.74 Bcf.

              Unbelievable productivity.
              The 6 new wells produced 4 Bcf the month of May.

              These wells are not outliers.

              The King D 4 has produced 6.5 Bcf in less than 10 months.

              For those looking at the financials, every 1 Bcf @ $3/mmbtu grosses $1 million.
              The King D 4 has grossed almost $20 million its first 10 months.

              Recent years, a single 10 MMcfd, 15 MMcfd IP would raise excitement.
              There are now 70 wells in Pennsylvania FLOWING – on an average, lifetime basis – over 15 MMcfd … some for years, now.

            2. coffeeguyz,

              You’re talking production rates of 20 to 40 MMcfpd. At those rates, these wells would pay out in just a few months. Pretty remarkable.

              I don’t think in the Midland Basin they’ve competed any monster wells like that yet, but there are probably some in the Delaware that have generated that kind of revenue.

              It would only make sense that, just like in the Permian, the longer laterals and latest fracking and completion technology would make for greatly enhanced well productivity.

              And indeed, the EIA shows rig productivity in the Marcellus to have doubled in the past four years.

              A question. Are gas takeaway problem in the Marcellus a problem? Do you believe they have restrained production from the field?

            3. Glenn

              There is no doubt whatsoever, none, that production has been greatly held back due to lack of takeaway capacity, most acutely in the northeast of the state (NEPA).
              This would affect Susquehannah, Bradford, Lycoming and Wyoming counties especially.
              There are hopes that a few pipelines will be in operation in 18/24 months’ time, but no guarantees.

              The southwest (SWPA), primarily Greene and Washington counties, have fared better as both westerly and southerly pipelines have been put into service with 2 – the Rover and Leach Xpress – expected to be operational this calendar year with 4.5 Bcf capacity.
              In addition, the Mariner East 2 should be operational this fall with 275,000 barrel capacity of ethane, propane, and butane to Marcus Hook.
              This will be expandable to over 500,000 bbld with a second pipe being laid – ME 2X – sequentially along with the current Mariner East transporting 70,000 bbld.
              The wet areas are located in SWPA, Ohio, and West Virginia.

              The projections of 35 Bcfd from this area, up from present 23 Bcfd, are very achievable, in my opinion.
              (Further takeaway restrictions exist in northwest of state to Buffalo, NY area. All in litigation).

            4. Suppose consumption overwhelms. That’s what coal cutbacks did. It created nat gas power plants.

              And you do realize the Bible doesn’t depart much.

            5. Watch

              It’s gonna be maghty int’rstin’ to see what the USGS folks peg the TRR for the Mighty Marcellus to be in the next year or so.

              The – dated – 2011 evaluation was 88 Tcf.
              Considering the Barnett went from 26 to 52 Tcf, the Mancos from 1.6 to 66 Tcf, and the Haynesville/Bossier up to 300 Tcf, methinks 1,000 Tcf for the Mighty Marcellus may not be entirely implausible.

              Then, you have the shallower Upper Devonian formations which include the Rhinestreet, Middlesex, Genesee, and Burket, amongst others.
              These formations are currently producing via new wells, particularly the Genesee and Burket in southwest PA, but show up under Marcellus in most reporting venues.

              Then, you gots the Big Brother in the basement, the Utica.

              WVU consortium put recoverable at 800 Tcf, but this past year has shown consistent productive expansion across north central tier, so, who knows?
              Lottsa marshmallow roasting fuel for a long time to come.

  39. On Topic here – just watch – DeepWaterHorizon THE MOVIE on a plane back from Europe. Not unlike Mad Max and an insight of Deep water challenge. Sure its Hollyworld, however I expected more depth. Themes include: Folly of Soviet style central management for such Real time operations, Unnecessary complexity, Lack of Mastering process dynamics, Piss on those that make it happen and TMF – Total Management Failure. No coverage on impact except those on the Platform.

  40. Small Permian producers flash warnings of slowdown
    Houston Chronicle – Collin Eaton – July 14, 2017

    Small oil producers tend to be more sensitive to falling prices since they don’t have the same access as larger competitors to capital through stock and bond markets to cushion the blow. Most of their capital comes from the oil they sell. And because of their smaller size, they struggle to negotiate the same discounts that oil field service firms give to larger companies.

    For small firms that depend on razor-thin margins to make ends meet, the economics of the oil patch have fallen apart in a matter of weeks. If crude remains cheap, Fasken Oil & Ranch, a small Midland oil producer, may have to “cut back pretty significantly,” possibly pausing plans to run two or three rigs this year, even though it owns the mineral rights on its acreage and doesn’t have to pay royalties as most firms do, said Tommy Taylor, director of oil and gas development at Fasken.
    http://www.houstonchronicle.com/business/article/Small-Permian-producers-flashing-warnings-as-oil-11288921.php

    1. And that’s why, of course, opening up more areas for drilling, and lowering royalty rates, makes so much sense right now. Have a fire sale so that gas and oil prices are kept down and the government makes less money in the process.

      1. Hi Boomer,

        The government doesn’t give a flying xxxx at a rolling donut about the oil and gas industry, except to ensure it keeps on doing what it’s doing now- producing plenty and selling cheap.

        VIRTUALLY ALL the incentives in our political system involve winning elections, and most of our elections are won by incumbents, and the best single indicator in predicting whether incumbents , either party, win is whether the economy is doing well.

        Incumbents are safe when voters are happy, less safe when voters are UNHAPPY.

        In my humble opinion, it takes a rather politically naive person to believe any politician, other than maybe a few who are in the pockets of oil and gas industry, give a shit about the oil and gas industry.

        All the rest, both parties, are perfectly satisfied with the price of oil and gas, you can take this to the bank.

        Don’t expect any thing to happen, top down, to change this situation.

        Don’t waste any time wondering why the financial police, aka the banking regulatory authorities, etc, aren’t investigating the way money is being loaned that apparently cannot be repaid, other than if it gets repaid via a bail out.

        The people whose job it is to investigate such matters don’t want to go looking for new jobs, lol. It’s easy for them not to notice when their salaries depend on not noticing.

        ( I didn’t say it first. )

        “And that’s why, of course, opening up more areas for drilling, and lowering royalty rates, makes so much sense right now. Have a fire sale so that gas and oil prices are kept down and the government makes less money in the process.”

        The GOVERNMENT doesn’t give a crap about losing a few billion here and there in potential revenue from leases, etc. The government is almost entirely focused on economic policies that enable incumbent politicians to win , election after election ………
        year after year…….

        forever………..

    2. If crude remains cheap, Fasken Oil & Ranch, a small Midland oil producer, may have to “cut back pretty significantly”….

      “Cut back pretty significantly” from what? Fasken was very active in the Wolfberry play and drilled scads of those wells, and was one of the very few operators that drilled them on 20 acre spacing. But after the oil price crash in the winter of 2014, Fasken cut its drilling activity to almost zero. Has Fasken drilled a single horizontal well in the Permian? I don’t know of any.

      I worked for David Fasken, Jr. back in the 1970s, a few years before he died. He was extremely wealthy (he owned 165,000 acres in Midland, Ector, Andrews and Martin counties in fee simple, and had another ranch near Laredo, Texas), and I assume his heirs still are, though they could have gotten themselves in a cash flow bind drilling Wolfberry wells. With the benefit of hindsight, those proved not to be very good investments. And talk about being conservative, David Fasken took that notion to an entirely new level.

      The same goes for Jack Byrd, another Permian Basin operator quoted in the article. I’ve know Jack for 35 years, and was a partner in some of his drilling ventures back in the 1980s. He must be up in his 80s now. I don’t know of a single well he drilled in the Wolfberry play, much less the Permian horizontal shale play.

      So again I ask, “cut back pretty significantly” from what?

  41. Taylor, of Fasken, was quoted back in November, 2016 and questioned the economics of horizontal Permian wells at $50 oil. Economist article.

    Story also says Fasken drills wells out of cash flow.

    Would not surprise me if Fasken is getting hammered as a non-operated interest owner in hz tight oil wells in PB. Might be getting some pretty big JIB’s that could be really draining cash flow.

    Let’s say, for example, a company owns a 20% GWI in a unit where 32 wells are pad drilled. Suddenly, in a 6 month time frame that company would get JIB’s totaling $40-50 million.

    Pretty sure most of the PB leases have et als. I bet Glenn is happy he owns RI and not WI in the unit Endeavor is getting ready to drill?

    1. shallow sand,

      Again I ask, “cut back significantly” from what? I cannot find a single horizontal shale well in the Permian that Fasken has drilled. They have staked several, but can you show me a completion?

      Regarding your speculation that Fasken is participating as a working interest partner in Pemian shale wells operated by others, for anybody who knows how Fasken operates that would be extraordinary unlikely.

      I took at look at the production histories of some of the shale wells that offset the Fasken ranch. The best one I found was a three-well pad with 5,000′ laterals that has produced an average of 130,000 BO per well during the first 15 months of production. That’s not much to crow about. And the other offsets I looked at were worse. So I can see why Fasken would be hesitant to offset these wells at current oil prices.

      I don’t know if you know where the Fasken ranch is located, but it lies north of the core areas of the Permian shale play. More recent 7500′ lateral wells completed in the core of the play produce an average of 200,000 BO or more during the first 12 months of production. This is considerably better than the well productivity achieved by wells offsetting the Fasken ranch. So what’s going on around the perimiter of the Fasken ranch is not necessarily a good gauge of what’s going on in the core areas of the Permian shale play, regardless of what you guys who like to paint with a big brush might believe.

      Regarding your comments about me participating as a working interest partner, I learned a long time ago that working interest ain’t for the working man. I lived through the oil price crash of the 1980s, so I’ve been there and done what you’re going through now. Working interest, and especially working interest in projects that entail drilling six or more wells at $5 or $6 million a pop all at one time, is for those with very deep pockets. Just a 10% working interest in one of these projects would cost one several million dollars. That’s out of my league.

Comments are closed.