分析师:顶级钻井库存减少,成本上升

根据 Enverus Intelligence Research 最近的分析,北美页岩油生产商的供应成本预计将继续上升。

根据Enverus Intelligence Research的分析,北美地区剩余的顶级页岩钻探库存供应量可能比之前估计的要少

分析师、投资者和石油从业者经常争论北美顶级页岩盆地还有多少未开发的钻井跑道。显然,人们的意见差异很大。

大多数分析认为,美国页岩油产量距离达到峰值还需要几年的时间。Enverus 分析师将美国供应预测上调 1 MMbbl/d,到 2030 年达到 14 MMbbl/d,其中纳入了地质上可行的库存,一旦探明库存耗尽,私人二叠纪盆地勘探与生产公司将钻探这些库存。

页岩气区块目前正在推动产量增长:根据《华尔街日报》援引 Rystad Energy 的预测,本月美国原油产量预计将达到创纪录的 13 MMbbl/d 。

但人们普遍认为,美国正处于北美页岩气这场戏剧性比赛的中间阶段。

水力压裂热潮的早期时代已经一去不复返了,当时运营商几乎不惜一切代价追求产量增长和钻井。美国页岩气区成本大幅上涨和油井产能下降使得钻井成本变得更加昂贵。

去年秋天,Enverus 估计北美还有 125,000 个未开发地区能够实现收支平衡,WTI 价格低于 40 美元/桶。

但在该公司的最新分析中,由于成本通胀和生产率下降,这些预期同比下降了约 45%。Enverus 估计北美地区仍有大约 75,000 个一级钻井地点(WTI 价格低于 45 美元/桶)。

该公司估计,按照目前的活动水平,一级钻探地点的剩余寿命约为六年。

Enverus Intelligence Research 董事总经理 Dane Gregoris 告诉 Hart Energy:“美国页岩油行业已经达到了成熟点。” “细胞并没有逐渐好转。” 事实上,他们的情况可能会变得更糟。”

“因此,除了服务成本之外,供应成本将会增加,”他说。

二叠纪盆地包含约 74% 的剩余 1 级地点,而 Eagle Ford 页岩仅占 10%。

虽然剩余 1 级工厂的估计数量可能会减少,但 Enverus 的分析发现,2、3 和 4 级工厂还有充足的跑道,“应该会减轻对未来 15 年美国生产或活动水平结构性下降的担忧” .”

但报告称,为了维持北美活动水平和供应增长,WTI 油价需要保持在 70 美元/桶至 90 美元/桶之间。

“坦率地说,我们认为,在未来 10 年里,北美石油和天然气的供应成本将会不断增加,”格雷戈里说。“与过去 20 年的情况相比,这有点陌生,当时行业的成本越来越便宜。”


相关:中局:页岩勘探与生产在吸引投资者方面进展缓慢


天然气库存

该报告发现,北美数十年的天然气资源可以在亨利中心价格 3 美元/MMBtu 的情况下实现收支平衡。

天然气最便宜的一些地点位于阿巴拉契亚的马塞勒斯和加拿大的蒙特尼页岩。马塞勒斯 (Marcellus) 和蒙特尼 (Montney) 占亨利中心盈亏平衡点低于 2.75 美元/MMBtu 的地点的 80% 以上。

海恩斯维尔页岩占收支平衡于 2.75 美元/MMBtu 至 3 美元/MMBtu 地区的四分之一。

Enverus 估计,海恩斯维尔、伊格尔福特和中部大陆的亨利中心盈亏平衡点仅剩四年以下的天然气钻探地点。


相关:页岩的未来:“聪明的东西即将到来”


原文链接/hartenergy

Analysts: Top-Tier Drilling Inventory Shrinking as Well Costs Rise

The cost of supply for North American shale producers is expected to continue rising, according to a recent analysis by Enverus Intelligence Research.

Remaining top-tier shale drilling inventory across North America could be in shorter supply than previously estimated, according to an analysis by Enverus Intelligence Research.

Analysts, investors and oilmen alike often debate how much undeveloped drilling runway remains in North America’s top shale basins. Obviously, opinions vary widely.

By most analyses, U.S. shale production is still several years from reaching its peak. Analysts at Enverus raised its U.S. supply forecast by 1 MMbbl/d to 14 MMbbl/d by 2030, incorporating geologically viable inventory that private Permian Basin E&Ps will drill once proven inventory is exhausted.

The shale patch is driving production growth right now: U.S. crude production is expected to reach a record 13 MMbbl/d this month, according to projections by Rystad Energy cited by The Wall Street Journal.

But there’s generally a broad consensus that the U.S. is somewhere in the middle innings of the dramatic ballgame that is North American shale.

Gone are the early days of the fracking boom, where operators would chase production growth and drill wells at nearly any cost. Rampant cost inflation and declining well productivity across the U.S. shale patch are making drilling wells much more expensive.

Last fall, Enverus estimated there were 125,000 remaining undeveloped locations able to break even below a $40/bbl WTI price across North America.

But those estimates fell about 45% year-over-year in the firm’s latest analysis, driven by cost inflation and productivity degradation. Enverus estimates around 75,000 Tier 1 drilling locations—at a sub-$45/bbl WTI—remain across North America.

At current activity levels, the firm estimates that’s about six years of remaining Tier 1 drilling locations.

“We’ve just sort of reached a point of maturity in U.S. shale,” Dane Gregoris, managing director at Enverus Intelligence Research, told Hart Energy. “Wells aren’t getting better incrementally. In fact, they’re probably getting worse.”

“Therefore, the cost of supply is going to be increasing—outside of service costs,” he said.

The Permian contains about 74% of the remaining Tier 1 locations, while the Eagle Ford Shale holds just 10%.

While the estimated number of remaining Tier 1 locations might be shrinking, Enverus’ analysis found an ample runway of Tier 2, 3 and 4 locations that “should alleviate fears of a structural decline in U.S. production or activity levels over the next 15 years.”

But oil prices will need to be in the range of $70/bbl to $90/bbl WTI in order to maintain North American activity levels and supply growth, according to the report.

“We are in a period, we think, over the next 10 years where you’re going to see an increasing cost of supply of North American oil and gas, frankly,” Gregoris said. “That’s a bit of a foreign world versus where we were the last 20 years, when costs continued to get cheaper and cheaper in the industry.”


RELATED: Middle Innings: Shale E&Ps’ Slow Struggle to Woo Back Investors


Natural gas inventory

The report found multiple decades of natural gas resources across North America that can break even below at a $3/MMBtu Henry Hub price.

Some of the cheapest locations for gas are in Appalachia’s Marcellus and Canada’s Montney shales. The Marcellus and Montney make up more than 80% of the locations with breakevens below $2.75/MMBtu Henry Hub.

The Haynesville Shale accounts for a quarter of the locations that break even between $2.75/MMBtu and $3/MMBtu.

Enverus estimates that only four years of gas drilling locations with sub-$2.75/MMBtu Henry Hub breakevens remain in the Haynesville, the Eagle Ford and the Midcontinent.


RELATED: The Future of Shale: ‘The Brainiac Stuff is Coming’