Too much oil? Texas boom outpaces supply,
transport networks
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[October 02, 2018]
By Liz Hampton, Devika Krishna Kumar and Jarrett Renshaw
MIDLAND, Texas (Reuters) - The west Texas
drillers that drove the shale revolution have overwhelmed the region's
infrastructure with oil production -driving up costs, depressing
regional oil prices and slowing the pace of growth.
The U.S. government continues to forecast the country's oil output
rising to fresh record. But competition for limited resources in Texas
is making it harder for shale producers to turn a profit and encouraging
some to invest elsewhere.
Texas is home to the Permian Basin, the largest U.S. oil field and the
center of the country's shale industry. In the past three years,
production from the Permian has risen a whopping 1.5 million barrels per
day (bpd) to 3.43 million bpd.
All that oil means pipelines from the shale patch are full, so producers
are paying more to transport oil on trucks and rail cars. Shortages of
labor, water and even the fuel used in fracking are driving up
production costs.
At the same time, Permian producers are getting less for their oil,
which in August traded as much as $17 a barrel below the U.S. crude
benchmark. Sellers have to offer the discount to compensate for the
higher transport costs.
"We're our own worst enemy," said Ross Craft, chief executive of
Approach Resources, a small west Texas oil producer which last year
averaged about 11,600 barrels of oil equivalent daily output.
"We can drill, bring these wells on so quickly that we basically outpace
the market. It is going to take a little bit of time," he said, for the
infrastructure to catch up to producers.
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Approach Resources is leaving some wells uncompleted. That means the
firm drills the wells, but does not fracture the rock to produce the
oil. Other shale producers are also leaving the oil in the ground,
waiting for higher prices to make the drilling more profitable.
The number of uncompleted wells in the Permian jumped by 80 percent to
3,630 in August compared with a year earlier, according to U.S. Energy
Department data. For the rest of the United States, uncompleted wells
are up 10 percent from the same period a year ago.
Some companies are reducing the scope of their operations in the
Permian. ConocoPhillips <COP.N> and Carrizo Oil & Gas <CRZO.O> each
moved a Permian drilling rig to another oilfield, and Conoco idled a
second, the companies have said.
Noble Energy <NBL.N> also has cut back on its well completions and said
it is moving some drilling resources to Colorado.
Global Drilling Partners, a drilling contractor based in the Woodlands
near Houston, was set to drill seven wells with a Permian operator this
July, but that has dropped to two wells starting in December due to lack
of pipeline takeaway, said John Hopkins, a managing partner at the
company.
"There will be a shift out of West Texas temporarily until they can
solve their midstream problems," he said. Companies are looking to boost
their drilling in other fields in Texas, Colorado and Oklahoma, he said.
Suppliers including sand and rail companies say they are hedging their
bets by expanding elsewhere.
SHARES FALL ON HIGHER COSTS, LOWER REVENUE
The price discount on Permian oil has hurt the share price of shale
producers such as Parsley Energy <PE.N>, which operates only in the
Permian.
Parsley delivered an eight fold-rise in profits in the second quarter
versus a year earlier, and boosted output by 57 percent over the same
period.
But investors have dumped the stock on concern that plans to increase
output by another 5 percent by spending 17 percent more will deliver
diminishing returns. Parsley's shares are down about 8 percent since the
company reported results on Aug. 7.
Spending plans in 2018 by 53 independent U.S. producers have risen a
combined 18 percent over 2017, to $63.2 billion, according to investment
firm Cowen & Co.
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A pumpjack is shown outside a hospital in Seminole, Texas, U.S.,
July 18, 2018. Image taken July 18, 2018. REUTERS/Liz Hampton
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The U.S. in August produced a record 11 million bpd and continued
investment in the Permian should see the country's total output to
hit an average of 11.5 million bpd in 2019.
But rising costs and bottlenecks have already slowed the pace of
growth.
Consultancy Wood Mackenzie estimates Permian oil production in 2019
will be 200,000 barrels per day (bpd) less than it could be because
of transport constraints.
Permian output will be 3.9 million bpd next year, Wood Mackenzie
estimates, but could have been 4.1 million bpd if more pipeline
space were available.
"We've had a more significant increase in costs this year than we
would have assumed," Timothy Dove, chief executive of Pioneer
Natural Resources, one of the largest Permian oil producers, said in
August.
TRANSPORTATION AND SUPPLY SHORTAGES
Smaller producers without contracts to use pipelines are getting
hurt most because they are forced to use trucks and railcars.
Shipping oil by truck to Gulf Coast refinery and export hubs costs
$15 to $25 a barrel, compared to $8 to $12 a barrel by rail and less
than $4 a barrel by pipeline, according to market sources.
The shift is leading to traffic jams on highways and rail crossings
in far-flung parts of the Permian shale fields. It also means fuel
for supply vehicles and fracking equipment can be in short supply
locally.
"Truck traffic is unlike anything we've ever seen," said James
Walter, co-CEO of Colgate Energy, a Midland-Texas based oil
producer, who adds his company has agreements to transport all of
its crude and gas production via pipelines.
Rail capacity is unlikely to increase because oil producers are
reluctant to sign up to long-term contracts to lease rail cars. They
would prefer to wait for the new pipelines to be built. Planned
pipelines out of the Permian will add about 3 million bpd of oil
capacity by late 2020, estimates Wood Mackenzie.
Rail firms are reluctant to buy new oil railcars without long-term
contracts.
"We do think it's a short-term situation," Union Pacific Executive
Vice President Beth Whited said in July. "So we will not invest to
support that."
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Sand suppliers have moved quickly to alleviate one supply shortage
by opening new operations. Some 15 sand mines have popped up in the
Permian in the past year, creating a $1.2 billion industry almost
overnight, consultancy Rystad Energy estimates.
These mines sell sand for about $40 a ton, saving producers nearly
$90 a ton compared with sand shipped in from other states.
Just as elsewhere in the Permian, however, the increase in activity
is inflating costs. Preferred Sands, which has a sand mine in
Monahans, Texas, is paying workers there about 30 percent more it
does in other markets, said Chief Executive Michael O'Neill,
prompting the firm to open its next sand mine in Oklahoma instead.
(Reporting By Liz Hampton, Jarrett Renshaw, Devika Krishna Kumar;
additional reporting by Collin Eaton, Scott DiSavino, Jessica
Resnick Ault and Andres Guerra Luz; writing by David Gaffen; editing
by Simon Webb and Brian Thevenot)
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