俄克拉荷马州崎岖不平的页岩之旅

Scoop 和 Stack 区域仍然是赚钱的,但只是改善了井距并有效管理了压裂驱动的相互作用。

[编者注:这篇报道出现在 2020 年 1 月版的 《E&P》中它最初于 2019 年 12 月 24 日在HartEnergy.com上运行 。在此订阅该杂志 。]  

过去几年,俄克拉荷马州的石油和天然气行业就像坐过山车一样——从 2012 年 Granite Wash 和 Mississippi Lime 的崛起到 2014 年的下跌,两年后又出现了另一次上涨。堆栈和勺子。2019 年,俄克拉荷马州中部地区的迹象继续下滑。

Enverus 能源分析总监 Sarp Ozkan 表示,虽然这两个区块的活动自 2016 年以来一直很热门,但时代已经发生了变化。在 Hart Energy 最近举办的 DUG 中部大陆会议和展览会上的演讲中,Ozkan 分享了他对该州页岩发展轨迹以及导致其崎岖不平的因素的看法。

“尽管 Scoop 和 Stack 是 2016 年的热门项目,但我们看到钻机数量有所下降,尤其是最近,而这种下降可以归因于几个因素,”Ozkan 说。——其中有两个处于最前沿。其中之一是由于间距不佳以及父母/孩子之间的良好互动以及远离核心的活动而导致生产力下降。”

另一个原因是该行业已经非常了解自由现金流。

“运营商实际上正在将其投资组合中的其他部分转移,特别是在自由现金流生成为王且有限的资本支出限制了他们实际可以拥有的钻机活动的时候,”他说。

奥兹坎表示,由于第一轮缩小井间距基本上没有取得成功,但相反的反应却是积极的。这一回应的时机则不太如此。

“超越最初的发展计划已经取得了巨大的成果,而且经济效益仍然可以与最好的相媲美,”他说。“尽管如此,由于华尔街的范式转变现在促使运营商专注于自由现金流的产生和为股东提供回报,因此活动要素仍然受到了影响。

然而,他补充说,Scoop 和 Stack 游戏的核心经济学意味着这两种游戏仍然非常赚钱,特别是如果间隔精心规划,并且父母和孩子的互动得到管理。

“前进的步伐需要被视为一门科学,而不是一种试错练习,这样 Stack 和 Scoop 的巨大资源才能被带到最前沿,”Ozkan 说。

俄克拉荷马州伍德沃德附近有一台抽油机在作业。(来源:Bob Pool/Shutterstock.com)
俄克拉荷马州伍德沃德附近有一台抽油机在作业。(来源:Bob Pool/Shutterstock.com)

一些经营者迁移到俄克拉荷马州以外的地方,为那些留下来的人创造了机会。

“与国内许多其他戏剧相比,Stack 和 Scoop 在许可方面仍然非常热门。这意味着许多运营商仍然对未来规划感兴趣,”他说。

2018 年,为 Stack 颁发了 1,​​100 多个许可证,为 Scoop 颁发了 600 多个许可证。据 Enverus 称,截至 11 月中旬,已分别发放 672 份许可证和 446 份许可证。就钻机数量而言,运营商减少的钻机数量非常显着。

“钻机数量明显下降,”他说。“下降的很大一部分原因是大量钻机离开了 Scoop、Stack 和 Merge 区域。例如,Marathon 的钻机数量从 7 台增加到 5 台,Exxon 的钻机数量从 8 台增加到 4 台,Encana 的钻机数量从 10 台增加到 5 台。”

然而,奥兹坎指出,钻机数量的减少并不意味着油井数量的减少或产量的减少。

“钻井和完井效率的提高,尤其是在 2017 年,意味着我们可以用更少的钻机做更多的事情,”他说。

2015 年,Stack 从开矿到钻机释放的天数分别为 26 天和 Scoop 的 37 天。据 Enverus 称,2019 年,Stack 的这一数字下降至 18 天,Scoop 的数字下降至 24 天。

“我们用更少的钻机做得更好,从成本角度来看,用更少的钱做更多的事情肯定会有所帮助。” 它保持盈亏平衡的水平使 Scoop 和 Stack 的部分业务保持吸引力,”Ozkan 说。

在完井方面,高支撑剂强度有助于释放 Stack 和 Scoop 的潜力。然而,据 Enverus 称,随着时间的推移,高支撑剂用量带来的生产率曲线生产率提升并没有持续下去。

“从 2014 年到 2019 年,我们看到堆栈中的支撑剂强度从 1,000 磅/英尺的低点增加到 2,500 磅/英尺的水平,”他说。“完井的现代化和更高的支撑剂强度确实释放了堆栈的潜力。我们发现 2017 年、2018 年和 2019 年的结果有所下降,这主要是由于核心之外的间隔和步进造成的。”

他表示,《独家新闻》中也出现了同样的趋势,因为更高的支撑剂强度完井最初带来了生产率的提高,并补充说,由于在最佳点之外进行钻探、降间距结果不佳以及母公司/孩子关系良好。

他指出,人们对大幅缩减空间对油井产能产生负面影响的担忧也有所增加。

“如果你非常简单地观察 Stack 和 Scoop 区域中每个钻井间距单位 [DSU] 的井数,你会发现随着时间的推移,每个 DSU 的井数大约为 6 到 8 个,”他说。“然而,深度确实在于细节。平均每个部分大约有七口井,因为我们在岩心内的每个部分钻​​了很多井,而在岩心外只钻了很少的独立井。”

原文链接/hartenergy

Oklahoma’s Bumpy Shale Ride

The Scoop and Stack plays are still in the money but only with improved well spacing and effective management of frac-driven interactions.

[Editor's note: This story appears in the January 2020 edition of E&P. It originally ran on HartEnergy.com on Dec. 24, 2019. Subscribe to the magazine here.]  

The last few years have been a bit of a roller coaster ride for Oklahoma’s oil and gas industry—from the rise in 2012 of the Granite Wash and Mississippi Lime plays to their fall in 2014, followed by another rise two years later of the Stack and Scoop. In 2019 the signs continued to point down for the central Oklahoma plays.

While activity in the two plays had been hot since 2016, times have changed, according to Sarp Ozkan, director of energy analysis for Enverus. In his presentation at Hart Energy’s recent DUG Midcontinent Conference and Exhibition, Ozkan shared his views on the state’s shale trajectory and the factors contributing to its bumpiness.

“Although the Scoop and Stack were hot plays to be in in 2016, we’ve since seen a drop in rig count, especially recently, and that drop can be attributed to several factors,” Ozkan said. “Two of which are at the forefront. One was the degradation of productivity due to poor spacing as well as parent/child well interactions and activity that is moving farther away from the core.”

The other is a reason that the industry has come to learn all too well—free cash flow.

“Operators are actually moving elsewhere in their portfolio, especially at a time when free cash flow generation is king and limited capex is constricting how much rig activity they can actually have,” he said.

With the initial round of downspacing wells returning largely unsuccessful results, the response going the opposite direction has been positive, according to Ozkan. The timing of that response has been less so.

“Upspacing from the initial development plans has led to great results and the economics still rival the best,” he said. “The activity element was nonetheless impacted due to the fact that the paradigm shift on Wall Street now pushes operators to focus on free cash flow generation and delivering returns to shareholders.

However, the economics in the core of the Scoop and Stack plays mean that both are still very much in the money, especially if the spacing is well-planned, and parent and child interactions are managed, he added.

“Spacing moving forward needs to be approached as a science rather than a trial-and-error exercise so that the vast resource of Stack and Scoop can be brought to the forefront,” Ozkan said.

A pumpjack operates near Woodward, Okla. (Source: Bob Pool/Shutterstock.com)
A pumpjack operates near Woodward, Okla. (Source: Bob Pool/Shutterstock.com)

The migration of some operators to opportunities outside of Oklahoma created opportunities for those left behind.

“The Stack and Scoop are still very hot in terms of permitting, in relation to a lot of the other plays in the country. Meaning that there is still interest here in terms of planning for the future for a lot of the operators,” he said.

In 2018 more than 1,100 permits were issued for the Stack and more than 600 for the Scoop. As of mid-November, there had been 672 permits and 446 permits issued, respectively, according to Enverus. In regard to the rig count, the dropping of rigs by operators has been significant.

“The drop in rig counts has been marked,” he said. “A large part of that drop was due to a lot of rigs leaving the Scoop, Stack and Merge area. For example, Marathon has gone from seven to five rigs, Exxon from eight to four and Encana from 10 to five.”

However, Ozkan noted that fewer rigs do not translate one-to-one to fewer wells or reduced production.

“Efficiency gains in drilling and completions, especially in 2017 moving forward, have meant that we can do more with fewer rigs,” he said.

In 2015 the number of days from spud to rig release for the Stack was 26 and 37 days in the Scoop. In 2019 that number was down to 18 days for the Stack and 24 in the Scoop, according to Enverus.

“We’re getting better at what we do with fewer rigs, and doing more with less definitely helps from a cost perspective. It maintains breakevens at levels that keep parts of the Scoop and Stack attractive,” Ozkan said.

On the completions side of the coin, high proppant intensities helped unlock the potential of the Stack and Scoop. However, the type curve productivity gains from high proppant loads did not continue over time, according to Enverus.

“Over time from 2014 to 2019, we’ve seen proppant intensity in the Stack increase from a low of 1,000 lb/ft up to 2,500 lb/ft levels,” he said. “The modernization of completions and higher proppant intensities really unlocked the potential of the Stack. We’ve seen some degradation of those results in 2017, 2018 and 2019 that is largely due to spacing and stepping outside of the core.”

The same trend was seen in the Scoop as higher proppant intensity completions initially delivered an increase in productivity, he said, adding that those productivity gains have since scaled down to 2015 levels due to drilling outside of the sweet spots, poor downspacing results and parent/child well relationships.

Concerns surrounding aggressive downspacing negatively impacting well productivity also have increased, he noted.

“If you take a very simplistic look at wells per drilling spacing unit [DSU] in the Stack and Scoop area, what you see are the number of wells per DSU over time has roughly been six to eight,” he said. “However, the depth was really in the details. The average is coming out to about seven wells per section, because we’re drilling a lot of wells per section within the core and we’re drilling very few standalone wells outside of the core.”