U.S. oil industry set to break record,
upend global trade
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[January 16, 2018]
By Liz Hampton
HOUSTON (Reuters) - Surging shale
production is poised to push U.S. oil output to more than 10 million
barrels per day - toppling a record set in 1970 and crossing a threshold
few could have imagined even a decade ago.
And this new record, expected within days, likely won't last long. The
U.S. government forecasts that the nation's production will climb to 11
million barrels a day by late 2019, a level that would rival Russia, the
world's top producer.
The economic and political impacts of soaring U.S. output are
breathtaking, cutting the nation's oil imports by a fifth over a decade,
providing high-paying jobs in rural communities and lowering consumer
prices for domestic gasoline by 37 percent from a 2008 peak.
Fears of dire energy shortages that gripped the country in the 1970s
have been replaced by a presidential policy of global "energy
dominance."
"It has had incredibly positive impacts for the U.S. economy, for the
workforce and even our reduced carbon footprint" as shale natural gas
has displaced coal at power plants, said John England, head of
consultancy Deloitte's U.S. energy and resources practice.
U.S. energy exports now compete with Middle East oil for buyers in Asia.
Daily trading volumes of U.S. oil futures contracts have more doubled in
the past decade, averaging more than 1.2 billion barrels per day in
2017, according to exchange operator CME Group.
The U.S. oil price benchmark, West Texas Intermediate crude, is now
watched closely worldwide by foreign customers of U.S. gasoline, diesel
and crude.
The question of whether the shale sector can continue at this pace
remains an open debate. The rapid growth has stirred concerns that the
industry is already peaking and that production forecasts are too
optimistic.
The costs of labor and contracted services have recently risen sharply
in the most active oilfields; drillable land prices have soared; and
some shale financiers are calling on producers to focus on improving
short-term returns rather than expanding drilling.
But U.S. producers have already far outpaced expectations and overcome
serious challenges, including the recent effort by the Organization of
the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) to sink shale firms by flooding
global markets with oil.
The cartel of oil-producing nations backed down in November 2016 and
enacted production cuts amid pressure from their own members over low
prices - which had plunged to below $27 earlier that year from more than
$100 a barrel in 2014.
Shale producers won the price war through aggressive cost-cutting and
rapid advances in drilling technology. Oil now trades above $64 a
barrel, enough for many U.S. producers to finance both expanded drilling
and dividends for shareholders.
BOOMING OIL EXPORTS
Efficiencies spurred by the battle with OPEC - including faster
drilling, better well designs and more fracking - helped U.S. firms
produce enough oil to successfully lobby for the repeal of a ban on oil
exports. In late 2015, Congress overturned the prohibition it had
imposed following OPEC's 1973 embargo.
The United States now exports up to 1.7 million barrels per day of
crude, and this year will have the capacity to export 3.8 billion cubic
feet per day of natural gas. Terminals conceived for importing liquefied
natural gas have now been overhauled to allow exports.
That export demand, along with surging production in remote locations
such as West Texas and North Dakota, has led to a boom in U.S. pipeline
construction. Firms including Kinder Morgan and Enterprise Products
Partners added 26,000 miles of liquids pipelines in the five years
between 2012 and 2016, according to the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials
Safety Administration. Several more multi-billion-dollar pipeline
projects are on the drawing board.
U.S. drillers say they can supply plenty more.
"We continue to see and drive improvements" in drilling speed and
efficiency, said Mathias Schlecht, a technology vice president at Baker
Hughes, General Electric Co's oilfield services business.
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Workers hired by U.S. oil and gas company Apache Corp drill a
horizontal well in the Wolfcamp Shale in west Texas Permian Basin
near the town of Mertzon, Texas, U.S., October 29, 2013.
REUTERS/Terry Wade/File Photo
New wells can be drilled in as little as a week, he said. A few
years ago, it could take up to a month.
TECHNOLOGY OPENS UP NEW FIELDS
The next phase of shale output growth depends on techniques to
squeeze more oil from each well. Companies are now putting sensors
on drill bits to more precisely access oil deposits, using
artificial intelligence and remote operators to get the most out of
equipment and trained engineers.
As expanded investments push more producers to add wells in less
productive regions, technology will help make those plays more
profitable, said Kate Richard, chief executive of Warwick Energy
Group, which owns interests in more than 5,000 U.S. wells.
In an interview, she estimated about a third of the money from
private equity investments in shale will be used to wring more oil
from overlooked regions.
Higher prices - up about $10 a barrel in the last two months - also
may encourage the industry to work through a backlog of some 7,300
drilled-but-uncompleted shale wells that have built up because of
crew and equipment shortages.
The higher prices have suppliers that provide hydraulic fracturing
services, such as Keane Group and Liberty Oilfield Services, buying
expensive new equipment in anticipation of more work.
U.S. fracking service revenues are expected to grow by 20 percent
this year, approaching a record of $29 billion set in 2014,
according to oilfield research firm Spears & Associates.
OIL MAJORS JOIN SHALE FRAY
The shale revolution initially upended the traditional industry
hierarchy, making billionaires out of wildcatters such as Harold
Hamm, who founded Continental Resources, and the late Aubrey
McClendon of Chesapeake Energy.
Top U.S. oil firms such as Exxon Mobil and Chevron a decade ago
turned much of their focus to foreign fields, leaving smaller firms
to develop U.S. shale. Now they're back, buying shale companies,
land and shifting more investments back home from overseas.
Exxon last year agreed to pay up to $6.6 billion for land in the
Permian basin, the epicenter of U.S. shale. Chevron this year plans
to spend $4.3 billion on shale development.
The majors' shift is driving up costs for labor and drillable land
in the region, another boost to wages and wealth in rural areas.
In the shale industry hub of Midland, Texas, unemployment has fallen
to a mere 2.6 percent, said Willie Taylor, executive director of the
Permian Basin Workforce Development Board, a group that helps firms
find staff.
Companies are now offering signing bonuses to attract workers to
West Texas. One oil company flies workers to Midland from Houston
weekly to fill a local labor void, he said.
"It was an employer's market," he said. "Now it's more of a job
seeker's market."
(Additional reporting by Ernest Scheyder; Editing by Gary McWilliams
and Brian Thevenot)
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