Midcon 势头:SCOOP/STACK 游戏,新区域引起关注

过去十年对中部大陆来说是艰难的十年,那里的勘探与生产公司破产,钻探活动也随之减少。但阿纳达科、SCOOP/STACK 油田和该地区周边的新兴区域仍有丰富的石油、天然气和液化天然气资源尚未开发。

钻机在俄克拉荷马州 STACK 区块核心的立方体开发区同时为 Ovinitv 进行钻探。Ovintiv 的阿纳达科 (Anadarko) 仓位是公司整个投资组合中基础递减率最低的,并且继续产生大量自由现金流。(来源:Ovintiv

当中大陆地区主要的勘探与生产公司申请破产并转而从事其他业务时,汤姆·沃德 (Tom Ward) 和马赫自然资源公司 (Mach Natural Resources)却坚持了下来。

沃德非常了解俄克拉荷马州和中部大陆的情况:他曾与奥布里·麦克伦登共同创立了切萨皮克能源公司,并担任总裁兼首席运营官。

后来,他组建并领导了SandRidge EnergyTapstone Energy,这两家公司都在中部大陆地区占据了深厚的地位。

这些角色使他能够亲眼目睹过去十年来中部大陆激烈的横向发展——他认为是过度开发。

钻井间距过近,造成干扰问题。大片土地以高额溢价易手。成本飙升,债务也随之增加。

沃德告诉《石油和天然气投资者》(OGI):“Midcon 的钻探量实在是太多了,而且价格也太高了。”

沃德看到动荡即将来临,而动荡最终还是到来了。

随后几年,几家在俄克拉荷马州拥有大量股权的知名 E&P 公司通过第 11 章破产程序寻求保护,其中包括 Linn Energy、Alta Mesa Resources、Chapparal Energy 和Gulfport Energy

甚至连沃德创办的切萨皮克和 SandRidge 两家公司也未能幸免。(当然,这两家公司现在仍然存在;切萨皮克比以前更大,而且可以说比以前更好)。

避免破产的中部大陆页岩钻探公司大量撤回了对该地区的投资。其他参与者,如哈罗德·哈姆的俄克拉荷马州支柱大陆资源公司,从未停止钻探阿纳达科。

该公司 8 月份向投资者表示,第二季度大陆石油总产量的约 32% 来自阿纳达科盆地。

但Enverus Intelligence Research首席分析师瑞安·希尔 (Ryan Hill) 表示,自上个世纪 50 年代中期以来,俄克拉荷马州总体上给运营商留下了不良印象

“我们认为,导致大量破产的根本原因之一是将重点放在一些质量较低的区间,比如 SCOOP/STACK 以北到堪萨斯州地区的矿产,”希尔说,“货架上的矿产在经济方面面临的挑战更大。”

自破产以来,Midcontinent 钻井公司已经调整了策略。自新冠疫情爆发以来,大部分新钻井都集中在 SCOOP/STACK 的核心区域,而较少关注该区域的北部边缘。

随着运营商对 Woodford 和 Meramec 层段地下特征的了解越来越多,他们也已转向更宽的井距和更大的压裂规模。

随着美国本土 48 个地区(尤其是二叠纪盆地)交易活动的升温以及价格的上涨,运营商正在认真考虑在中部大陆还有哪些地方可以钻探。

希尔表示,“从经济角度来看,SCOOP/STACK 拥有中部大陆绝大多数非常规资源。”

沃德表示,Mach 确实看到了 Midcontinent 资产的竞争和价格正在上升。

“我们的重点一直放在 Midcon 上,因为它是美国最便宜的分子,”沃德说,“而它可能会离我们远去。”


有关的

Tom Ward:随着 Midcon 竞争日趋激烈,Mach 开始考虑其他盆地


摇钱树

过去十年中部大陆发生的多起破产事件给许多运营商留下了痛苦的回忆,但有些人从未离开俄克拉荷马州。

总部位于俄克拉荷马城的大陆资源公司和德文能源公司在疫情低迷时期依然保持活跃。

其他大型公共公司,包括马拉松石油公司科特拉能源公司Ovintiv 公司,也一直在俄克拉荷马州的土地上进行钻探计划。格尔夫波特虽然如今在阿巴拉契亚地区更为活跃,但仍在中部大陆占有一席之地。

Midcon 势头:SCOOP/STACK 游戏,新区域引起关注
与其他盆地相比,天然气和 NGL 价格在阿纳达科的经济中发挥着更大的作用。(来源:Marshall Hawkins

少数私人运营商也在阿纳达科进行钻探,包括私募股权支持的 E&Ps Citizen Energy IIICamino Natural Resources。家族所有的私人 E&P Mewbourne Oil在阿纳达科西部和德克萨斯州狭长地带拥有大量业务。

留在该盆地的公共勘探与生产公司向阿纳达科投入的资金少于其投资组合中其他部分(如二叠纪盆地)。

但运营商有理由留在俄克拉荷马州。Ovintiv 的阿纳达科持仓是公司整个投资组合中基础下降率最低的,并且继续产生大量自由现金流,这支持了其每季度向股东派发更多股息的目标。

Ovintiv 首席运营官 Greg Givens 在公司第二季度财报电话会议上表示:“我们的目标是油田中最油的部分,以利用我们在 2023 年看到的强劲石油表现,这些油井的第一年石油产量超过 55%,第一年收入的 85% 左右来自石油。”

“对于 Ovintiv 来说,这是他们现金流的一大部分,”Enverus’ Hill 说道。“显然,他们已经撤走了许多活动,从我们的角度来看,他们似乎将该盆地视为非核心或次要的——但就像我说的,它的现金流相当强劲。”

Coterra 在阿纳达科运营一台钻机,并于第二季度完成了 2024 年大部分压裂活动。

Coterra 运营高级副总裁 Blake Sirgo 表示,尽管天然气市场面临阻力,但该盆地在 2024 年仍表现出了弹性。

Sirgo 在 Coterra 的第二季度财报电话会议上表示:“我们的阿纳达科资产靠近亨利港,这为我们提供了投资组合中最强劲的天然气变现能力。这些变现能力,加上来自 NGL 和凝析油的大量液体贡献,提振了我们的经济,使阿纳达科成为一个有吸引力的投资资本之地。”

戴文能源目前的主要业务是特拉华盆地,该公司的大部分资本支出都来自该盆地。但戴文能源仍活跃在阿纳达科盆地,与化学巨头陶氏成立合资企业,共同开发戴文能源的 STACK 油田。

第二季度,德文公司约 21% 的天然气产量和 16% 的 NGL 产量均来自阿纳达科油田。

德文郡首席运营官克莱·加斯帕 (Clay Gaspar) 表示,与陶氏的合作有助于提高回报,以继续争夺开发资本。

加斯帕在德文郡第二季度财报电话会议上表示:“在阿纳达科,我们与陶氏合资企业推动的资本计划在本季度带来了稳健的回报和两位数的生产增长。”


有关的

洞中粉末:德文郡可能在未来几年启动其 PRB


商品汇流

中部大陆未能吸引到二叠纪等其他地区的投资,部分原因在于中部大陆的商品组合。

二叠纪盆地是一个石油盆地。随着盆地的钻探和开发,盆地内的天然气含量会逐渐增加,但运营商购买二叠纪盆地是为了获得原油敞口。

希尔表示,运营商也将 Midcon 视为一个油盆。但对于一个油盆而言,Midcontinent“仍然含有相当多的天然气”,他说。

与其他盆地相比,天然气和 NGL 价格在阿纳达科和 SCOOP/STACK 油田的经济中发挥着更大的作用。

天然气价格的起伏波动对中部大陆生产商计划的影响要大于对二叠纪盆地的影响,在二叠纪盆地,瓦哈天然气价格经常跌入负值区域(然而,二叠纪 E&P Diamondback Energy报告称,由于天然气价格过低,该公司在第二季度关闭了含气二叠纪油井)。

因此,在俄罗斯入侵乌克兰和全球经济从新冠疫情衰退中复苏的推动下,2022 年天然气价格飙升,中部大陆的钻井活动健康增长也就不足为奇了。

当 2023 年油价暴跌时,阿纳达科的钻探也随之暴跌。

希尔表示,“2023 年初,当天然气价格真正下跌时,钻井活动才真正大幅下降。”“毫无疑问,这个盆地与商品价格的关联性将大大增强。”

过去五年来,阿纳达科钻井活动大幅减少。根据 Enverus 的数据,2019 年 1 月,阿纳达科平均有 117 个钻井平台。仅仅一年后,同一片土地上就有 39 个钻井平台在钻探。

2020 年 6 月至 7 月,随着全球遭受 COVID-19 疫情的重创,阿纳达科钻井平台活动降至 7 个钻井平台的最低点。

图片:阿纳达科钻井平台数量 2019 年至今图表.jpg

图片说明:2019 年后,阿纳达科盆地的钻井活动急剧下降,但在 2022 年随着大宗商品价格的上涨而飙升。专家表示,中部大陆的活动在很大程度上取决于天然气价格。(来源:Enverus Intelligence Research 数据)

尽管天然气价格已从今年早些时候的历史低点回升,但目前仍处于低位。阿纳达科仍在活跃的作业已将开发重点转向了 SCOOP/STACK 油田富含石油和液体的部分。

但随着美国液化天然气出口需要更多的天然气,以及国内发电、制造和高级计算领域的使用量不断增长,运营商并没有忘记阿纳达科。

FourPoint Energy业务开发和土地副总裁约翰弗雷 (John Frey) 表示,中部大陆仍然拥有大量且相对未开发的干气资源

Midcon 势头:SCOOP/STACK 游戏,新区域引起关注
Xtreme Drilling Corp. 钻机 #23 正在德克萨斯州惠勒县为 FourPoint 钻探 Harris 4HB 井。FourPoint Energy 业务开发和土地副总裁 John Frey 表示,Midcontinent 仍拥有大量且相对未开发的干气资源。(来源:FourPoint Energy

在公司重组并将资产于 2020 年底转让给Maverick Natural Resources的一家附属公司之前,FourPoint 曾在阿纳达科盆地西部开发过业务。

FourPoint 在二叠纪盆地十分活跃,但该公司目前正在考虑中部大陆的新并购机会。

弗雷表示,“如果天然气价格达到一定水平,Midcon 将会得到大规模开发,并产出大量干气资源。”

专家预计,未来液化天然气原料气产量将主要来自海恩斯维尔、鹰福特、二叠纪和阿巴拉契亚地区,而非中部大陆。


有关的

独家:Aethon 并购策略以 Woodside-Tellurian 交易获得回报


热点

自 E&P 破产和疫情爆发以来,中部大陆的大多数钻探活动都围绕着 SCOOP/STACK 区块的核心。但某些运营商在该地区周边欠发达的角落中看到了机会。

在阿纳达科切诺基西部地区,交易活动正在升温,私营勘探与生产公司一直在划定水平钻井位置。

埃克森美孚是唯一在俄克拉荷马州南部玛丽埃塔盆地进行钻探的公司之一,该盆地距离德克萨斯州边境不远。玛丽埃塔盆地以北,阿德莫尔盆地的开发由大陆资源公司主导。

监管文件显示,第二季度,SandRidge与 Upland Operating 公司签署了以 1.44 亿美元收购切诺基资产的协议。

该交易包括俄克拉荷马州埃利斯县和罗杰米尔斯县的 42 口油井、4 个 DUC 和约 6,000 桶油当量/天的净产量(约 40% 为石油)。

SandRidge 正在获得 11 个钻井间距单位 (DSU) 的租赁权益,从而在切诺基核心区增加多达 22 个 2 英里长的水平井库存。

Upland 是 Cherokee 油田的主要开发商之一,其竞争对手是家族企业 Mewbourne Oil。

“切诺基的开采]看起来非常有趣,”沃德说。“我们有近 20,000 英亩的租赁土地用于生产,我们只是在关注这一情况。”

Midcon 势头:SCOOP/STACK 游戏,新区域引起关注
根据 Rextag 的现有数据,自 2020 年 1 月 1 日起,针对切诺基地层的水平井已上线。切诺基地层正在俄克拉荷马州西部和德克萨斯州狭长地带出现。(来源:Rextag 数据

埃克森美孚的旗舰页岩资产是二叠纪,通过斥资 600 亿美元收购先锋自然资源公司,其二叠纪足迹显著扩大。埃克森美孚在巴肯地区仍然活跃。

但埃克森美孚旗下的XTO 能源公司却悄悄地继续在俄克拉荷马州洛夫县钻探伍德福德井。

大陆资源公司阿纳达科盆地副总裁 Aaron Chang 向 Hart Energy 表示玛丽埃塔盆地在某种程度上是一种地质异常,是美国本土 48 个州中仅有的几个在地下 15,000 英尺至 16,500 英尺深处沉积黑油的地区之一。

XTO 已在该地区进行非法开采十多年,但目前尚不清楚伍德福德油井如何在该公司日益重视二叠纪的投资组合中争夺资本。埃克森拒绝就此事接受有关玛丽埃塔盆地的采访。

对中部大陆油区的搜寻也吸引了像大陆石油这样的运营商来到阿德莫尔盆地的南部SCOOP。

这里一直是 Continental 和 Camino 等运营商活跃的开发区域,他们宣称,与 Midcontinent 的其他油田相比,Ardmore 油井的产量下降幅度更小,气油比 (GOR) 更低。

州数据显示,马赫甚至继续在​​边境对面的堪萨斯州南部钻新井。

有关的

SandRidge Energy 以 1.44 亿美元收购 Western Anadarko Cherokee 资产

为交易做好准备

很难说哪些运营商将退出中部大陆,哪些运营商又能通过并购进一步扎根于中部大陆。

希尔表示,“在谁留下谁离开的问题上,我们肯定会看到更多的整合发生。”

Midcon 势头:SCOOP/STACK 游戏,新区域引起关注
为应对过去十年的破产潮,Midcontinent 钻井公司调整了战略。大多数公司都专注于 SCOOP/STACK 的核心区域,而不是北部边缘区域。(来源:Marshall Hawkins

Mach 正在 Midcon 以及其他盆地寻找交易机会。SandRidge 继续在阿纳达科西部延伸区进行收购。

Citizen Energy 和 Camino 至少是两家拥有私募股权赞助商的私营勘探与生产公司,它们最终将寻求出售。据报道,华平投资集团正在为 Citizen 寻找一个出价在 25 亿美元左右的买家。

但对于像马拉松石油这样的大型运营商来说,中部大陆很可能被视为非核心。

在第二季度,马拉松公司在俄克拉荷马州的资产总产量(42,000 桶油当量/天)和石油产量(7,000 桶/天)是其整个资产组合中最低的。马拉松公司在本季度也没有将任何俄克拉荷马州油井转化为销售。

由于康菲石油公司以 225 亿美元(包括债务)收购了马拉松石油公司,因此该公司可能会考虑出售非核心资产来偿还债务。

“像 Devon、Ovintiv 这样的公司,现在对 Marathon 的吸引力可能没那么大了,你可以看到他们退出了 SCOOP/STACK,”Hill 说道,“但你也可以看到他们在 SCOOP/STACK 上的投入加倍。”

德文和 Ovintiv 似乎专注于不同的盆地。德文以 50 亿美元收购了 Bakken E&P Grayson Mill Energy,而 Ovintiv 去年以超过 42 亿美元的价格收购了三家私营 Permian E&P 公司。

决定中部大陆未来的关键很可能是天然气价格的走势。

希尔表示,“今年肯定会是充满趣味的一年,因为我们将看到天然气相对于液化天然气建设将发生怎样的变化,然后,我们将看到 SCOOP/STACK 将会发生什么变化。”


有关的

公民能源公司对中部大陆的案例

原文链接/HartEnergy

Midcon Momentum: SCOOP/STACK Plays, New Zones Draw Interest

The past decade has been difficult for the Midcontinent, where E&Ps went bankrupt and pulled back drilling activity. But bountiful oil, gas and NGL resources remain untapped across the Anadarko, the SCOOP/STACK plays and emerging zones around the region.

Rigs drill simultaneously for Ovinitv in a cube development in the core of the STACK play in Oklahoma. Ovintiv’s Anadarko position has the lowest base decline rate across the company’s entire portfolio and continues to generate significant free cash flow. (Source: Ovintiv)

When Midcontinent-heavy E&Ps were filing for bankruptcy and leaving for other plays, Tom Ward and Mach Natural Resources dug in.

Ward is someone who knows well Oklahoma and the Midcontinent plays: He previously co-founded Chesapeake Energy with Aubrey McClendon and served as its president and COO.

He later formed and led SandRidge Energy and Tapstone Energy, both of which developed deep Midcontinent positions.

Those roles gave him a front-row seat to the intense horizontal development—overdevelopment, he argues—of the Midcontinent over the past decade.

Wells were drilled too closely together, causing interference issues. Massive swathes of land traded hands for huge premiums. Costs soared, as did debt.

“The amount of drilling going on in the Midcon was just excessive,” Ward told Oil and Gas Investor (OGI), “and prices were excessive.”

Ward saw turmoil brewing on the horizon, and that turmoil eventually arrived.

Several notable E&Ps with major stakes in Oklahoma sought protection through the Chapter 11 bankruptcy process in the ensuing years, including Linn Energy, Alta Mesa Resources, Chapparal Energy and Gulfport Energy.

Even the companies Ward founded, Chesapeake and SandRidge, weren’t spared. (Of course, both companies are still around today; Chesapeake is bigger, and arguably better, than ever).

Midcontinent shale drillers that avoided bankruptcy themselves massively pulled back investment in the region. Other players, like Harold Hamm’s Oklahoma mainstay Continental Resources, never stopped drilling the Anadarko.

Around 32% of Continental’s total production came from the Anadarko Basin during the second quarter, the company told investors in August.

But Oklahoma, by and large, has left a sour taste in the mouths of operators since the middle of last decade, said Ryan Hill, principal analyst at Enverus Intelligence Research.

“One of the biggest fundamental reasons why a lot of those bankruptcies happened, in our view, was focusing on some of the lower-quality intervals, like the stuff north of the SCOOP/STACK toward that Kansas area,” Hill said. “The stuff on the shelf is a lot more challenged on economics.”

Since the bankruptcy bout, Midcontinent drillers have adjusted their strategies. Most of the new drilling since the COVID-19 pandemic has focused on the core of the SCOOP/STACK and less on the northern fringes of the play.

Operators have also pivoted to wider well spacing and bigger fracs as they’ve learned more about the subsurface characteristics of the Woodford and Meramec intervals.

And as dealmaking and prices heat up in other parts of the Lower 48—namely the Permian Basin—operators are taking a hard look at what’s still left to drill in the Midcontinent.

“From an economic standpoint, the SCOOP/STACK holds the vast majority of the unconventional resource in the Midcontinent,” Hill said.

Mach is certainly seeing competition and prices for Midcontinent assets creeping up, Ward said.

“Our focus was always on the Midcon because it was the cheapest molecule in the U.S.,” Ward said, “and that might be moving away from us.”


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Cash cow

The multitude of bankruptcies across the Midcontinent last decade left traumatized memories for many operators, but some never left Oklahoma.

Continental Resources and Devon Energy, both headquartered in Oklahoma City, remained active through the lows of the pandemic.

Other large publics, including Marathon Oil, Coterra Energy and Ovintiv, have also kept up drilling programs on their Oklahoma acreage. Gulfport, while much more active in Appalachia today, still retains a footprint in the Midcontinent.

Midcon Momentum: SCOOP/STACK Plays, New Zones Draw Interest
Compared to other basins, natural gas and NGL prices play larger roles in the economics of the Anadarko. (Source: Marshall Hawkins)

A handful of private operators also drill in the Anadarko, including private equity-backed E&Ps Citizen Energy III and Camino Natural Resources. Family-owned private E&P Mewbourne Oil has a large footprint in the western Anadarko and the Texas Panhandle.

The public E&Ps left in the basin are pumping less capital into the Anadarko than they are into other parts of their portfolio, like the Permian Basin.

But operators have their reasons for staying in Oklahoma. Ovintiv’s Anadarko position has the lowest base decline rate across the company’s entire portfolio and continues to generate significant free cash flow, which supports its goal of paying out larger dividends to shareholders each quarter.

“We are targeting the oiliest parts of our acreage to leverage the strong oil performance we saw in 2023, where the wells displayed first-year oil cuts of more than 55%, with about 85% of first year revenue coming from oil,” Ovintiv COO Greg Givens said during the company’s second-quarter earnings call.

“For Ovintiv, it’s a big part of their cash flow,” said Enverus’ Hill. “Obviously, they’ve pulled a lot of the activity away and, from our perspective, it seems like they view the basin as non-core or secondary—but like I said, it is pretty strong on cash flow.”

Coterra is running a single rig in the Anadarko and completed the bulk of its 2024 frac activity during the second quarter.

It’s a basin that’s shown resiliency in 2024 despite headwinds to the natural gas market, said Blake Sirgo, senior vice president of operations for Coterra.

“Our Anadarko assets’ proximity to Henry Hub provides us some of the strongest gas realizations in our portfolio,” Sirgo said during Coterra’s second-quarter earnings call. “Those realizations, combined with significant liquid contributions from NGLs and condensate, buoy our economics, making the Anadarko an attractive place to invest capital.”

Devon Energy’s bread and butter today is the Delaware Basin, where the company is sending most of its capital spending. But Devon is still active in the Anadarko Basin under a joint venture (JV) with chemical giant Dow to jointly develop Devon’s STACK acreage.

In the second quarter, around 21% of Devon’s companywide gas volumes and 16% of companywide NGL volumes came from its Anadarko acreage.

Devon COO Clay Gaspar said the partnership with Dow helps promote returns to continue competing for development capital.

“In the Anadarko, our capital program driven by our joint venture with Dow delivered both solid returns and double-digit production growth in the quarter,” Gaspar said during Devon’s second-quarter earnings call.


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Commodity confluence

Part of the reason the Midcontinent hasn’t attracted the investment of other geographies, like the Permian, is the Midcon’s commodity mix.

The Permian Basin is an oil basin. It’s getting gassier over time as the basin gets drilled and developed, but operators buy in the Permian for crude oil exposure.

Operators consider the Midcon as an oil basin, too, Hill said. But for an oil basin, the Midcontinent is “still pretty gassy,” he said.

Compared to other basins, natural gas and NGL prices play larger roles in the economics of the Anadarko and the SCOOP/STACK plays.

The up-and-down volatility of gas prices can impact a producer’s plans more in the Midcontinent than in the Permian Basin, where Waha gas prices frequently dip into negative territory (however, Permian E&P Diamondback Energy reported shutting in gassy Permian oil wells during the second quarter because of dismally low natural gas prices).

So, it shouldn’t come as a surprise that the Midcontinent saw a healthy increase in drilling rig activity when natural gas prices skyrocketed in 2022—bolstered by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the global economic reemergence from the COVID-19 recession.

When prices collapsed heading into 2023, so did Anadarko drilling.

Rig activity “really fell off a cliff in early 2023 when the gas prices really fell,” Hill said. “Definitely, it’s a basin that will be a lot more associated with that commodity price.”

Anadarko rig activity has declined massively over the past five years. There was an average of 117 rigs across the Anadarko during January 2019, according to Enverus figures. Just a year later, there were 39 rigs drilling across the same land mass.

Rig activity in the Anadarko bottomed out at seven rigs during June and July of 2020, as the world suffered the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.

PHOTO: Anadarko Rig Count 2019-Present Chart.jpg

CAPTION: Rig activity in the Anadarko Basin fell drastically after 2019 but spiked alongside commodity prices in 2022. Experts say activity in the Midcontinent depends heavily on natural gas prices. (Source: Enverus Intelligence Research data)

Natural gas prices are still low today, though they’re moving up from record lows seen earlier this year. Operations still active in the Anadarko have mostly shifted development toward oil- and liquids-rich sections of the SCOOP/STACK plays.

But as more gas is needed to fuel U.S. LNG exports and growing domestic usage in power generation, manufacturing and advanced computing, operators are not forgetting the Anadarko.

The Midcontinent still has a significant and relatively untapped resource of dry gas, said John Frey, vice president of business development and land for FourPoint Energy.

Midcon Momentum: SCOOP/STACK Plays, New Zones Draw Interest
In the control room while Xtreme Drilling Corp. Rig #23 drills the Harris 4HB for FourPoint in Wheeler County, Texas. The Midcontinent still has a significant and relatively untapped resource of dry gas, said John Frey, vice president of business development and land for FourPoint Energy. (Source: FourPoint Energy)

FourPoint previously developed a footprint in the western Anadarko Basin before the company restructured and assets were transitioned to an affiliate of Maverick Natural Resources in late-2020.

FourPoint is active in the Permian, but the company is considering new M&A opportunities in the Midcontinent today.

“If gas prices got to a certain level, there would be massive development and significant [dry gas] resource produced from the Midcon,” Frey said.

Rather than the Midcontinent, experts anticipate seeing greater future LNG feed-gas volumes emerging from the Haynesville, the Eagle Ford, the Permian and Appalachia.


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Hot spots

Since the E&P bankruptcy bout and the pandemic, most Midcontinent drilling activity has centered around the core of the SCOOP/STACK plays. But certain operators see opportunity in less developed nooks and crannies hiding around the region.

Dealmaking activity is heating up in the western Anadarko Cherokee play, where private E&Ps have been delineating horizontal drilling locations.

Exxon Mobil is one of the only companies drilling in the Marietta Basin of southern Oklahoma, not far from the Texas border. North of the Marietta, development of the Ardmore Basin has been led by Continental Resources.

During the second quarter, SandRidge inked a $144 million acquisition of Cherokee assets from Upland Operating, according to regulatory filings.

The transaction includes 42 wells, four DUCs and net production of approximately 6,000 boe/d (about 40% oil) in Ellis and Roger Mills counties, Oklahoma.

SandRidge is picking up leasehold interest in 11 drilling spacing units (DSU), adding inventory of up to 22, 2-mile lateral wells in the core of the Cherokee play.

Upland was one of the leading developers of the Cherokee play, along with family-owned Mewbourne Oil.

“[The Cherokee play] looks very interesting,” Ward said. “We have close to 20,000 acres of leasehold that’s held by production and we’re just watching that play.”

Midcon Momentum: SCOOP/STACK Plays, New Zones Draw Interest
Horizontal wells targeting the Cherokee formation online since Jan. 1, 2020, according to available Rextag data. The Cherokee play is emerging in Western Oklahoma and into the Texas Panhandle. (Source: Rextag data)

Exxon Mobil’s flagship shale asset is the Permian, and its Permian footprint expanded significantly through its $60 billion acquisition of Pioneer Natural Resources. Exxon is also still active in the Bakken.

But Exxon unit XTO Energy has quietly continued drilling Woodford wells in Love County, Oklahoma.

The Marietta Basin is somewhat of a geologic anomaly—one of the only places in the Lower 48 where black oil is deposited at depths between 15,000 ft and 16,500 ft, Continental Resources’ Anadarko Basin Vice President Aaron Chang told Hart Energy.

XTO has been wildcatting in the area for more than a decade, but it’s unclear how the Woodford wells compete for capital in the company’s increasingly Permian-heavy portfolio. Exxon declined to be interviewed on the Marietta Basin for this story.

The hunt for oily zones across the Midcontinent also brought operators like Continental to the South SCOOP in the Ardmore Basin.

It’s been an active development area for operators like Continental and Camino, which have touted flatter declines and lower gas-oil ratios (GORs) from Ardmore wells compared to other Midcontinent plays.

Mach has even continued drilling new wells across the border into southern Kansas, state data show.

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Primed for deals

It’s hard to say which operators will pull away from the Midcontinent and which could dig in further through M&A.

“On the who stays and who goes—we definitely see more consolidation likely to be happening,” Hill said.

Midcon Momentum: SCOOP/STACK Plays, New Zones Draw Interest
In response to bankruptcies in the past decade, Midcontinent drillers have adjusted strategies. Most are focusing on the core of the SCOOP/STACK, rather than the northern fringes of the play. (Source: Marshall Hawkins)

Mach is hunting for deals in the Midcon, as well as in other basins. SandRidge continues to be acquisitive in the western Anadarko extensions.

Citizen Energy and Camino are at least two private E&Ps with private equity sponsors that will eventually look for a sale. Warburg Pincus is reportedly seeking a buyer for Citizen in the range of $2.5 billion.

But for larger operators, like Marathon Oil, the Midcontinent could very well be considered non-core.

During the second quarter, Marathon’s Oklahoma assets produced the least total resource (42,000 boe/d) and least oil (7,000 bbl/d) across its entire portfolio. Marathon didn’t turn any Oklahoma wells to sales during the quarter, either.

And as ConocoPhillips acquires Marathon in a deal valued at $22.5 billion, including debt, the pro forma company could look at non-core assets sales to pay down debt.

“Companies like Devon, Ovintiv, maybe less so Marathon now—you could see them moving out of the SCOOP/STACK,” Hill said, “but you could also see them double down on the SCOOP/STACK.”

Devon and Ovintiv, for their parts, appear to be focused on different basins. Devon is acquiring Bakken E&P Grayson Mill Energy for $5 billion, and Ovintiv acquired a trio of private Permian E&Ps last year for more than $4.2 billion.

The key to unlocking the Midcontinent’s future will likely be the movement of natural gas prices.

“It’s definitely going to be an interesting year as we see what happens with gas relative to the LNG buildout,” Hill said, “and then, as a result, what happens in the SCOOP/STACK.”


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