U.S. shale could face weeks of depressed oil production due to cold
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[February 17, 2021] By
Jennifer Hiller
HOUSTON (Reuters) - The U.S. deep freeze
will wreak havoc on oil and gas production for several days if not
weeks, according to industry experts, as companies deal with frozen
equipment and a lack of power to run operations.
Texas produces more oil and natural gas than any other U.S. state, and
its operators, unlike those in North Dakota or Alaska, are not
accustomed to dealing with frigid temperatures. Numerous refineries in
Texas have also been shut, though weather events rarely knock
substantial amounts of production offline in oil patches far from the
Gulf coast.
Roughly 500,000 to 1.2 million barrels per day of the state's crude
production has been shut-in by the weather, which hit Texas with the
coldest temperatures in 30 years, analysts at Rystad Energy said. The
ripple effect from the cold is likely to reduce output for several
weeks.
Icy roads in the Permian Basin, the top U.S. shale field, halted the
trucking of everything from sand supplies to cement, while a loss of
power that affected millions of Texas residents also cut electricity to
oil pumps and saltwater disposal facilities. In some instances,
wellheads froze. Cellular service, used to send data from wellsites to
headquarters, was lost.
"They haven't had the electricity available to make the pumps work,"
said Texas Railroad Commissioner Jim Wright, one of the state's three
elected industry regulators. "Some producers in West Texas had to shut
in entire fields when they lost power."
Chevron Corp said the widespread power loss had led to "a significant
production shut-in of our Permian assets," while Exxon Mobil said its
shale operations in the region were operating at "reduced capacity."
Power interruptions for Texland Petroleum, which has 1,200 wells in the
Permian Basin, started on Monday morning, President Jim Wilkes said.
Some wells were disconnected by the power company or have had rotating
outages. At others, oil haulers stopped picking up oil due to road
conditions. "When the stock tanks fill up with oil, we have to shut in
the wells," Wilkes said.
Wilkes expects to restart production this weekend, but it will take a
week to return to normal.
Two of Abraxas Petroleum Corp's Permian oil wells were frozen in, but a
"silver lining" was that the company's natural gas wells continued
producing, said Chief Executive Bob Watson.
"Time will tell when things get back to normal and how much well work
will be required to get them back on," he said.
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A pump jack operates in the Permian Basin oil and natural gas
production area near Odessa, Texas, U.S., February 10, 2019.
REUTERS/Nick Oxford/File Photo
Permian wells produce prolific amounts of water, so production streams can
easily freeze in surface valves. That, along with the loss of electrical power,
contributed to the loss in output, analysts at Wood Mackenzie said. Many wells
rely on gas lift, and those lines freeze easily, too.
"There's no recent precedent for this and it's really due to the severity and
the duration of the cold weather," said Marc Amons, a Wood Mackenzie analyst.
Accessibility has been a major constraint, said Todd Staples, president of the
Texas Oil & Gas Association.
"Hazardous travel conditions limit the accessibility to repair equipment, it
limits the ability for service companies to reach production sites. You have
unplanned communication and power outages that all create difficulties," Staples
said.
The cold weather spillover has affected producers in North Dakota's Bakken shale
field, which suffered temperatures as low as minus 50 degrees Fahrenheit (-46 C)
earlier this month, said Ron Ness, president of the North Dakota Petroleum
Council.
"I think we’ll see some fairly significant impacts" on production, said Ness, in
part because of blackouts from electric supply sent south, he said. Oil
production in the Bakken slipped to 1.19 million barrels per day in December,
the latest month for which data is available.
More recently, well completions, which foreshadow future production, fell 40% in
the first half of February as severe weather descended, Ness said.
The state’s oil production declined by 35,000 barrels per day in December over
November, and will fall further in January and February, said Lynn Helms, North
Dakota's director of mineral resources.
"We could see double the production drop in January and see similar production
drops in this cold weather," said Helms.
(Reporting by Jennifer Hiller; Additional reporting by Gary McWilliams and Swati
Verma; editing by David Gaffen and Leslie Adler)
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