商业/经济

美国勘探与生产陷入“拉拉”周期

美国在岸业务目前看起来表现平平,尽管此类预测很容易突然发生变化。

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美国陆上石油和天然气的前景介于下降和停滞之间。

根据美联储堪萨斯城分行最近的调查,石油和天然气公司最近报告称,活动又一个季度放缓。

其对新墨西哥州、俄克拉荷马州和科罗拉多州勘探和生产的调查显示,钻探速度放缓,利润萎缩,商业活动减少。

优点是:工人们似乎没有受到低迷的影响。调查报告称,员工人数和工作时间“保持积极态势”。

调查中的一位匿名评论者表示,“如果我们能找到优秀的人才,我们的公司可以做得更多,而且将会做得更多。” 交易员相信经济衰退的言论,从而损害了大宗商品价格。基本面仍然显示能源消耗在增加。”

该报告反映了美国能源信息署 (EIA) 最近的一系列报告,预测未来石油价格持平,而天然气价格将从糟糕的水平恢复到平均水平。

根据 Enverus 所做的贝克休斯报告,今年上半年,正在运行的钻机数量减少了 100 多座,此后几周内已趋于稳定。

以船队数量衡量的压裂能力也持平,并且很可能保持这种状态。

Rystad 页岩油供应链研究副总裁贾斯汀·马约尔加 (Justin Mayorga) 表示,“这里大约有 290 个活跃船队,我们认为这一数字不会增加。”他补充道,“任何人都希望看到任何增长,甚至是投资者。”

这一观察的一个例外是:运营商一直愿意花钱购买更高马力的泵,这使他们能够保持高抽油率,同时通过同时压裂多口井来加快速度。

快感消失

75 美元/桶的石油能够带动钻探热潮的日子已经过去了。

该价格接近 WTI 目前的基准,该价格足以维持钻探——远高于美联储调查中 63 美元/桶的盈亏平衡价格——但远低于受访者所说的大幅增加所需的 86 美元平均价格。在紧张的油田服务市场中,要做更多的事就需要支付更多的钱。

在天然气方面,调查显示,亨利中心期货基准价格仍保持在 2.60 美元/千立方英尺左右,低于目前钻探所需的平均价格(3.49 美元/千立方英尺),以引发大幅增长(4.67 美元/千立方英尺)。

根据堪萨斯城联储和 EIA 短期价格展望,预计未来几年石油和天然气价格都不会上涨到刺激经济活动大幅增长所需的水平。

这些数字正在减少美国所有主要非常规油气区的钻探活动,但二叠纪盆地除外,随着老油井迅速减少,二叠纪盆地对于那些希望增加面积以维持产量的公司来说仍然具有吸引力。

但这越来越难做到。根据 Enverus 最近的每周报告,过去两年,600 亿美元的资产出售大幅减少了私募股权投资者出售的业务供应。

对于那些希望迅速翻转这些公司的投资者来说,这花费的时间比计划的要长几年。但最近大量的交易,包括今年上半年销售额达 140 亿美元,已经使库存减少,预计下半年销售额将下降。

“这并不是因为缺乏买家的兴趣(随着公共勘探与生产公司努力更换钻探库存,买家的兴趣似乎比以往任何时候都强烈),而是因为缺乏在多产地区购买的剩余机会,”高级兼并经理安德鲁·迪特马尔(Andrew Dittmar)表示Enverus 的收购分析师。

二叠纪盆地剩余的大型潜在目标已经存在了一段时间,出售的可能性较小。

根据 Enverus 能源数据库,“二叠纪盆地约有 15 家私营公司,分布在 100 多个地点,其中大多数都是老牌私营公司,例如 Endeavour Energy Resources 和 Mewbourne Oil”。

美国还有其他页岩油业务,但迪特玛表示,销售趋势极其“以埃尔米亚为中心”,占 2023 年私募股权销售总额的 99%。

迪特玛说:“除非发生这种变化(目前阶段看起来不太可能),否则二叠纪盆地的集中意味着销售速度不太可能维持到今年下半年。”

除了二叠纪

截至 6 月底,西德克萨斯超级盆地是唯一一个比一年前作业钻机数量更多的盆地,但仅增加了 2%。

全国范围内,正在作业的钻机数量下降了 12%。降幅最大的是阿纳达科盆地(占 36%)和横跨阿肯色州、路易斯安那州和德克萨斯州东部边界的海恩斯维尔盆地(占 28%)。

EIA 报告显示,尽管近年来推动天然气钻探的天然气价格飙升已经过去,但今年上半年的产量仍远高于 2021 年的水平。

二叠纪天然气产量稳定,因为它与更有价值的石油一起流动。根据 EIA 的数据,马塞勒斯和尤蒂卡的纯天然气产量一直持平。

疲软的迹象之一是:宾夕法尼亚州四个县的天然气产量下降了 3%,这四个县的天然气产量占这一巨大天然气产区的 40%。EIA表示,许多停滞的管道建设项目限制了产量。

EIA 关于近期 Marcellus 产量放缓的报告指出,“自 2013 年以来,由于钻井效率提高,产量逐年增加,直到去年。” 钻井效率的衡量标准之一是钻井前 6 个月内井中生产的平均天然气量。自 2013 年以来,宾夕法尼亚州天然气井的钻井效率逐年提高,但在 2022 年首次下降。”

原文链接/jpt
Business/economics

US E&P Stuck on the ‘Blah’ Cycle

The US onshore business is looking flat at the moment, though these sorts of predictions are prone to sudden shifts.

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The US onshore oil and gas outlook is somewhere between sinking and stagnant.

Oil and gas companies recently reported another quarter of slowing activity, according to the recent survey by the Kansas City branch of the Federal Reserve Bank.

Its survey covering exploration and production in New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Colorado showed slowing drilling, shrinking profits, and reduced business activity.

One plus: Workers don’t seem affected by the doldrums. The survey reported that the number of employees and the number of hours worked “remain positive.”

An anonymous commenter in the survey said, “Our company could do more and would do more if we could find quality people. The traders have believed the recession talk and have hurt commodity prices. The fundamentals still show energy use increasing.”

The report mirrored a run of recent reports from the US Energy Information Administration (EIA) predicting flat future oil prices, and gas prices recovering from awful to about average.

The number of drilling rigs working dropped by more than 100 during the first half of the year and has stabilized in the weeks since, according to the Baker Hughes report done by Enverus.

Fracturing capacity measured by the number of fleets is also flat and likely remain that way.

“There are approximately 290 active fleets and we do not see that increasing,” said Justin Mayorga, vice president for shale supply chain research for Rystad, adding, “No one wants to see any growth, even investors.

An exception to that observation: Operators have been willing to pay up for higher-horsepower pumps that allow them to maintain high pumping rates while going faster by fracturing multiple wells at the same time.

The Thrill Is Gone

The days when $75/bbl oil could drive a drilling boom are past.

That price is near the current benchmark for WTI, which is high enough to sustain drilling—comfortably above the $63/bbl breakeven price in the Fed survey—but well short of the $86 average its respondents said is needed for a substantial increase at a time when doing more requires paying more in a tight oilfield services market.

On the gas side, the survey said benchmark Henry Hub futures price, which remains around $2.60/Mcf, is below the average needed for drilling now—at $3.49/Mcf—or to trigger substantial growth—$4.67/Mcf.

Neither oil nor gas prices are expected to rise to levels needed to spur a significant jump in activity over the next couple years, according to the Kansas City Fed and the EIA short-term price outlook.

Those numbers are reducing drilling activity in every major US unconventional play except the Permian Basin, which is still looking attractive to companies wanting to add acreage to sustain their production as older wells rapidly decline.

But that is getting harder to do. Over the past 2 years, $60 billion in asset sales has sharply reduced the supply of operations for sale by private-equity investors, according to a recent weekly report from Enverus.

It took years longer than planned by investors who hoped to quickly flip those companies. But the flood of recent deals, including $14 billion in sales during the first half of this year, has shrunk the inventory to the point that sales are expected to drop during the second half.

That “comes not from a lack of buyer appetite, which looks to be stronger than ever as public E&Ps grapple with replacing drilled inventory, but from a lack of remaining opportunities to buy in the prolific region,” said Andrew Dittmar, senior mergers and acquisitions analyst for Enverus.

The remaining big potential targets in the Permian have been around for a while and are less likely to sell.

“There are about 15 private companies in the Permian with more than 100 locations, and most are established private companies such as Endeavor Energy Resources and Mewbourne Oil,” according to the Enverus’ energy database.

There are other US shale plays out there, but Dittmar said the sales trend has been extremely “Permian-centric,” accounting for 99% of the total private-equity sales value in 2023.

“Unless that shifts, which looks unlikely at this stage, that Permian concentration means the pace of sales is unlikely to be maintained through the back half of the year,” Dittmar said.

Except the Permian

At the end of June, the west Texas super basin was the only one with more rigs working than a year before, and that was up only 2%.

Nationwide, the number of rigs working was down 12%. The biggest declines were in the Anadarko Basin—down 36%—and the Haynesville Basin straddling Arkansas, Louisiana, and the east Texas border—down 28%.

While the surge in gas prices which pushed up drilling for gas in recent years has passed, production during the first half of the year is still well above the levels going back to 2021, according to an EIA report.

Permian gas output is steady because it flows along with more valuable oil. Gas-only production from the Marcellus and the Utica has been flat, according to EIA.

One sign of weakness: The output for four counties in Pennsylvania, which produce 40% of the gas from that huge gas region, declined by 3%. The EIA said the many stalled pipeline construction projects have put a lid on the output.

An EIA report on the recent slowdown in the Marcellus noted, “Until last year, output had increased every year since 2013 on the back of drilling efficiency gains. One measure of drilling efficiency is the average volume of natural gas produced in wells during the first 6 months of drilling. Drilling efficiency at Pennsylvania’s natural gas wells increased every year since 2013 before declining for the first time in 2022.”