非常规/复杂油藏

关注塑造美国能源格局的五种趋势

在 2024 年展望中,Enverus 预计 3 英里长的横向剖面将成为二叠纪的新常态,并暗示新兴的地热和锂领域可能是真正的交易。

油田油井中的抽油机视图。 这种布置通常用于陆上产油少的油井。 它是油井中往复活塞泵的地上驱动装置。
资料来源:盖蒂图片社。

美国石油和天然气格局始终在变化,但今天的构造力量明显不同,这可能预示着 Enverus Intelligence Research (EIR) 在其 2024 年展望中概述的新能源时代。

从去年的页岩油行业并购热潮,到内华达州新型地热井的成功,以及阿肯色州部署的新兴锂提取技术,EIR 强调的每一个趋势都表明,随着美国页岩油行业的成熟对于那些能够留下来的人来说仍然是巨大的机会。

为了进一步了解这一点,我们选择了 EIR 所说的正在重塑美国能源市场的五个最大发展项目,并与做出预测的专家进行了讨论。这是他们告诉我们的。

1. 优质岩石致密油资源不足

近几个月来主导美国页岩油行业的最大主题是一系列轰动一时的并购。

自10月份以来,主要行业参与者赫斯公司(Hess Corp.)、先锋自然资源公司(Pioneer Natural Resources)和CrownRock公司都决定分别将其股份出售给更大的竞争对手雪佛龙公司(Chevron)、埃克森美孚公司(ExxonMobil)和西方石油公司(Oxy)。等待批准的这三笔交易代表着超过 1,250 亿美元的现金和股票交换。

但如此大牌公司提出退出的提议,在一些人看来,该行业已经变成了一场高风险的抢椅子游戏。

“优质资源稀缺是一个非常现实的问题,从我们在二叠纪盆地看到的交易涉及的数字和几乎每笔交易都与改善买家库存前景相关的消息中都可以明显看出, EIR 石油和天然气研究高级副总裁 Steve Diederichs 说道。

换句话说,那些此时买入的人很可能不打算利用所持股份,而是表明他们打算成为最后一批页岩油公司之一。与此同时,卖家可能会透露美国页岩油行业正进入后期。

尽管经历了这一切,预计整合仍将继续进行,但迪德里克斯解释说,已经没有多少公司能够像赫斯公司或先锋公司那样具有冲击力,而在交易结束之前,先锋公司将声称自己是二叠纪最大的生产商。

“潜在目标(即私人运营商)仍然持有的大部分资产的质量将低于上市公司已经拥有的资产,这并不真正符合买家今天所寻求的库存质量增加的条件,“ 他说。

2. 3英里标准即将到来

随着美国页岩油行业的参与者数量和未来井位不断减少,二叠纪盆地横向剖面 3 英里长的新页岩井数量有望增长。

迪德里克斯表示,这些趋势是齐头并进的,他表示,较长油井的经济效益非常好,通过收购钻探更多油井的前景正在推高涉及大片连续区域的二叠纪交易的价格。

“三英里井将在几年内成为标准,当然今天,公司只要有钻探这些井的机会,我们就会看到他们采取行动,”迪德里克斯说。

向更长井的发展已经持续了好几年,美国的平均横向长度从 2013 年的 5,000 英尺左右增长到 2022 年的 10,000 英尺。和以前一样,驱动因素并不是油井生产率。檚关于从每一美元中获得更多收益。

Diederichs 指出,虽然将 1 英里横向行驶与 2 英里横向行驶进行比较时,每英尺生产率大幅下降,但成本节省远远超过了性能下降。他补充说,随着支线从 2 英里延伸到 3 英里,每英尺的损失变得微乎其微,因此更加容易接受。

将此与运营商报告的每英尺资本节省 15% 相结合,页岩油生产商很难忽视钻 3 英里横向钻井的情况。

下一步已经开始,几家公司正在二叠纪盆地测试 4 英里的横向管道。值得注意的是,此类井可能符合行业对大位移钻井的定义(即横向和垂直部分长度之比为 2:1),而传统上该定义仅用于最复杂的上游开发。

EIR 对二叠纪 4 英里支流管道的未来做出明确的决定还为时过早,但包括埃克森美孚在内的公司对此下了很大的赌注。当这家美国超级巨头去年宣布以 595 亿美元收购 Pioneer 的巨额交易时,它表示,钻探更多 4 英里井的能力是其决定合并两家公司在德克萨斯州西部的大量股份的首要推动力。

3.更多二叠纪巴尼特井即将出现

Wolfcamp 和 Spraberry 地层仍然是二叠纪盆地的摇滚明星,但现在有一个新的地层登上了舞台——Barnett 页岩。最广为人知的是得克萨斯州北部的干燥天然气区,页岩革命始于 20 多年前,二叠纪盆地(尤其是米德兰次盆地)的地层深厚且富含液体。

包括 Oxy 和康菲石油公司在内的知名运营商都在 11,500 英尺深的地平线钻探中,据 EIR 称,到目前为止,他们的成果令人鼓舞。

“他绝对对此感到兴奋。” 我认为 [Barnett] 是真的,2024 年将是重要的一年,越来越多的此类护垫将在更广泛的比赛中进行测试,”Diederichs 说道。

除了符合二叠纪两个坚定目标的油井产量外,EIR 由于其深度而看好 Barnett 在二叠纪的前景。虽然更深的井意味着更昂贵的井,但人们相信,Barnett 层与较浅地层的井之间有足够的垂直距离,可以防止页岩油行业众所周知的母子问题,将高预期重新调整为下行。

如果这一切都成立,EIR 认为这意味着巴尼特准备从划定阶段过渡到成为一个代表其球道运营公司有意义的新库存的游戏。

4. EGS将受到认真关注

去年 11 月,Fervo Energy 与互联网巨头谷歌合作启动了第一个商业增强型地热系统 (EGS) 项目。内华达州农村地区的三井设施正在向公共电网供应约 3.5 兆瓦的地热能,行业观察人士对此也非常乐观。

EIR 能源转型情报副总裁格雷厄姆·贝恩 (Graham Bain) 表示:“我认为今年我们会看到更多此类项目,并且基于这一成功,可能会对该领域进行更多投资。”

EGS 可以概括为使用水力压裂技术创建增压地下热交换器的水平井对。贝恩解释说,由于 EGS 非常依赖“hale 剧本”,因此几乎没有需要消除的重大技术差距。

然而,还有几个主要问题。

第一个是地热行业降低钻井成本的能力,考虑到页岩行业提供的先例,这一点应该是可以克服的。

等式的另一边取决于 EGS 井的长期表现。储层和裂缝网络能否在未来数年或数十年保持高温仍然是最大的未知数之一。

贝恩表示必须考虑的另一个潜在问题涉及优先流通过主要裂缝的风险。贝恩分享道:“这一点让我不敢说 EGS 绝对是一个灌篮。”

他解释说,优先通道不仅可能导致地表水温低于预期,还可能导致岩石收缩并产生更宽的裂缝。结果将是一个负反馈回路,其中裂缝面积增大,允许越来越多的冷水从注入井流向生产井。

5. 锂提取的早期但令人兴奋的日子

北美对电网规模电池存储和电动汽车的需求不断增长,引发了上游越来越多地参与直接锂提取(DLE)项目,这些项目使用热盐水(通常是油田废水)作为原料。

这方面最大的新闻是去年,埃克森美孚斥资 1 亿美元收购了阿肯色州南部 Smackover 地层 120,000 英亩富含锂的地下矿权,该地层拥有美国最丰富的锂矿床。

“xxonMobil 进入市场的规模肯定会很大,因为在此之前该领域只有小参与者。贝恩表示,这将使投资者更有信心认为这不仅仅是一个白日梦。他补充说,雪佛龙和 Oxy 最近也对该领域表现出了兴趣。

这些发展是在 DLE 技术最近取得突破之后进行的,该技术旨在将应用范围扩展到低浓度盐水,该阈值被认为约为 70-75 ppm 的锂。

如果大宗商品价格能够保持稳定,并且最近的一些试点项目被证明是成功的,贝恩预测 DLE 技术的使用将迅速扩展到阿肯色州以外的地区。

名单上的地区包括德克萨斯州、北达科他州、俄亥俄州和宾夕法尼亚州,为石油和天然气交叉提供了更多机会。贝恩表示,还值得追踪艾伯塔省北部的情况,那里有一些当地公司正处于展示该地区锂潜力的不同阶段。

贝恩特别表示,卡尔加里的 E3 锂公司最近进行了一次低浓度现场测试,如果认为成功,“将真正开启 DLE 的可行性,几乎可以在任何地方进行,因为几乎每个盆地都至少有锂含量至少高于 70 ppm 的一个区间。”

原文链接/jpt
Unconventional/complex reservoirs

Keep an Eye on These Five Trends Shaping the US Energy Landscape

In its 2024 outlook, Enverus expects 3-mile-long lateral sections to become a new normal in the Permian and suggests the budding geothermal and lithium arenas may be the real deal.

View of the pumpjack in the oil well of the oil field. Arrangement is commonly used for onshore wells producing little oil. It is overground drive for a reciprocating piston pump in an oil well.
Source: Getty Images.

The US oil and gas landscape is always shifting, but today’s tectonic forces are markedly different, potentially heralding a new energy era as outlined by Enverus Intelligence Research (EIR) in its 2024 outlook.

From last year’s flurry of shale sector mergers and acquisitions to the success of a new breed of geothermal wells in Nevada and the still-emerging lithium extraction technologies deployed in Arkansas, each trend highlighted by EIR shows that as the US shale sector matures there remain big opportunities for those who can stick around.

To unpack it all a bit more, we selected five of the biggest developments EIR said are reshaping the US energy market and discussed them with the experts who made the predictions. This is what they told us.

1. Tight Oil Running Low on Good Rock

The biggest theme dominating the US shale sector in recent months has centered around a series of blockbuster mergers and acquisitions.

Since October, major industry players Hess Corp., Pioneer Natural Resources, and CrownRock all decided to sell out to larger rivals Chevron, ExxonMobil, and Occidental Petroleum (Oxy), respectively. Pending approval, these three deals represent more than $125 billion in cash and stock exchanging hands.

But that such big names are motioning for the exit suggests to some that the sector has turned into a high-stakes game of musical chairs.

“High-quality resource scarcity is a very real issue and it's evident from both the numbers involved with the deals we saw in the Permian and in the messaging which for almost every single deal has been related to improving the inventory outlook for the buyer," said Steve Diederichs, senior vice president of oil and gas research at EIR.

In other words, those doing the buying at this point are more than likely not looking to parlay their holdings, but are signaling their intent to be one of the last shale companies standing. The sellers, meanwhile, may be tipping their hand in revealing that the US shale sector is entering into its late innings.

While consolidation is expected to march ahead despite all this, Diederichs explained that there are not many companies left that can pack the punch of a Hess or a Pioneer, which until closing will hold claim to being the largest Permian producer.

"Most of what is still held by potential targets, namely the private operators, is going to be of lower quality than what the public companies already own, which doesn’t really tick the box of inventory quality accretion that the buyers are looking for today," he said.

2. The 3-Mile Standard Is Coming

As both the number of players and future well locations continue to dwindle in the US shale sector, one thing on track to grow is the number of new shale wells being drilled in the Permian Basin with 3-mile-long lateral sections.

The trends go hand-in-hand, according to Diederichs, who said the economics of the longer wells are so good that the prospect of drilling more of them through acquisition is driving up the price of Permian deals involving large swaths of contiguous acreage.

“Three-mile wells are going to become the standard in a few years, and certainly today, every opportunity that a company has to drill them, we are seeing them act on that,” said Diederichs.

The move toward longer wells has been taking place for several years with the average lateral length in the US growing from just about 5,000 ft in 2013 to 10,000 ft in 2022. And just as before, the driver is not about well productivity—it’s about getting more out of each dollar.

Diederichs noted that while there is a substantial drop in per-foot productivity when comparing 1-mile laterals to 2-mile laterals, the cost savings far outweighs the performance degradation. He added that the per-foot losses become marginal, and thus even more palatable, as the laterals extend from 2 to 3 miles.

Combine this with operator reports of a per-foot capital savings of 15%, and the case for drilling a 3-mile lateral becomes hard for shale producers to ignore.

The next step out is already underway with several companies testing 4-mile laterals in the Permian. Notably, such wells likely meet the industry’s definition of extended-reach drilling (i.e., a 2:1 ratio between lateral and vertical section length) which has traditionally been reserved for only the most complex upstream developments.

It’s too early for EIR to make a definitive call on the future of the Permian's 4-mile laterals, but companies including ExxonMobil are betting big on it. When the US supermajor announced its $59.5 billion megadeal to acquire Pioneer last year, it cited the ability to drill more 4-mile wells as a top driver for its decision to combine the companies’ massive holdings in west Texas.

3. More Permian Barnett Wells on the Way

The Wolfcamp and Spraberry formations remain the rockstars of the Permian Basin but there is a new layer taking the stage—the Barnett Shale. Better known to most as a dry gas play in north Texas where the shale revolution began more than 20 years ago, in the Permian—particularly in the Midland sub-basin—the layer runs deep and is liquids rich.

Big name operators including Oxy and ConocoPhillips are among those drilling into the 11,500-ft-deep horizon and so far, their results are promising according to EIR.

“We’re definitely excited about it. I think that [the Barnett] is for real and that 2024 will be a big year in which more and more of these pads will be tested across a wider portion of the play,” said Diederichs.

Aside from the wells producing in line with the Permian’s two stalwart targets, EIR is bullish on the Barnett’s outlook in the Permian because of its depth. While deeper wells mean more-expensive wells, it is believed that the Barnett layer offers enough vertical distance from wells landed in shallower horizons to protect against the parent-child issues that are known across the shale sector for recalibrating high expectations to the downside.

If all this holds up, EIR believes it means the Barnett is poised to transition from the delineation stage to becoming a play representing meaningful new inventory for the companies working its fairways.

4. EGS Will Get Serious Attention

n November, Fervo Energy commissioned the first commercial enhanced geothermal system (EGS) project with internet giant Google. The three-well facility in rural Nevada is supplying about 3.5 MW of geothermal energy to the public grid along with plenty of optimism to industry observers.

“We think we will see more of those kinds of projects this year and likely a lot more investment into the space based on that success,” said Graham Bain, a vice president of energy transition intelligence at EIR.

EGS can be summed up as horizontal well pairs that use hydraulic fracturing techniques to create supercharged subsurface heat exchangers. Bain explained that because EGS leans so heavily on the “shale playbook,” there are few, if any, major technology gaps to clear.

However, there are a few major questions.

The first surrounds the geothermal sector’s ability to lower drilling costs, which should be surmountable given the precedent offered by the shale sector.

The other side of the equation depends on how EGS wells will perform over the long term. Whether the reservoirs and fracture networks can maintain high temperatures for years, or decades, to come remains one of the biggest unknowns.

Another potential hiccup Bain said must be considered involves the risk of preferential flow through a dominate fracture(s). "This is one aspect that makes me hesitant to say that EGS is an absolute slam dunk," shared Bain.

He explained that preferential channeling may not only result in cooler-than-expected water temperatures on surface, but it could also cause the rock to contract and create an even wider fracture. The result would be a negative feedback loop in which the fracture area grows to allow more and more cool water to flow from injector to producer.

5. Early, but Exciting Days for Lithium Extraction

Rising demand for grid-scale battery storage and electric vehicles in North America has sparked growing upstream involvement in direct lithium extraction (DLE) projects that use hot brine, and often oilfield wastewater, as their feedstock.

The biggest news on this front came last year when ExxonMobil made a $100 million acquisition of 120,000 acres of lithium-laden subsurface rights in the Smackover formation of southern Arkansas, which holds the most lithium rich deposits in the US.

“ExxonMobil entering the market is definitely going to be huge since prior to that the space only had small players. It’s going to give investors more confidence to think that this is not just a pipe dream,” said Bain, who added that Chevron and Oxy have also shown recent interest in the space.

These developments follow recent breakthroughs in DLE technology that aim to expand the application envelope to low-concentration brines, a threshold considered to be around 70–75 ppm of lithium.

If commodity prices can hold steady and some of the recent pilot projects prove successful, Bain predicts use of DLE technology will expand quickly beyond Arkansas.

Regions on the list including Texas, North Dakota, Ohio, and Pennsylvania offer even more opportunities for oil and gas crossover. Bain said it's also worth tracking what’s going on to the north in Alberta where a handful of locally based companies are at various stages of demonstrating the region’s lithium potential.

In particular, Bain said Calgary’s E3 Lithium has recently run a low-concentration field test that, if considered to be successful, “will really open up the viability of DLE to be done almost anywhere because just about every basin has at least one interval with a lithium content of at least above 70 ppm.”