In New Mexico’s Chihuahuan Desert, Exxon Mobil is building a massive
shale oil project that its executives boast will allow it to ride out
the industry's notorious boom-and-bust cycles.
Workers at its Remuda lease near Carlsbad — part of a staff of 5,000
spread across New Mexico and Texas — are drilling wells, operating
fleets of hydraulic pumps and digging trenches for pipelines.
The sprawling site reflects
the massive commitment to the Permian
Basin by oil majors, who have spent an estimated $10bn buying ground in
the top US shale field since the beginning of 2017, according to
research firm Drillinginfo.
The rising investment also reflects a recognition that
Exxon, Chevron, Royal Dutch Shell and BP largely missed out on the first
phase of the Permian shale bonanza while more nimble independent
producers, who pioneered shale drilling technology, leased Permian
acreage on the cheap.
Now that the field has made the US the world's top oil producer,
Exxon and other majors are moving aggressively to dominate the Permian
and use the oil to feed their sprawling pipeline, trading, logistics,
refining and chemicals businesses. The majors have 75 drilling rigs here
this month, up from 31 in 2017, according to Drillinginfo. Exxon
operates 48 of those rigs and plans to add seven more this year.
The majors' expansion comes as smaller independent producers, who
profit only from selling the oil, are slowing exploration and cutting
staff and budgets amid investor pressure to control spending and boost
returns.
Exxon CEO Darren Woods said on March 6 that Exxon would change “the
way that game is played” in shale. Its size and businesses could allow
Exxon to earn double-digit percentage returns in the Permian even if oil
prices — now above $58 per barrel — crashed to below $35, added senior
vice-president Neil Chapman.
Exxon's approximately 648,000ha in the Permian means it can approach
the field as a “megaproject”, said Staale Gjervik, the head of shale
subsidiary XTO Resources, whose headquarters was recently relocated to
share space with its logistics and refining businesses. The firm also
recently outlined plans to nearly double the capacity of a Gulf Coast
refinery to process shale oil.
“It sets us up to take a longer-term view,” Gjervik said.
The majors' Permian investments position the field to compete with
Saudi Arabia as the world's top oil-producing region and solidifies the
US as a powerhouse in global oil markets, said Daniel Yergin, an oil
historian and vice-chair of consultancy IHS Markit.
“A decade ago, capital investment was leaving the US,” he said. “Now it's coming home in a very big way.”
The Permian is expected to generate 5.4-million barrels per day (bpd)
by 2023 — more than any single member of oil cartel Opec other than
Saudi Arabia, according to IHS Markit. Production in March, at about
four-million bpd, will about double that of two years ago.
Exxon, Chevron, Shell and BP now hold about 1.8-million hectares in
the Permian Basin, according to Drillinginfo. Chevron and Exxon are
poised to become the biggest producers in the field, leapfrogging
independent producers such as Pioneer Natural Resources.
Pioneer recently dropped a pledge to hit one-million bpd by 2026 amid
pressure from investors to boost returns. It shifted its emphasis to
generating cash flow and replaced its chief executive after posting
fourth quarter profit that missed Wall Street earnings targets by 36c a
share.
Shell, meanwhile, is considering a multibillion dollar deal to
purchase independent producer Endeavor Energy Resources, according to
people familiar with the talks. Shell declined to comment and Endeavor
did not respond to a request.
Chevron said it would produce 900,000 bpd by 2023, while Exxon
forecast pumping one-million bpd by about 2024. That would give the two
companies one-third of Permian production within five years.
Smaller producers get squeezed
At first, the rise of the Permian was driven largely by nimble
explorers who pioneered new technology for hydraulic fracturing, or
fracking, and horizontal drilling to unlock oil from shale rock,
slashing production costs.
The advances by smaller companies initially left the majors behind.
Now, those technologies are easily copied and widely available from
service firms.
Surging Permian production has overwhelmed pipelines and forced
producers to sell crude at a deep discount, sapping cash and profits of
independents who, unlike the majors, don't own their own pipeline
networks.
Even as the majors have ramped up operations, the total number of
drilling rigs at work in the Permian has dropped to 464, from 493 in
November, as independent producers have slowed production, according to
oilfield services provider Baker Hughes.
Shell, by contrast, plans to keep expanding even if prices fall further, said Amir Gerges, Shell's Permian GM.
“We have a bit more resilience” than the independents, Gerges said.
In west Texas, the firm drills four to six wells at a time next to
one another, a process called cube development that targets multiple
layers of shale as deep as about 2.4km.
Cube development is expensive and can take months, making it an
option only for the majors and the largest independent producers. Shell
has used the tactic to double production in two years, to 145,000bpd.
The largest oil firms can also take advantage of their volume-buying
power even if service companies raise prices for supplies or drilling
and fracking crews, said Andrew Dittmar, a Drillinginfo analyst.
“It’s like buying at Costco versus a neighbourhood market,” Dittmar said.
The majors' rush into the market means smaller companies are going to
struggle to compete for service contracts and pay higher prices, said
Roy Martin, analyst with energy consultancy Wood Mackenzie.
“When you’re sitting across the negotiating table from the majors, the chips are stacked on their side,” he said.
Rebirth
The revival of interest in the Permian marks a reversal from the late 1990s, when production had been falling for two decades.
“All the majors and all the companies with names you’ve heard left
with their employees,” said Karr Ingham, an oil and gas economist.
"Conventional wisdom was this place was going to dry up.”
Chevron was the only major that stayed in the Permian. It holds
2.3-million acres and owns most of its mineral rights, too, but until
recently left drilling to others.
But earlier in March, CEO Mike Wirth called the Permian its best bet for delivering profits “north of 30% at low oil prices”.
“There's nothing we can invest in that delivers higher rates of
return,” Wirth said earlier in March at its annual investor meeting in
New York.
‘Hunger and fear’
Matt Gallagher, CEO of Parsley Energy, calls the majors' investments
“the best form of flattery” for independents operating here.
Parsley holds about 78,000 Permian hectares — most of which were
snatched up on the cheap during oil busts — and sees its smaller size as
an advantage in shale.
“We’re not finished yet," Gallagher said. "We can move very quickly.”
The majors have greater infrastructure, but independents continue to
innovate and design better wells, said Allen Gilmer, a co-founder of
Drillinginfo.
“Nothing is a bigger motivator than, 'Am I going to be alive
tomorrow?’” Gilmer said. “Hunger and fear is something that every
independent oil-and-gas person knows — and that something no major
oil-and-gas person has ever felt in their career.”
- Reuters
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