2021 年 4 月

第一油

鹰滩出现生命迹象
库尔特·亚伯拉罕 / 世界石油

 

近日,小编再次驱车从休斯敦驱车前往圣安东尼奥,沿“老路”行驶,这是一条与南面10号州际公路平行的美国高速公路。这条旧路的作用之一是为 Eagle Ford 页岩气/凝析油部分的工业活动提供了一个可见的晴雨表,特别是在冈萨雷斯和希纳之间 22 英里的路段。

事实上,这条路上行驶的油田服务卡车数量比我 15 个多月以来见过的还要多。在 SWD 设施中,每个停车位都停有一辆卡车。沿着这条路,一家独立运营商的地区办公室门口停着的车辆比一年多以来还要多。

虽然看不到正在运行的钻机,但修井机确实在现有井场上运行——这是相当长一段时间以来的第一次。有趣的是,一个房车公园在 2019 年和 2020 年似乎陷入困境,现在似乎几乎满了。你可以打赌,在那里露营的一些拖车里不是游客,而是很可能是伊格尔福特的工人,因为住房仍然稀缺。

因此,Eagle Ford 的情况正在好转,2021 年 4 月 16 日,贝克休斯 (Baker Hughes) 的钻机数量达到 33 台,这是自 2020 年 4 月 24 日 35 台钻机以来的最高数字。因此,很快,产量将开始超过随着经济活动继续复苏,与一年前的每周数据相比。这对于该行业以及德克萨斯州该地区的城镇来说是个好消息。

一位多年的同事去世了。我们非常悲伤地宣布,我们的长期艺术家/插画家 David Weeks 于 4 月 9 日突然去世,享年 69 岁。David 于 1978 年加入我们公司 Gulf Energy Information,一直是一名敬业、勤奋的成员在我们的生产部门工作了 43 年。他参与了我们所有出版物的工作,包括《世界石油》读者可能没有意识到大卫的“触摸”在如此多的方面有多么广泛,从清理和格式化技术文章的照片到创建或重新制作复杂的绘图和地图,再到帮助我挑选和判断图像获取每月一期的封面,然后对其进行格式化。我一直欣赏并相信他的判断。

正如我们的副总裁兼制作总监谢丽尔·斯通 (Sheryl Stone) 所说,“戴维是一位无私的人和一位耐心的老师,总是愿意分享他的知识并将他人的需求放在第一位。即使在紧迫的期限内工作,大卫仍然保持冷静,这为他赢得了“沉默的刺客”的绰号。众所周知,他会在不存在的地方添加天空,以数字方式为作者打扮得更合适一些,甚至移动月亮……安息吧,大卫,他确实想念你。

对已故菲利普亲王的思考。我们向英国的许多同事和朋友表示哀悼,他们于 4 月 9 日在王室中失去了心爱的菲利普亲王,享年 99 岁。作为爱丁堡公爵和伊丽莎白二世女王结婚 73 年的丈夫,菲利普亲王是一座塔楼背后的力量。

此外,正如前《华尔街日报》主编、现任总编辑杰拉德·贝克(Gerard Baker)(他本人是英国公民)所指出的,菲利普是一个非常直接的人。正如贝克所指出的,菲利普“具有提出尴尬问题、说出令人难以忽视的真相和挑战礼貌正统观念的准确能力。”例如,几年前 7 月 4 日在美国大使伦敦官邸举行的晚宴上,大使提出举杯庆祝,承认美国在 1776 年选择走一条不同的道路。贝克说,菲利普突然从坐着的位置大声喊道,毫无疑问,他喝了几杯大使馆的葡萄酒,“哦,是的!” 这对你来说效果如何?

在另一个例子中,当一位“对话者”解释说他正在访问的外国议会只有 200 名议员时,菲利普说,“这个数字大约是正确的”。“我们有 650 个,”菲利普宣称,“其中大多数完全是浪费时间。”菲利普可能不是一个真正的政治家,但他的评论是干脆、清晰和毫无歉意的。我们可以在当前的能源政策和哲学讨论中利用其中一些特征。

关于作者
库尔特·亚伯拉罕
世界石油
库尔特·亚伯拉罕 kurt.abraham@worldoil.com
相关文章 来自档案
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April 2021
Columns

First oil

Signs of life emerge from the Eagle Ford
Kurt Abraham / World Oil

 

Recently, this editor again drove from Houston toward San Antonio on the “old road,” a U.S. Highway that parallels I-10 to the south. One thing that the old road does is offer a visible barometer of industry activity in the gas/condensate portion of the Eagle Ford shale, particularly in a 22-mi stretch between Gonzales and Shiner.

Indeed, more oilfield service trucks were traveling that road than I have seen in more than 15 months. And at an SWD facility, every bay had a truck in it. Down the road, an independent operator’s district office had more vehicles parked out front than in well over a year.

While no active drilling rigs were visible, a workover rig did operate at an existing well pad—the first in quite some time. Anecdotally, an RV park, which had seemed to struggle in 2019 and 2020, now appeared to be nearly full. You can bet that some of those trailers camped out there were not tourists but most likely Eagle Ford workers, as housing remains scarce.

So, things are looking up for the Eagle Ford, where the Baker Hughes rig count sat at 33 units on April 16, 2021, the highest figure since 35 rigs on April 24, 2020. Thus, very shortly, the play will begin exceeding the year-ago weekly figures, as activity continues to recover. This is good news for the industry, as well as the towns in this part of Texas.

A long-time colleague passes away. It is with great sadness that we report that our long-time artist/illustrator, David Weeks, passed away suddenly on April 9 at age 69. David had joined our company, Gulf Energy Information, in 1978 and had been a dedicated, hardworking member of our Production Department for 43 years. He worked on all of our publications, including World Oil. Readers may not have realized how widespread David’s “touch” was on so many aspects, ranging from cleaning up and formatting photos for technical articles to creating or re-doing intricate drawings and maps, to helping me pick out and judge images for the covers of monthly issues and then formatting them. I always appreciated and trusted his judgment.

As our V.P. and Production Director Sheryl Stone noted, “David was a selfless man and a patient teacher, always willing to share his knowledge and put the needs of others first. David remained calm, even when working on a tight deadline, earning him the nickname, ‘the silent assassin.’ He had been known to add sky where none existed, digitally dress an author a little more appropriately, and even move the moon.” Rest in peace, David—we sure do miss you.

Thoughts on the late Prince Philip. Our condolences go out to our many colleagues and friends in the UK, who lost their beloved Prince Philip in the Royal Family on April 9 at age 99. As the Duke of Edinburgh and husband of 73 years to Queen Elizabeth II, Philip was a tower of strength behind the scenes.

Also, as noted by former Wall Street Journal Editor-in-Chief and now Editor-at-Large Gerard Baker (himself a British citizen), Philip was a very direct person. As Baker notes, Philip “had an unerring capacity to ask awkward questions, speak inconvenient truths and challenge polite orthodoxies.” For instance, at a July 4 dinner at the American ambassador’s house in London some years back, the ambassador made a toast, acknowledging that the U.S. had chosen in 1776 to go down a different path. Baker says Philip suddenly shouted out from a sedentary position, fortified, no doubt, by a couple of glasses of the embassy’s wine, “Oh yes! And how’s that working out for you?”

In another example, Philip said, “That’s about the right number,” when an “interlocutor” explained that the parliament of a foreign country he was visiting had only 200 members. “We have 650,” declared Philip, “and most of them are a complete bloody waste of time.” Philip may not have been properly P.C., but his comments were crisp, clear and unapologetic. We could use some of those traits in current discussions of energy policy and philosophy.

About the Authors
Kurt Abraham
World Oil
Kurt Abraham kurt.abraham@worldoil.com
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