尽管多产盆地产量预测下降,美国页岩先驱仍持“乐观态度”

大卫·韦特,彭博社 2023 年 7 月 31 日

(彭博社)“进入哈罗德·哈姆 (Harold Hamm) 的大陆资源公司 (Continental Resources Inc.) 总部,首先映入眼帘的是一尊 9 英尺长的咆哮公牛雕像,名叫 Boe。

哈罗德·哈姆

Boe(桶油当量的缩写)对于一位经验丰富的冒险家来说是一个恰当的象征,他仍然对美国的更多原油产量押注很大。 Hamm 是页岩先驱,第一个弄清楚如何钻探数英里长的油井横向释放北达科他州巴肯页岩地区的石油。当时,这是自 1968 年阿拉斯加普拉德霍湾发现以来美国最大的石油发现。

如今,他和家人控制的大陆石油公司是北达科他州和俄克拉荷马州最大的石油生产商。大陆集团还在怀俄明州以及西德克萨斯州和新墨西哥州富饶的二叠纪盆地进行钻井。

“未来是光明的,”77 岁的哈姆本月在俄克拉荷马城的办公室接受彭博新闻社采访时说道。“我认为这是一个令人兴奋、充满冒险、有创造巨大财富潜力的行业。”

他的乐观情绪掩盖了对美国页岩油行业的预测,该行业正显示出步入中年的迹象。专家预测产量将在本十年末达到顶峰。巴肯已经失去了光彩,产量落后于新冠疫情前的水平。即使在世界上最繁忙的页岩盆地二叠纪,产量预计也会在 2030 年达到最大,然后逐渐减少。

目前的页岩油产量放缓,加上欧佩克+联盟的减产,预计到今年年底将导致世界石油市场出现赤字。虽然这可能会支撑价格并取悦生产商,但这表明哈姆所拥护的美国工业的活力和增长可能会成为过去。

Hamm 对这一估计提出质疑,称二叠纪盆地可能要到 2035 年才能达到最高水位,并且产量将首先增加 25%。

“我们确实在页岩气领域经历了一些伟大的日子,”他说。“但是我们还有很长的路要走吗?” 是的。”

他在新书《同一个改变者》发行前发表了讲话,该书周二发售。哈姆在其中推动华盛顿改变能源政策,这将有助于提高石油和天然气产量。哈姆是俄克拉荷马州佃农所生的 13 个孩子中最小的一个,他也希望这本书能够激发人们对该行业的热情。

“这本书的目的之一就是鼓励下一个赤脚的乡村男孩想象他也可以做​​同样好的事情,”他说。

尽管大陆集团是美国主要石油生产商,但哈姆仍然自豪地称自己是一个野心勃勃的人——这在一个很大程度上厌恶风险的行业中是罕见的。大陆集团是在俄克拉荷马州南部进行钻探的少数公司之一,该地区并不以富含原油的页岩矿床而闻名。油价接近每桶 80 美元,这对 Hamm 来说是一个值得下注的赌注。

“这很有趣,”哈姆说。——这令人兴奋。就像寻找古代财富一样。”

大约十年前,产量失控引发油价暴跌后,页岩钻探商一直面临着限制支出并向股东返还现金的压力。哈姆的解决方案是:将大陆航空私有化。该过程已于去年年底完成。

尽管如此,哈姆表示,他对美国生产商新建立的纪律感到自豪。他甚至学会了感谢欧佩克——曾经是页岩油行业的眼中钉——帮助平衡了全球石油市场。

哈姆说:“你们的产量非常集中,特别是与沙特,对于他们来说,就像节流阀一样,这非常好。” “这可以防止浪费和供应过剩,还可以在不破坏市场的情况下为需求增加节省一些供应。”

哈姆表示,大陆集团今年的产量增长约为 5%,与大型上市钻探公司的情况一致。他预计明年会有类似的增长。

就收购而言,哈姆主要考虑在大陆集团已经运营的盆地进行扩张的交易。但与哈姆一起参观他 19 层办公楼的地下室表明,他不排除去更远的地方。

整个地下室大厅的墙壁上都是新安装的壁画,描绘了大陆集团运营的四个美国页岩盆地。当被问到这是否意味着他不会再进入任何盆地时,哈姆看着附近空荡荡的白墙走廊,微笑着。就他而言,在未勘探的油田寻找石油的鼎盛时期还远未结束。

“四十年前,在页岩出现和水平钻探之前,找到下一个隐藏的产油田是巨大的,”他说。“但是这样的情况还要继续吗?” 绝对是。”

原文链接/worldoil

U.S. shale pioneer “optimistic” despite declining production forecasts in prolific basins

David Wethe, Bloomberg July 31, 2023

(Bloomberg) – The first thing that greets visitors entering the headquarters of Harold Hamm’s Continental Resources Inc. is a 9-foot-long statue of a snarling bull named Boe.

Harold Hamm

Boe — short for barrels of oil equivalent — is an apt symbol for a veteran wildcatter who’s still betting big on more crude production in the U.S. Hamm is a shale pioneer, the first to figure out how to drill miles-long wells sideways to unleash oil from North Dakota’s Bakken shale region. At the time, it was the biggest U.S. oil find since Alaska’s Prudhoe Bay in 1968.

Today, Continental, which he and his family control, is the biggest oil producer in North Dakota and Oklahoma. Continental is also drilling wells in Wyoming and in the prolific Permian basin of West Texas and New Mexico.

“The future is bright,” Hamm, 77, said during an interview with Bloomberg News this month in his Oklahoma City office. “I look at it as an industry that is exciting, a lot of adventure, has a lot of potential for making great wealth.”

His optimism belies forecasts for the U.S. shale sector, which is showing signs of reaching middle age. Experts predict output will peak by the end of this decade. The Bakken has already lost its luster, with output trailing pre-Covid levels. Even in the Permian, the world’s busiest shale basin, production is expected to max out by 2030 and gradually trail off from there.

The current shale slowdown, combined with production cuts from the OPEC+ alliance, is expected to tip the world’s oil market into a deficit by the end of the year. And while that’s likely to support prices and please producers, it suggests the dynamism and growth in the U.S. industry as espoused by Hamm could become a thing of the past.

Hamm quibbles with the estimates, saying the Permian may not reach its high-water mark until 2035 and will see another 25% pop in production first.

“We’ve certainly seen some great days in shale,” he said. “But have we got a long way to go? Yeah.”

He spoke before the release of his new book, “Game Changer,” which goes on sale Tuesday. In it, Hamm pushes for a change in energy policy in Washington that would help boost oil and gas production. Hamm, the youngest of 13 children born to Oklahoma sharecroppers, also hopes the book will rally enthusiasm for the industry.

“Part of the purpose of this book is to encourage the next barefooted country boy to imagine that he could do something equally as good,” he said.

Though Continental is a major U.S. oil producer, Hamm still proudly calls himself a wildcatter — something of a rarity in an industry that’s largely become averse to risk. Continental is one of the few companies drilling in southern Oklahoma, a region not known for crude-rich shale deposits. Oil prices near $80 a barrel mean that for Hamm, it’s a bet worth taking.

“It’s a lot of fun,” Hamm said. “There is a thrill to it. Like finding ancient wealth.”

After runaway production triggered an oil-price crash about a decade ago, shale drillers have been under pressure to limit spending and return cash to shareholders. Hamm’s solution: Take Continental private. That process was completed late last year.

Still, Hamm says he’s proud of U.S. producers’ newfound discipline. He’s even learned to appreciate OPEC — once a thorn in shale’s side — for helping to balance the global oil market.

“You have a concentrated amount of production, particularly with the Saudis, and for them to act like a throttle, that’s pretty good,” Hamm said. “It prevents waste and oversupply and also saves some supply for increased demand without decimating the market.”

Continental’s production growth this year will be about 5%, Hamm said, in line with large publicly traded drillers. He expects similar growth next year.

As far as acquisitions go, Hamm is primarily looking at deals to expand in basins where Continental is already operating. But a trip with Hamm down to the basement of his 19-story office building suggests he’s not ruling out going farther afield.

All over the basement lobby, walls are newly installed murals depicting the four U.S. shale basins where Continental operates. Ask if that means he won’t be entering any more basins, Hamm looks at a nearby hallway with a blank, white wall and smiles. As far as he’s concerned, the heyday of searching for oil in unexplored fields is far from over.

“Forty years ago, prior to shale coming about, and horizontal drilling, finding the next hidden producing field was tremendous,” he said. “But does it still go on? Absolutely.”