非常规/复杂油藏

2025年美国上游并购活动将呈现交易多元化特征

Enverus 预计 2026 年将开展旨在获取墨西哥湾沿岸天然气资源和拆分资产的活动。

石油工人握手
根据 Enverus Intelligence Research 的年度交易总结报告,2025 年美国上游并购活动达到 650 亿美元,低于 2024 年的 1050 亿美元。
图片来源:shotbydave/Getty Images。

2025 年美国上游并购活动的价值约为 2024 年交易水平的三分之二。

Enverus旗下子公司Enverus Intelligence Research (EIR)预测,2025年美国全年并购活动额为650亿美元,而2024年为1050亿美元。根据EIR 1月28日发布的公告,2025年第四季度的并购活动额为235亿美元,略高于全年并购活动的三分之一。

EIR首席分析师Andrew Dittmar告诉JPT, 2025年美国上游并购活动的主要主题是交易多元化,包括地域和同行群体两方面。2023年和2024年,大型企业竞相收购优质油气资源,尤其是在二叠纪盆地,而2025年则呈现出回落趋势,并更加关注不同的油气产区。

“我们看到阿纳达科盆地、DJ盆地、鹰滩、阿巴拉契亚、海恩斯维尔等地都有油气活动,”他说。

他表示,参与交易的公司包括上市公司、国际公司、私募股权公司,以及被称为资产支持证券化集团的新兴公司群体。所有这些集团都在争夺稀缺资源,在经历了年中放缓之后,市场在第四季度再次升温。 

迪特马尔表示,2025 年最后几个月虽然没有出现轰动一时的巨型并购案,但收购和剥离的速度确实加快了,他将此归因于多种因素,包括新资本的可用性和更广泛的买家组合。 

国际买家在2025年第四季度完成了约60亿美元的收购,使2025年全年收购总额达到74亿美元。根据EIR的摘要,这一数字创下了美国上游资产国际收购额七年来的新高。EIR指出,除了海恩斯维尔油田外,这些买家还竞购了墨西哥湾和丹佛盆地的资产。

然而,今年三菱斥资75 亿美元收购Aethon Energy(其核心资产为 Haynesville 油田),已经超过了去年的国际交易额。 

EIR 认为 2026 年海恩斯维尔盆地的机会将减少,因此寻求天然气投资的买家可能会考虑其他选择,包括鹰滩页岩和阿纳达科盆地。

“人们确实希望涉足天然气领域,无论是液化天然气还是数据中心建设。因此,这方面的活动可能会保持稳定,”迪特马尔说。

他说,这意味着各公司可能会寻找可通往墨西哥湾沿岸的天然气资产,而海恩斯维尔将成为主要目标,因为这是沿海地区的“阿尔奎斯”天然气开采区。

“海恩斯维尔盆地已经没什么可买的了,所以我认为,要想获得墨西哥湾沿岸的天然气投资机会,关键在于创新,比如收购鹰滩页岩气资产,或者在液化气商品组合均衡的阿纳达科盆地进行投资,甚至可以重新关注一些我们之前不太活跃的传统天然气产区。如果国际买家关注巴内特盆地甚至费耶特维尔盆地,我不会感到惊讶。”迪特马尔说道。

Enverus-Deal-Value-Play.png
美国和加拿大各行业季度并购交易额。
资料来源:Enverus石油天然气并购。

2025年第四季度交易总额中,二叠纪盆地所占比例较小。EIR认为,这主要是由于二叠纪盆地优质资产包稀缺,以及纯粹的油气勘探开发公司退出意愿有限,他们可能在等待原油价格走低后再出售。尽管如此,EIR指出,第四季度二叠纪盆地最大的交易是SM Energy以128亿美元收购Civitas Resources,这是一笔涉及多个盆地的交易,其中还包括在丹佛-朱尔斯堡盆地的大量资产。

今年早些时候,Crescent Energy宣布以31亿美元收购二叠纪盆地能源公司Vital Energy。

迪特马尔表示,这些交易表明企业整合并没有完全消失,只是速度放缓,规模有所缩小。 

“我们从这些交易中学到的是,在当前市场环境下,要达成合理的合并真的很难——因为那些战略契合度很高的公司大多都已被其他公司牵制住了,”他说道。“所以,你会看到一些公司不得不寻求更多跨盆地交易,或者那些彼此之间没有明显互补资产的交易。”

他说,与将同一盆地的两家运营商合并以创建更大、更高效的资产基础的逻辑相比,此类交易更难被华尔街接受。

“企业整合未来面临的一大阻力是找到合适的组合,这种组合既要合理,又要具有运营协同效应,而不仅仅是为了规模而规模,”他说。

EIR指出,目前缺乏有吸引力的战略合并可能抑制了进一步的整合,但跨盆地合作的可能性依然存在。EIR认为,上市公司可能会寻求通过出售美国非核心资产来收购核心地区的资产,从而建立运营协同效应。

Dittmar 表示,“聚合”活动遵循了从新冠疫情后到 2024 年美国交易的聚合市场特征。 

他预计,正在精简库存的公司会出售二叠纪盆地以外的土地,因为那里往往拥有最优质的库存。 

加拿大合并

迪特马尔表示,虽然美国可能正在经历分拆,但加拿大的上游并购活动“与美国的趋势相比略逊一筹”。

据EIR称,目前的形势有利于加拿大企业持续整合。预计到2025年,加拿大上游并购交易额将接近200亿美元,这主要得益于蒙特尼和杜韦尔奈油田的并购活动。他表示,虽然强劲的资产定价可以刺激美国的交易,但加拿大的格局更有利于运营商合并相邻油田,从而进一步扩大规模。

他预计,如果大宗商品价格保持区间波动,加拿大仍将是战略合并的活跃市场;而他预计,美国的交易将以有针对性的资产交易和选择性的附加收购为中心。

技术促成交易

迪特马尔表示,技术创新可以推动交易。 

“我们看到一些公司愿意为原本可能被视为边际储量的油气田买单,因为他们可以利用这些油气田进行更长的水平井作业,节省钻井和完井成本,并将其转化为更高质量的油气田。我预计这种趋势将会持续下去,”他说道。
他还表示,专注于提升成熟油气田价值的技术可能会推动并购活动。

“成熟油气藏的压裂和再开发是一个很大的领域,我认为我们会看到更多围绕这一领域的并购活动。”

2026 年预测

EIR 预计 2026 年上游行业的并购活动将十分活跃,重点可能放在天然气密集型油气田和非核心区域机遇上。 

“我们身处一个受大宗商品价格驱动的行业。这始终是我们的底线。我认为我们可以在各种不同的油井价格下建立活跃的交易市场,但我们需要稳定的原油价格才能真正保持市场的活力,”他说道。

2月2日,德文能源公司(Devon Energy)和科特拉能源公司(Coterra Energy)宣布达成全股票合并协议,合并后的公司将同时拥有阿纳达科盆地和特拉华盆地的油气资产。迪特马尔在一份研究报告中指出,从德文能源公司的角度来看,特拉华盆地的资产才是“这笔交易的真正价值所在”,它将成为合并后公司的核心,并使德文能源公司从该盆地第三大生产商跃升至第一大生产商。

“德文和科特拉的合并表明,席卷美国页岩油行业的整合浪潮尚未结束,生产商数量减少、规模扩大的趋势似乎不可避免,”他写道。

原文链接/JPT
Unconventional/complex reservoirs

Diversification of Deals Characterizes 2025 Upstream M&A Activity in US

Enverus projects 2026 activity aimed at gaining access to gas along the Gulf coast and disaggregation of assets.

Oil Worker Handshake
US upstream M&A activity reached $65 billion in 2025, down from $105 billion in 2024, according to Enverus Intelligence Research’s annual deal-making summary.
Source: shotbydave/Getty Images.

US upstream merger and acquisition (M&A) activity in 2025 was valued at just under two-thirds the deal-making level seen in 2024.

Enverus subsidiary Enverus Intelligence Research (EIR) pegged 2025’s full-year M&A activity in the US at $65 billion, compared to $105 billion in 2024. According to a 28 January announcement by the EIR, the fourth quarter of the year was responsible for $23.5 billion, or a little over a third, of overall 2025 activity.

Andrew Dittmar, principal analyst at EIR, told JPT the defining theme for 2025 upstream M&A activity in the US was diversification of deals, both in terms of geography and peer group. While 2023 and 2024 featured a focus on mega-mergers with big companies seeking out the highest-quality inventory they could get, primarily in the Permian Basin, 2025 represented a pullback from that, with a broader focus across different plays.

“We saw activity in the Anadarko Basin and the DJ Basin, and the Eagle Ford, Appalachia, Haynesville,” he said.

Deals were made by public, international, and private equity companies, as well as a new group of companies known as asset-backed securitization groups, he said. All of these groups were competing for scarce resources, and in the fourth quarter, the market picked up steam again after a mid-year slowdown. 

The closing months of 2025 didn’t feature headline-making mega-mergers, according to Dittmar, but it did reach a faster pace of acquisitions and divestments, which he attributed to a mix of factors, including availability of fresh capital and a broader buyer mix. 

International buyers accounted for roughly $6 billion of fourth-quarter 2025 acquisitions, bringing the full-year total for 2025 to $7.4 billion. That number represents a 7-year high for international acquisitions of US upstream assets, according to the EIR summary. The EIR noted that besides the Haynesville, these buyers also chased Gulf of Mexico and DJ Basin assets.

Already this year, however, Mitsubishi’s $7.5 billion purchase of Aethon Energy, with its core Haynesville acreage, has topped last year’s international activity. 

For 2026, EIR sees fewer opportunities in the Haynesville, so buyers seeking gas exposure will likely look at other options, including Eagle Ford Shale and Anadarko Basin.

“People really want gas exposure, whether it's because of LNG or data center buildout. So probably steady activity there,” Dittmar said.

That means, he said, that companies will likely hunt for gas assets with Gulf Coast access, making Haynesville a primary target, as the “marquis” gas play on the coast.

“There's not much left to go buy in the Haynesville, so it's creativity, I think, in getting Gulf Coast gas exposure, whether that’s Eagle Ford gas assets, buying in the Anadarko Basin where you have a balanced liquids-gas commodity mix, and maybe even returning to some of the legacy gas plays that we haven't seen a lot of activity in. I wouldn't be shocked to see an international buyer look at the Barnett or even the Fayetteville,” Dittmar said.

Enverus-Deal-Value-Play.png
US and Canadian quarterly M&A deal value by play.
Source: Enverus Oil & Gas M&A.

What made up a smaller portion of the deal value for the fourth quarter of 2025 was the Permian Basin, which EIR attributed to the scarcity of top-tier packages available and limited willingness of pure-play E&P companies in the Permian to exit as they are likely waiting for a better crude price environment before selling. That said, EIR noted the biggest Permian splash of the fourth quarter came from SM Energy’s $12.8-billion merger with Civitas Resources, a multibasin deal that also included significant holdings in the DJ Basin.

Earlier in the year, Crescent Energy announced a $3.1 billion deal for Permian player Vital Energy.

Dittmar said these deals show corporate consolidation hasn’t gone away entirely, just that the pace has slowed and the scale is somewhat smaller. 

“What we learned from those deals is that it's really challenging to put sensible combinations together in the current market” with the obvious strategic fit companies being largely tied up, he said. “So, you see companies having to pursue more multibasin deals or deals where they don't have obvious offsetting assets together.”

And such deals are harder sells with Wall Street than the logic that fuels the combination of two same-basin operators creating a larger, more efficient asset base, he said.

“One of the big headwinds for corporate consolidation moving forward is just finding the right combination that's going to be sensible and have operational synergies beyond just trying to sell some kind of scale for scale's sake,” he said.

Now, EIR said, the lack of attractive strategic combinations has likely put a damper on further consolidation, but more multibasin tie-ups remain a possibility. EIR believes public companies may look to match sales of non-core assets in the US with purchases of those in core regions to build operational synergies.

Dittmar said the “disaggregating” activities follow the aggregating market that characterized US deals from post-COVID through 2024. 

He expects companies pruning their inventories to part with acreage outside the Permian Basin, which is where the best-quality inventory tends to exist. 

Canada Consolidations

While the US may be disaggregating, upstream M&A activity in Canada is “a little behind US trends,” Dittmar said.

Conditions favor continued corporate consolidation in Canada, according to EIR. Canadian upstream M&A approached $20 billion in 2025, driven largely by Montney and Duvernay activity. While strong asset pricing can motivate deals in the US, Canada’s setup is more conducive to further scale-building as operators combine contiguous positions, he said.

He expects Canada to remain an active arena for strategic combinations if commodity prices stay range-bound, while he expects US deals to center around targeted asset trades and selective bolt-ons.

Technology Enables Deals

Dittmar said technology innovations can drive deals. 

“We see companies willing to pay for maybe what would've been viewed as more marginal inventory because they can deploy longer laterals, have D&C (drilling and completions) savings and convert that to a higher-quality location. I expect that's a trend that's going to continue,” he said.
Technology focused around improving value in mature plays may help drive M&A activity, he said.

“Refracturing and redevelopments in mature plays are a big area, and I think we're going to see more M&A activity driven around that.”

2026 Projections

EIR expects M&A in the upstream sector to be active in 2026, likely focused on gas-weighted plays and non-core regional opportunities. 

“We're in a commodity price-driven industry. That's always the bottom line for us. I think we can have an active deal market on a lot of different well prices, but we need stability and crude pricing to really keep that market humming,” he said.

On 2 February, Devon Energy and Coterra Energy announced an all-stock deal to merge, creating a company with exposure to the Anadarko as well as the Delaware Basin. In a research note, Dittmar called the Delaware asset the "real prize of the deal" from Devon’s perspective, forming the centerpiece of the combined company and vaulting Devon from third-largest to top producer in that basin.

"The combination of Devon and Coterra demonstrates that the wave of consolidation sweeping US shale isn’t finished yet and the march towards fewer, larger producers feels inevitable," he wrote.