二叠纪要点:重建美国最多产的范式

中游公司和勘探与生产公司可能有不同的优先事项,但持续的管道开发对该盆地的未来至关重要。

Brazos Midstream 选择二叠纪盆地是因为它是最经济、成本最低的天然气勘探区。(来源:布拉索斯中游)

哈罗德·哈姆 (Harold Hamm) 记得 2000 年代的某个时刻,当时二叠纪盆地的管道几乎已经干涸。

页岩革命正在进行中,来自德克萨斯州西部的新产量尚无法与现有的基础设施相匹配。

“我们已经安装了可以处理该体积的管道。基本上,当时它们大多是空的,”拥有私营勘探与生产大陆资源公司的哈姆说。

情况将会改变。 2010 年代末之前,原油管道已满,必须寻找替代运输方式。

现在,哈姆和他的团队发现天然气也存在同样的问题。该地区的生产商早就知道,随着页岩气的成熟,他们生产的天然气会增加,原油产量会减少。

根据美国能源信息管理局 (EIA) 的分析,2018 年至 2023 年间,二叠纪主要地点的气油比增加了两倍。然而,由于原油价格持续坚挺(两年多以来一直保持在 70 美元/桶以上),生产商继续增加原油产量。

由此导致的二叠纪天然气供应过剩,导致该地区的天然气价格跌至负值,并迫使一些公司寻求燃烧多余甲烷的许可。

预计今年将开通一条新的主要天然气管道,这将带来一些缓解。

然而,分析师预测天然气外运能力将在几年内充满。因此,在 2026 年至 2027 年期间需要另一个大型天然气管道项目。多个项目正在开发中,但尚未达到最终投资决策 (FID) 阶段。大型新建管道的建设通常需要至少两年的时间。

与此同时,联邦政府正在实施限制燃烧和监测气体排放的新规则。哈姆说,生产商可能会面临一个问题。如果原油生产产生的天然气多于可输送的天然气,原油生产可能会受到限制。

中游公司已经建立了一个粗略的网络,预计可以处理未来十年不断增加的流量。天然气的情况不太清楚。行业观察人士表示,需要新的管道产能,宜早不宜迟。

哈姆说:“随着规则的变化和时间的推移,我们试图防止的是在建造管道之前先扩大体积的考验。” “这必须改变,而且应该已经改变。”

新管道

与此同时,中游公司正在应对不断变化的地区和行业。

自 20 年代以来,人们一直在二叠纪盆地勘探石油,每一代人都尝试新的工具和技术,但总是需要重新安装管道。

“米德兰盆地的钻探已经有 100 年了,”Brazos Midstream 执行副总裁兼首席商务官 Stephen Luskey 说道,Brazos Midstream 是在二叠纪盆地运营的较大的独立中游公司之一。 “这里长期以来一直是盆地两侧的基础设施。”

这项工作的收集和处理部分意味着公司必须在生产现场处理新的、复杂的设置。

“当我们第一次开始时,您谈论的是每个平台一到两个水平井。今天,我们有人在每个垫上钻孔 8 到 12 个,”Luskey 说。所需的基础设施也相应扩大。需要更大的管道、更多的压缩、更多的天然气工厂来处理新的输出。

“对我们来说幸运的是,对运营商来说不幸的是,(新网络)尚未存在,”他说。 “本质上,你所看到的是,像布拉索斯这样的人基本上不得不重新铺设水池。”

燃气外卖项目_地图

原油空间

二叠纪的管道工程通常很难确定时间。

到 2018 年底,二叠纪原油产量超过了中游网络的运输能力。据一家公司称,随着产量激增,原油管道已满负荷,生产商有时不得不依靠更昂贵的铁路和卡车来运走原油。标准普尔全球当时的分析

管道建​​设者很快迎头赶上。当二叠纪盆地达到 2020 年疫情前的峰值原油产量略低于 5 MMbbl/d 时,随着埃克森美孚运营的 Wink-to-Webster 生产线上线,外运能力已超过 6 MMbbl/d,产能为1.5 MMbbl/天。

到 2023 年,二叠纪盆地的总出口能力约为 8 MMbbl/d,远远超​​过生产水平。由于产能过剩,Enterprise Products Partners决定于2023 年 10 月将其塞米诺尔管道转变为 NGL 运输管道,原油产能减少 21 万桶/天。

2024 年 5 月,美国能源信息署报告称,二叠纪原油产量已达到 6.16 MMbbl/d。虽然总体出口容量不是问题,但主要中游公司正在努力解决一些问题。

其中之一位于德克萨斯州科珀斯克里斯蒂。根据 RBN 5 月初发布的分析,该港口最近扩大了航运通道,出口设施不断增加,是该州最具吸引力的原油目的地。因此,到 2023 年,向南德克萨斯城输送原油的 4 条管道的平均产能将超过 90%。

为科珀斯克里斯蒂服务的两个管道扩建项目正在进行中。 5月9日,安桥宣布其灰橡树管道进入有约束力的开放季,计划产能扩大12万桶/天,项目将于2026年完工。安桥可能会根据开放季的需求调整拟议的新增产能。据 RBN 报道,私营企业EPIC Midstream正在考虑对其 EPIC Crude 系统进行类似的扩张,但该公司尚未确定具体的推进时间。

无论哪种方式,正如休斯顿 2024 年 Enverus Evolve 会议所指出的那样,二叠纪原油整体产能状况应该能够应对该地区的产量增长。该地区的石油产量预计到本十年末将增长约 2 MMbbl/d,而过去 10 年产量将增长 5 MMbbl/d。

“我们现在拥有的是一个非常健康的中游系统。 “他们在石油领域做得非常好,”哈姆说。 “无论是金德摩根、能源转移公司还是企业公司,无论是谁,他们的交易量都非常大。”  

二叠纪盆地天然气产量_图表

煤气灯

公司首席财务官威廉·巴特勒 (William Butler) 表示,随着这一产量的增加,将产生大量天然气,这正是布拉索斯的计划。

当 Brazos Midstream 成立时,其创始人知道他们希望专注于天然气管道和设施的开发。当时,由于阿巴拉契亚、德克萨斯州和路易斯安那州富含天然气的页岩盆地的开发,天然气正处于熊市。

巴特勒说,这给团队留下了一个选择。

“要么我们需要进入最经济、成本最低的天然气盆地,要么我们需要进入一个生产大量天然气的盆地,而他们不在乎价格是多少,”他说。 “因此,我们想要进入一个井口经济由天然气价格而非石油价格驱动的地区。”  

自成立以来,公司在现场和董事会上也发生了变化。

并购是去年二叠纪勘探与生产的热门话题。 5 月初,Kinetik Holdings宣布以 13 亿美元的中游交易收购 Durango Permian。然而,巴特勒表示,中游公司总体上还没有看到相同水平的合并活动。

“有点认为不祥之兆,”他说。 “但是我们在这里还有很多事情要做。”在我们考虑这样的事情之前,我们正在建设很多东西,还有很多工作要做。”

该公司专注于建设生产线和加工设施,目前正在米德兰盆地修建约 200 英里的高压管道和一座加工厂。

巴特勒表示,对于典型的二叠纪勘探与生产来说,甲烷气体将占公司收入的不到5%,因此价格与生产商无关。然而,中游公司仍然关注其生产线和工厂的产量。

“在二叠纪盆地的经济中,产量将取决于油价。”米德兰和特拉华州的盈亏平衡油价都低于 40 美元,”他说。 “没有比这里更好的地方了。” 

这个地方仍然会设置一些障碍。布拉索斯领导人表示,自 2020 年新冠疫情爆发以来,他们看到该盆地的供应链发生了巨大变化,特别是在液化天然气的加工过程中。

巴特勒表示,该公司的工厂避免了成为生产瓶颈,但该公司必须提前做好供应计划。

“过去我们需要 10 到 12 个月才能建造一座加工厂,现在可能需要 18 到 20 个月,”他说。 “现在的采购周期是 52 周。我的意思是,我们过去可以打电话把它下架。”

卢斯基表示,该公司经常与建设液化天然气终端的公司竞标铜制铝热交换器。公用事业公司的请求不堪重负。

“在典型的石油和天然气商业模式中,每个人都试图同时提高产量,”他说。 

然而,卢斯基表示,一旦该项目完成,布拉索斯公司向客户运送液化天然气将不会遇到困难。

二叠纪地区正在建设两条液化天然气管道。Targa Resources 的目标是在今年年底前将 40 万桶/天的 Daytona 生产线投入使用。

Enterprise 的目标是 60 万桶/天巴伊亚项目于 2025 年上半年投入使用,并已暂时将其塞米诺尔原油管道转变为运输液化天然气,以满足勘探和生产以原油为主的地区的高需求。

“增长将继续发生,”卢斯基说。

建筑WTX
Brazos Midstream 正在建设圣丹斯工厂,这是一座位于德克萨斯州马丁县的新低温处理设施,能够处理 200 MMcf/d,以及大约 200 多英里的相关收集管道,预计将于 2024 年第四季度投入使用。(来源:Brazos Midstream)

恰巧巨大

根据 EIA 的数据,二叠纪盆地是该国第二大天然气盆地,3 月份产量为 17.2 Bcf/d。以天然气为主的 Marcellus 盆地平均为 25.315 Bcf/d。

2024 年的大部分时间里,天然气价格一直处于低迷状态,2 月初在亨利中心期货市场跌破 2 美元/MMBtu,并且在三个月内没有升至该水平之上。到 5 月中旬,价格已攀升至仍然疲软的 2.25 美元/MMBtu。

然而,低价格和高销量可能会导致一些问题。

天然气整体需求较低,加上多条地区天然气管道的春季维护工作,导致德克萨斯州佩科斯附近的瓦哈枢纽的现货价格跌至负值。生产商现在必须花费超过 1 美元/MMBtu 聘请运输公司才能将天然气从他们手中拿走。

据路透社报道,西德克萨斯天然气网络造成的交通拥堵导致一些公司采取火炬燃烧的方式。 4 月最后一周,德克萨斯州铁路委员会批准了运营商提出的 21 项火炬燃烧请求,主要是在二叠纪和 Eagle Ford 页岩,是 2023 年同期批准的请求的四倍多。

卢斯基说,燃烧还可以显示很多有关其来源的基础设施的信息。作为一家独立公司,该公司更愿意建立能够处理更高负载的强化网络。

布拉索斯的成败在于我们的成功。 “这不是我们在压缩机站设置额外机组的地方,所以让我们拥有过剩的产能来应对增长的高峰,”他说。

当管道或加工厂无法处理超负荷时,即使气体流动速度不够快,仍继续在管道上泵送气体,通常会发生火炬燃烧。扩口通常首先出现在一些较旧的管道网络上,这些管道网络具有较旧的聚塑料管道或老化的压缩装置。在某个地区停留时间较长的公司通常必须处理占地数百万英亩的旧材料。

作为二叠纪盆地相对较新的公司,布拉索斯拥有利用钢管和新机组建设网络的优势。这是该公司向潜在客户的卖点之一。

“我们的系统不会出现 20% 到 30% 的线路损耗,每周不会发生多次耀斑,”Luskey 说道。

对于整个盆地来说,生产商希望新的管道能够让他们完全降低管线压力。

Brazos Midstream 选择二叠纪盆地是因为它是最经济、成本最低的天然气勘探区。 (布拉索斯中游)
Brazos Midstream 选择二叠纪盆地是因为它是最经济、成本最低的天然气勘探区。(来源:布拉索斯中游)

出口线路

有五个主要管道项目计划将天然气从二叠纪地区输送到墨西哥湾沿岸的不同目的地。

Matterhorn Express 是EnLinkWhiteWaterMarathon PetroleumDevon Energy的合资企业,于 2022 年达成最终投资决定,是目前唯一在建项目。这条 580 英里长的管道设计用于输送 2.5 Bcf/d 的天然气,终点位于休斯顿附近。该线路预计将于第四季度前投入使用。

马特洪峰的到来将为二叠纪生产者带来一些喘息的空间,但幅度不大,而且不会持续很长时间。随着米德兰和特拉华州的天然气产量随着时间的推移和该地区开采的增加而不断增加,预计该管道将在 2025 年底前满负荷运行。

公开提议的其他项目有: 

  • 金德摩根 (Kinder Morgan)提议的墨西哥湾沿岸快线 (Gulf Coast Express) 扩建项目将为终止于德克萨斯州南部的现有管道增加 570 MMcf/d。金德摩根 (Kinder Morgan) 呼吁该项目于 2022 年 5 月开放,希望在 2023 年 12 月之前实施扩建。不过,该项目尚未公布最终投资决定。一月份,金德摩根首席执行官 Kim Dang 表示,该公司仍然对该项目感兴趣。
  • Apex 管道是一个拟议的 563 英里、2 Bcf/d 产能的绿地项目,终止于德克萨斯州亚瑟港附近。 2023 年 3 月,Targa 获得德克萨斯铁路委员会批准修建该线路。公司高管公开表示,他们仍在决定该项目是否继续推进。
  • 勇士管道将从二叠纪盆地延伸至德克萨斯州沃思堡西南部的其他能源传输管道连接点。该计划的优点是利用达拉斯/沃斯堡地区未充分利用的管道容量,容量将在 1.5 Bcf/d 至 2 Bcf/d 之间。 Energy Transfer表示,该管道可能会在最终投资决定后两年内完工,但目前尚未达到这一目标。公司联合首席执行官汤姆·朗(Tom Long)在公司第一季度财报电话会议上表示,公司将继续致力于该项目,并将“很快”就是否继续推进做出决定。
  • DeLa Express 项目于 4 月公开,当时私营公司 Moss Lake Partners 向联邦能源管理委员会提交了初步文件。拟议的 690 英里管道的输送能力为 2 Bcf/d。这是唯一一条跨越州界的管道,终点位于路易斯安那州卡梅伦教区。该管道也是唯一一条设计用于运输富含液体的天然气的管道,这意味着托运人可以在运输前绕过西德克萨斯州的处理过程。根据向 FERC 提交的文件,Moss Lake 预计启动日期为 2028 年。
布拉索斯中游管道建设横跨米德兰盆地的里根县、格拉斯科克县、米德兰县、马丁县、霍华德县、安德鲁斯县和埃克托县。随着产量迅速达到极限,二叠纪盆地的管道建设势在必行。 (布拉索斯中游)
 布拉索斯中游管道建设横跨米德兰盆地的里根县、格拉斯科克县、米德兰县、马丁县、霍华德县、安德鲁斯县和埃克托县。随着产量迅速达到极限,二叠纪盆地的管道建设势在必行。(来源:布拉索斯中游)

准备好搬家了吗?

大陆资源公司总裁兼首席执行官罗伯特·劳勒表示,无论其他拟议项目是否继续推进,都会有明确的需求。

“随着该盆地石油的持续投资,对额外产能的需求将继续增长,”劳勒说。 “如果没有额外的产能,我们不仅会限制天然气生产,还会限制美国和世界所需的石油生产。”

在二叠纪盆地内外,许多行业一直在等待天然气的繁荣。

根据 EIA 的数据,未来两年,北美液化天然气出口量预计将增加一倍以上,从目前的 11.4 Bcf/d 增至 24.3 Bcf/d。沿着墨西哥湾沿岸,公司正在建设多个液化天然气出口终端,预计二叠纪将向这些终端供应天然气。

最近,人工智能 (AI) 和燃气发电之间的联系已在整个能源行业广为人知。 TC Energy 首席运营官 Stanley Chapman 在财报电话会议上表示,数据中心电力需求可能需要天然气产量增加 8 Bcf/d,相当于美国目前电力生产天然气需求的 21%。 

容纳人工智能服务器的数据中心比典型服务器需要更多的电力,因为人工智能芯片在其功能中比普通芯片消耗更多的能源。

天然气行业的其他人士报告称,“离岸外包”或制造公司将其业务迁回美国后,能源需求激增。 《福布斯》一月份报道称,69% 的美国制造商正在将其业务回流。

劳勒表示,增长预测足够强劲,以至于一些公司在项目决策中变得更加积极。这一趋势可能会鼓励中游公司考虑大型管道项目。

从历史上看,公司在宣布 FID 之前都会考虑约 75% 的基数。他说,随着二叠纪盆地的长期稳定增长,这可能不再是必要的。

“这条生产路径以及我们围绕它的确定性的有趣之处在于,最近在一些项目的最终投资决定中,人们倾向于较低的承诺基础,”他说。 “有了这种确定性,我们认为中游公司应该对那些管道已满的情况有更好的视野,并且最终投资决定应该更快发生。”

原文链接/HartEnergy

Permian Takeaways: Rebuilding the Most Prolific Paradigm in the US

Midstream companies and E&Ps may have different priorities, but continued pipeline development is crucial for the basin’s future.

Brazos Midstream chose the Permian Basin because it was the most economic, lowest-cost gas play. (Source: Brazos Midstream)

Harold Hamm remembers a point in the 2000s when the pipelines out of the Permian Basin were practically dry.

The shale revolution was getting underway, and the new volumes from West Texas could not yet match the infrastructure already in place.

“We had pipes in place that could handle the volume. Basically, at that time, they were mostly empty,” said Hamm, who owns the private E&P Continental Resources.

The situation would change. Before the end of the 2010s, crude pipelines were so full that alternative means of transport had to be found.

Now, Hamm and his team see the same problem arising with natural gas. Producers in the area have long known that, as shale plays age, they produce more gas and less crude.

The gas-to-oil ratio at primary sites in the Permian tripled between 2018 and 2023, according to an analysis by the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA). However, as price of crude has remained strong—above $70/bbl for more than two years—producers have continued to increase crude production.

The resulting gas oversupply in the Permian has dropped the region’s natural gas price into negative territory and forced some companies to seek permission to flare excess methane.

A new major gas pipeline is expected to open this year and will bring some relief.

However, analysts have forecast gas takeaway capacity will fill in only a couple of years. Another major natural gas pipeline project would therefore be needed in the 2026-2027 timeframe. Several projects are in development, but none have reached the final investment decision (FID) stage of the process. Construction for a major greenfield pipeline usually takes at least two years.

Meanwhile, the federal government is implementing new rules restricting flaring and monitoring gas emissions. Producers may face a problem, Hamm said. If crude production produces more gas than can be moved, crude production may be trapped.

Midstream companies have built a crude network expected to handle the increasing flows into the next decade. The picture for natural gas is less clear. Industry watchers say new pipeline capacity will be needed sooner rather than later.

“What we’re trying to prevent, as the rules change and time goes on, is the ordeal of building out volume before building out the pipes,” Hamm said. “That has to change and should have already changed.”

New plumbing

Midstream companies, meanwhile, are dealing with a changing region and industry.

Since the 1920s, people have been exploring the Permian Basin for oil, each generation trying out new tools and technologies—and always having to re-do the plumbing.

“The Midland Basin’s been drilled for 100 years,” said Stephen Luskey, executive vice president and chief commercial officer of Brazos Midstream, one of the larger independent midstream companies operating in the Permian. “There’s been infrastructure on both sides of the basin for that long.”

The gathering and processing part of the job means that companies have to handle new, complicated setups at the production site.

“When we first started, you were talking about one or two horizontal wells per pad. Today, we’ve got folks drilling eight to 12 per pad,” Luskey said. The infrastructure required has scaled up accordingly. Large pipes, more compression, more gas plants are all needed to handle the new output.

“Fortunately for us, unfortunately for the operators, (the new network) hasn’t existed,” he said. “What you’re seeing, in essence, is folks like Brazos are having to re-plumb the basin, basically.”

Gas takeaway projects_Map

Room for crude

The plumbing for the Permian has often been difficult to time.

Permian crude production outpaced the midstream network’s ability to take it away near the end of 2018. As production surged, crude pipelines were at capacity, and producers sometimes had to rely on more expensive rails and trucks to haul crude away, according to an analysis at the time by S&P Global.

Pipeline builders quickly caught up. By the time the Permian hit 2020 pre-COVID peak crude production at a little under 5 MMbbl/d, takeaway capacity had already surpassed 6 MMbbl/d as the Exxon Mobil-operated Wink-to-Webster line came online, with a capacity of 1.5 MMbbl/d.

By 2023, total egress capacity for the Permian was about 8 MMbbl/d, well ahead of production levels. There was enough excess capacity that Enterprise Products Partners decided to convert its Seminole Pipeline into an NGL transport conduit in October 2023, subtracting 210,000 bbl/d from crude capacity.

In May 2024, the U.S. Energy Information Administration reported that Permian crude production had hit 6.16 MMbbl/d. While overall egress capacity is not a problem, there are some issues that major midstream companies are trying to address.

One is in Corpus Christi, Texas. The port, with recently enlarged shipping channels and growing export facilities, is the most attractive destination for crude in the state, according to an analysis by RBN published in early May. As a result, the four pipelines serving crude to the South Texas City averaged over 90% capacity in 2023.

Two pipeline expansion projects serving Corpus Christi are in the works. On May 9, Enbridge called a binding open season for its Gray Oak Pipeline, with a proposed capacity expansion of 120,000 bbl/d and project completion in 2026. Enbridge may adjust the proposed added capacity, depending on the demand from the open season. According to RBN, private EPIC Midstream is considering a similar expansion on its EPIC Crude system, though the company has not determined a definite time to move forward.

Either way, the overall Permian crude capacity situation should be able to handle the region’s production growth, as noted at the 2024 Enverus Evolve conference in Houston. The region’s production output is expected to grow about 2 MMbbl/d by the end of the decade, after growing 5 MMbbl/d over the last decade.

“What we have now is a very healthy midstream system. They’re doing very good in the oil patch,” Hamm said. “Whether it’s the Kinder Morgans, the Energy Transfers, Enterprise, whoever it is, they’re moving a hell of a lot of volume.”  

Permian Basin Natural Gas Production_Chart

Gas light

With that volume comes a whole lot of natural gas, which is what Brazos planned for, said company CFO William Butler.

When Brazos Midstream formed, its founders knew they wanted to focus on the development of gas pipelines and facilities. At the time, natural gas was in a bear market, thanks to the development of gas-rich shale basins in Appalachia, Texas and Louisiana.

That left the group with a choice, Butler said.

“We needed to either go into the most economic, lowest-cost gas basin, or we needed to go into a basin where they produce a lot of gas, and they don’t care what the price is,” he said. “So, we wanted to go to an area where the wellhead economics were driven by gas prices, not by oil prices.”  

Since its start, the company has also seen changes in the field and boardroom.

M&A was a hot subject for the Permian E&Ps last year. In early May, Kinetik Holdings announced a $1.3 billion midstream deal to acquire Durango Permian. However, Butler said the same level of merger activity has not been seen overall by midstream companies.

“We kind of think the writing’s on the wall,” he said. “But we’ve got a lot to do out here. We’re building a lot and have a lot of work to do before we think about something like that.”

The company has focused on building up its lines and processing facilities and is currently working on about 200 miles of high-pressure pipe and a processing plant in the Midland Basin.

Butler said that for the typical Permian E&P, methane gas will make up less than 5% of the company’s revenue, making the price irrelevant to the producer. Midstream companies, however, remain focused on the volume going into their lines and plants.

“The volume is going to come by virtue of the oil price in the economics of the Permian Basin. Both the Midland and the Delaware have sub-$40 breakeven oil prices,” he said. “There’s no better place to be.” 

The place can still throw up some obstacles. Brazos leaders said they have seen a sea of change in the supply chains in the basin ever since the beginning of the COVID pandemic in 2020, especially in the processing to make NGLs.

The company’s plants have avoided becoming a production bottleneck, Butler said, but the company has to plan well in advance for supplies.

“What used to take us 10 to 12 months in building a processing plant takes probably 18 to 20 months,” he said. “Compression now is a 52-week lead time to purchase. I mean, we used to be able to call and just get it off the shelf.”

Luskey said the company is often bidding for braised aluminum heat exchangers with corporations building LNG terminals. Utility companies are overloaded with requests.

“In typical oil and gas business fashion, everybody tries to ramp up at the same time,” he said. 

Once the project is done, however, Luskey said the Brazos will not have difficulty shipping NGLs to customers.

Two NGL pipelines are under construction in the Permian. Targa Resources aims to place the 400,000 bbl/d Daytona line in service by the end of the year.

Enterprise is targeting a first half of 2025 in-service date for the 600,000 bbl/d Bahia project and has temporarily converted its Seminole crude pipeline to transport NGLs in response to high demand in an area where E&Ps are focused on crude.

“The growth is going to continue to happen,” Luskey said.

Construction WTX
Brazos Midstream is constructing the Sundance Plant, a new cryogenic processing facility capable of handling 200 MMcf/d located in Martin County, Texas, and approximately 200 plus miles of associated gathering pipeline, expected to be commissioned Q4 2024. (Source: Brazos Midstream)

Coincidentally huge

According to the EIA, the Permian was the country’s second-most productive natural gas basin at 17.2 Bcf/d for March. The gas-focused Marcellus Basin averaged 25.315 Bcf/d.

The price of natural gas has been in the doldrums for most of 2024, dropping below $2/MMBtu at the Henry Hub futures market at the beginning of February and not climbing above the mark for three months. By mid-May, the price had climbed to a still-anemic $2.25/MMBtu.

Low prices and high volume can cause some problems, however.

The overall low demand for natural gas, coupled with spring maintenance work on several area gas pipelines, drove the spot price at the Waha Hub near Pecos, Texas, into negative territory. Producers now had to spend more than $1/MMBtu for a transport company to take the gas off their hands.

According to Reuters, the resulting traffic jam on the West Texas gas network led some companies to resort to flaring. During the last week of April, the Texas Railroad Commission approved 21 flaring requests from operators, primarily in the Permian and the Eagle Ford Shale, more than four times the requests that had been approved during the same time in 2023.

Luskey said that flaring can also show a lot about the infrastructure it’s coming from. As an independent, the company prefers to build reinforced networks that can handle a higher load.

“What’s going to make or break Brazos is our success. It’s not where we did or didn’t set an additional unit at a compressor station, so let’s have the excess capacity to manage the spikes in growth as it comes,” he said.

Flaring often happens when the pipelines or processing plants are unable to handle the excess load when gas continues to be pumped on the line even when it’s not flowing fast enough. Flaring will generally first appear on some of the older pipeline networks with older polyplastic pipes or aging compression units. Companies with more time in an area often have to deal with older material stretched out over millions of acres.

As a relative newcomer to the Permian, Brazos has the advantage of building its networks with steel pipe and new units. It’s one of the company’s selling points to potential customers.

“You’re not going to see a 20% to 30% line loss on our system, you’re not going to flare multiple times a week,” Luskey said.

For the basin as a whole, producers hope a new pipeline will allow them to lower the line pressure completely.

Brazos Midstream chose the Permian Basin because it was the most economic, lowest-cost gas play. (Brazos Midstream)
Brazos Midstream chose the Permian Basin because it was the most economic, lowest-cost gas play. (Source: Brazos Midstream)

Lines of egress

There are five major pipeline projects slated to take natural gas out of the Permian and onto different destinations on the Gulf Coast.

The Matterhorn Express, a joint venture by EnLink, WhiteWater, Marathon Petroleum and Devon Energy reached FID in 2022 and is currently the only project under construction. The 580-mile pipeline was designed to handle 2.5 Bcf/d of natural gas and terminates close to Houston. The line is expected to be in service before the fourth quarter.

The arrival of the Matterhorn will give Permian producers some breathing room, but not much, and not for long. The pipeline is expected to be at full capacity before the end of 2025, as natural gas production in the Midland and Delaware continues to increase with time and with increased exploitation of the area.

The other projects publicly proposed are: 

  • The Gulf Coast Express expansion, proposed by Kinder Morgan, would add 570 MMcf/d to an already existing pipeline that terminates in South Texas. Kinder Morgan called an open season on the project in May 2022 in hopes of implementing the expansion by December 2023. However, no FID on the project has been announced. In January, Kinder Morgan CEO Kim Dang said the company was still interested in the project.
  • The Apex Pipeline is a proposed 563-mile, 2 Bcf/d capacity greenfield project that would terminate near Port Arthur, Texas. In March 2023, Targa received Texas Railroad Commission approval for the line. Company executives have publicly stated that they are still deciding if the project will move forward.
  • Warrior Pipeline would run from the Permian to other Energy Transfer pipeline connections southwest of Forth Worth, Texas. The plan has the advantage of utilizing underused pipeline capacity in the Dallas/Fort Worth area and would have between 1.5 Bcf/d and 2 Bcf/d capacity. Energy Transfer says the pipeline could be completed within two years of FID, which it has not yet reached. Company co-CEO Tom Long said during the company’s first-quarter earnings call that the company continued to work on the project and would reach a decision about whether or not to go forward “pretty quick.”
  • The DeLa Express project became public in April when private company Moss Lake Partners filed preliminary paperwork with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. The proposed 690-mile pipeline would have a capacity of 2 Bcf/d. It’s the only pipeline that would cross state lines, as the terminal point is slated for Cameron Parish, Louisiana. The pipeline is also the only one designed to haul liquids-rich gas, meaning that shippers could bypass processing in West Texas before shipping. According to its filing with the FERC, Moss Lake has projected a 2028 start date.
Brazos Midstream pipeline construction stretching Reagan, Glasscock, Midland, Martin, Howard, Andrews and Ector counties in the Midland Basin. Pipeline construction is imperative in the Permian Basin as output is rapidly reaching capacity. (Brazos Midstream)
 Brazos Midstream pipeline construction stretching Reagan, Glasscock, Midland, Martin, Howard, Andrews and Ector counties in the Midland Basin. Pipeline construction is imperative in the Permian Basin as output is rapidly reaching capacity. (Source: Brazos Midstream)

Ready to move?

Continental Resources President and CEO Robert Lawler said there will be a definite need regardless of whether the other proposed projects go forward.

“With the continued investment in oil in this basin, that need for additional capacity is going to continue to grow,” Lawler said. “And without the additional capacity, we are going to limit not only the gas for production but the oil production that the United States and the world need.”

Inside and outside of the Permian, much of the industry has been waiting for a natural gas boom.

In the next two years, North American LNG exports are expected to more than double from their present capacity of 11.4 Bcf/d to 24.3 Bcf/d, according to the EIA. Along the Gulf Coast, companies are constructing multiple LNG export terminals, which the Permian is expected to feed.

More recently, the connection between artificial intelligence (AI) and gas-fired generation has become known throughout the energy industry. TC Energy’s COO Stanley Chapman said during an earnings call that data center power demands could call for an 8 Bcf/d increase in natural gas production, equal to 21% of current natural gas demand in the U.S. for electrical production. 

Data centers housing AI servers require far more electricity than typical servers, as AI chips use much more energy in their functions than normal chips.

Others in the gas industry have reported a surge in energy demand from “reshoring,” or when a manufacturing company moves its operations back to the U.S. after moving them offshore. Forbes reported in January that 69% of U.S. manufacturers are reshoring their operations.

Lawler said the growth projections are strong enough that some companies have become more aggressive in their project decisions. The trend could potentially encourage a midstream company pondering a major pipeline project.

Historically, companies have looked at a base of about 75% before announcing FID. With the long, steady growth in the Permian, that may no longer be necessary, he said.

“What’s interesting about this production path and the certainty that we have around it, is that recently on some project FIDs, folks have leaned into a lower commitment base,” he said. “With this certainty, we see it where we think the midstream company should have a better line of sight to those pipes being full and that FID should occur sooner.”