Civitas:4 英里科罗拉多侧向输油管道是 DJ 盆地的“竞争优势”

Civitas Resources 已向二叠纪盆地的并购项目投入了数十亿美元,但该公司仍然认为其在科罗拉多州的基础投资组合仍有增长空间。

尽管监管和土地收购环境十分严峻,但丹佛Civitas Resources通过在科罗拉多州钻探更长的水平井实现了效率。

总部位于丹佛的 Civitas 公司于 6 月底开始从 13 口 4 英里长的丹佛-朱尔斯堡 (DJ) 盆地油井回流生产。

“据我们所知,它们是科罗拉多州有史以来钻的最长的井,”Civitas 首席财务官兼财务主管 Marianella Foschi 在 8 月 19 日举行的 2024 年 EnerCom 丹佛会议上表示。

Foschi 表示,13 口 4 英里 DJ 井的结果仍处于早期阶段,但 Civitas 已经证实,钻探的每一英里都对产量做出了有意义的贡献。

她表示,能够在 DJ 盆地钻探更长的 4 英里井,为 Civitas 带来了“巨大的竞争优势”。

与 3 英里井相比,Civitas 4 英里井的每英尺钻井成本降低了约 5%。

“显然,这说明资本效率,”Foschi 说。

随着时间的推移,该公司在 DJ 钻探更长的水平井时变得更加得心应手。在规划 2022 年资本计划时,Civitas 曾考虑钻探高风险的 3 英里水平井,但并不确定这些井的表现会如何。

该公司很高兴地看到,与 2 英里井相比,3 英里井的性能几乎没有下降。

她说:“如果你想想我们在 2022 年和 2023 年的出色表现,就会发现这很大程度上是因为我们在第三英里上冒了很大的风险,相对于这两英里而言。”

在 DJ 盆地中延长地下开采时间也可以减轻土地收购游戏的难度。

在科罗拉多州寻找和购买地面钻井地点可能很困难,因为该地的油田已经被雪佛龙西方石油和西维塔斯等少数几家运营商牢牢控制。

Foschi 表示,Civitas 的 13 口 4 英里 DJ 井的额外四分之一英里相当于大约六口 2 英里的井,并且资源回收潜力远远超过 60,000 英尺。

尽管 Civitas 对二叠纪盆地进行了重大投资,但该公司仍然为其基础科罗拉多资产制定了未来钻探计划。

本月初,科罗拉多州能源和碳管理委员会 (ECMC) 批准了 Civitas 的综合区域计划 (CAP),以开发位于 DJ 盆地南部的 Lowry Ranch 项目。

Lowry Ranch CAP 要求在科罗拉多州阿拉帕霍县的 10 个新建或扩建井场上钻探多达 166 口井。         

福斯基表示,Civitas 的目标是明年初获得州监管机构批准的额外 CAP。


有关的

Civitas 的 4 英里 DJ Basin Wells 看到“相当引人注目”的回报


二叠纪徘徊

尽管 Civitas 在 DJ 盆地拥有钻探场地,但该公司对库存的追逐使其在过去一年中向二叠纪盆地投入了近 70 亿美元的并购资金。

Civitas 于 2023 年 8 月完成了前两次二叠纪收购,分别以 22 亿美元收购了  米德兰盆地的 Hibernia Energy III和 以 25 亿美元收购了特拉华盆地的Tap Rock Resources 。

1 月初,Civitas 以 20 亿美元完成了对Vencer Energy 的 收购,Vencer Energy 是一家由国际大宗商品贸易公司Vitol支持的米德兰盆地勘探与生产公司 

福斯基表示,Civitas 很高兴公司选择进军二叠纪盆地。

Foschi 表示:“我们非常感激和幸运能够进入二叠纪盆地。据我们所知,在我们买入后不久,二叠纪盆地的资产价格就出现了显著上涨。”

当 Civitas 收购 Permian 时,它支付的费用约为债务与 EBIDTA 之比的 3 倍,并且每个净钻井地点支付的费用约为 100 万至 200 万美元。

如今,Civitas 看到 Permian 资产的交易价格接近债务与 EBIDTA 的 4 倍,每个地点的交易价格约为 200 万至 400 万美元。

Foschi 表示:“目前的市场很艰难。你必须为未来的资本效率付出代价。你必须为可能尚未被证明可重复的上行区域付出代价。”

尽管二叠纪油价高企,但 Civitas 仍在米德兰和特拉华盆地开展业务,寻找油田交易、掉期和其他小规模并购。

Civitas 第二季度在二叠纪盆地的产量约为 186,000 桶油当量/天。


有关的

Civitas 优先考虑二叠纪盆地,抛弃非核心科罗拉多资产

原文链接/HartEnergy

Civitas: 4-mile Colorado Laterals A ‘Competitive Edge’ in D-J Basin

Civitas Resources poured billions of dollars into Permian M&A, but the company still sees room to run in its foundational portfolio in Colorado.

DENVER—Civitas Resources is seeing efficiencies from drilling longer laterals in Colorado, despite a challenging regulatory and land acquisition environment.

Denver-based Civitas began flowing back production from 13 4-mile Denver-Julesburg (D-J) Basin wells in late June.

“To our knowledge, they’re the longest wells ever drilled in the state of Colorado,” said Civitas CFO and Treasurer Marianella Foschi during the 2024 EnerCom Denver conference on Aug. 19.

Results from the 13 4-mile D-J wells are still early, but Civitas has confirmed that each mile drilled is contributing meaningfully to production, Foschi said.

Being capable of drilling longer 4-mile wells in the D-J Basin gives Civitas “a massive competitive edge,” she said.

Civitas saw around a 5% reduction in per-foot drilling costs on its 4-mile wells compared to 3-mile wells.

“Obviously, that speaks to the capital efficiency,” Foschi said.

The company has gotten much more comfortable drilling longer laterals in the D-J over time. When planning its 2022 capital program with risky 3-mile laterals, Civitas wasn’t sure what kind of performance it would see from the wells.

The company was pleased to see essentially no degradation in performance for a 3-mile well compared to a 2-mile well.

“If you think about our outperformance in 2022 and 2023, it was very much underpinned by the fact that we heavily risked that third mile, relative to the two,” she said.

Going longer underground in the D-J Basin can also provide some relief to a challenging land acquisition game.

It can be difficult to find and buy surface drilling locations in Colorado, where acreage is already heavily consolidated in the portfolios of a handful of operators like Chevron , Occidental and Civitas itself.

The extra fourth mile on Civitas’ 13 4-mile D-J wells is equal to about six 2-mile wells—and well over 60,000 ft of resource recovery potential, Foschi said.

And despite Civitas’ major investment into the Permian Basin, the company still has future drilling plans in store for its foundational Colorado asset.

Earlier this month, the Colorado Energy and Carbon Management Commission (ECMC) approved a comprehensive area plan (CAP) for Civitas to develop the Lowry Ranch project in the southern D-J Basin.

The Lowry Ranch CAP calls for up to 166 wells on 10 new or expanded well pads in Arapahoe County, Colorado.         

Foschi said Civitas aims to have an additional CAP approved by state regulators early next year.


RELATED

Civitas’ 4-Mile D-J Basin Wells See ‘Quite Compelling’ Returns


Permian prowl

Despite Civitas’ drilling runway in the D-J Basin, the company’s hunt for inventory led it to allocate nearly $7 billion of M&A into the Permian in the past year.

Civitas closed its first two Permian acquisitions in August 2023, scooping up Hibernia Energy III in the Midland Basin for $2.2 billion and Tap Rock Resources in the Delaware Basin for $2.5 billion.

In early January, Civitas closed a $2 billion acquisition of Vencer Energy, a Midland Basin E&P backed by international commodities trading house Vitol.

Foschi said Civitas is glad the company dove into the Permian when it did.

“We’re grateful and fortunate that we were able to enter the Permian when we did,” Foschi said. “According to the best we can tell, there was a meaningful, meaningful step-up in prices of assets in the Permian Basin shortly after we bought in.”

When Civitas bought in the Permian, it paid around 3x debt-to-EBIDTA and around $1 million to $2 million per net drilling location.

Today, Civitas is seeing Permian assets trade for closer to 4x debt-to-EBIDTA and around $2 million to $4 million per location.

“The current market is tough,” Foschi said. “You have to pay for capital efficiencies ahead. You have to pay up for upside zones that perhaps haven’t been proven to be repeatable.”

While Permian prices are high, Civitas still has boots on the ground in the Midland and Delaware basins scouring for acreage trades, swaps and other small-ball M&A.

Civitas produced approximately 186,000 boe/d from the Permian Basin in the second quarter.


RELATED

Civitas, Prioritizing Permian, Jettisons Non-core Colorado Assets