Diamondback:二叠纪天然气是下一个目标,但需要管道和价格

Diamondback Energy 基础设施总监迈克尔·索利 (Michael Sollee) 在 IPAA 年会上表示,二叠纪盆地拥有大量未开发的含气岩石,可能成为天然气“巨额投资”的一部分。


该盆地第二大石油生产商的基础设施主管表示,更多的天然气管道和天然气需求可能会使二叠纪盆地含气量较高的岩石具有经济效益。

Diamondback Energy的 Michael Sollee最近在美国独立石油协会(IPAA) 的年度会议上告诉其成员:“二叠纪盆地有大量的天然气井可供钻探,一些更深的井和一些更边缘的地区也可供钻探。”

但在二叠纪盆地的运营商能够开采该盆地富含天然气的地层之前,该地区的生产商至少需要足够的输送能力,才能将当前的伴生气量推向市场。

“在二叠纪盆地,我们看到的天然气价格只有亨利港的一半左右。”“在某些月份,价格甚至为负数。我们实际上是在白白浪费,”索利说。

与此同时,二叠纪盆地的钻探仅受石油及其价格驱动。根据美国能源信息署 (EIA) 的数据,目前伴生气产量约为 250 亿立方英尺/天。

索利说:“我们估计,如果我们在地下铺设更多的管道,我们每天可以从二叠纪盆地开采出 50 至 100 亿立方英尺的天然气。”

总部位于德克萨斯州米德兰的 Diamondback 公司第一季度生产了约 50 万桶/天的石油和 11 亿立方英尺/天的伴生气,全部来自二叠纪盆地。

“天然气有巨大的机会成为下一个重大投资,”索利说,“美国有大量优质岩石。二叠纪盆地有很多,海恩斯维尔盆地有很多,马塞勒斯盆地也有很多。”

“随着价格上涨和需求增加,该行业将会繁荣。”

大西洋海岸管道“愤怒”

索利的言论是有关美国电力容量(特别是为数据中心提供可靠电力)的小组讨论的一部分。

至于将更多的马塞勒斯天然气从阿巴拉契亚盆地输送到需求中心,弗吉尼亚制造商协会主席兼首席执行官布雷特·瓦西表示,大西洋海岸管道项目的最终取消“可能是国家最大的失败之一”。

布雷特·瓦西
弗吉尼亚州制造商协会主席兼首席执行官 Brett Vassey (来源:Hart Energy)

多米尼恩能源公司杜克能源公司在花了七年时间试图解决反碳氢化合物组织的挑战后,于2020年放弃了这个600英里、日产15亿立方英尺的联合项目。预计成本将增至80亿美元。

瓦西说,能源基础设施已经“完全政治化”。

反对者在每个州和全国范围内的投入都是我们的二十倍,弗吉尼亚州就是一个典型的例子:为大西洋海岸输油管道投入了 10 亿美元,但它却只是在生锈。

“我的意思是这是一场国家悲剧。”

电力管理和发电运营商VoltaGrid总裁兼首席执行官 Nathan Ough在最近接受媒体采访时提到了谷歌前首席执行官埃里克·施密特关于电力和气候变化的言论。

他说,“库克,释放美国的能源机器,然后让人工智能去解决气候问题。”他说,这将比我们今天所做的版本做得更好。

IPAA 负责政府关系和政治事务的副总裁 Ryan Ullman 表示:“我们并不需要‘钻、宝贝、钻’,我们更需要‘建造、宝贝、建造’。”

内森·奥夫
VoltaGrid 总裁兼首席执行官 Nathan Ough (来源:Hart Energy)

网格

Diamondback 一直在利用部分伴生气为油田作业提供动力。

索利表示:“如果我们能够为我们的开发项目提供电力,我们就能获得最低的 LOE [租赁运营费用]。”

西德克萨斯州电力短缺。“我们在发电上投入了大量资金,因为我们无法从德克萨斯州的电网获得电力,”索利说。“二叠纪盆地的开发正处于爆炸式增长阶段,电网无法跟上。”

德克萨斯州立法机构最近通过了二叠纪盆地可靠性计划。

“它本应将输电资产和电力输送到盆地,以便我们能够继续发展并获得服务。但与此同时,我们正在使用自己的天然气为大多数新开发项目提供电力。”

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Diamondback: Permian Gas Next Target but Pipe, Prices Needed

The Permian Basin has a lot of untapped gassier rock that could be part of a “huge investment” in natural gas, said Michael Sollee, Diamondback Energy’s director of infrastructure, at the IPAA annual meeting.


More gas pipelines—and gas demand—could make the Permian Basin’s gassier rock economic, the basin’s No. 2 oil producer’s director of infrastructure said.

“There is a tremendous amount of gas wells in the Permian to also drill—some deeper wells [and] some other areas more on the fringe,” Diamondback Energy’s Michael Sollee told Independent Petroleum Association of America (IPAA) members at their annual meeting recently.

But before the Permian’s operators can go after the basin’s gas-rich formations, the area’s producers need at least enough takeaway capacity to get the current volume of associated gas to market.

“In the Permian, we're seeing only about half of the price of natural gas at Henry Hub. … In certain months, it's negative. We're literally giving it away,” Sollee said.

Meanwhile, Permian drilling is driven by oil and its price alone. The associated gas is currently some 25 Bcf/d, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA).

“We estimate we could unlock 5 to 10 Bcf/d of gas out of the Permian if we had more pipe in the ground,” Sollee said.

Midland, Texas-based Diamondback produced some 500,000 bbl/d of oil and 1.1 Bcf/d of associated gas in the first quarter, all of it from the Permian Basin.

“There’s a huge opportunity for natural gas to be the next big investment,” Sollee said. “We have a ton of great rock in the United States. There's a lot in the Permian; there's a lot in the Haynesville; there's a lot in the Marcellus.

“As prices go up and demand goes up, it's going to be a boom for the industry.”

Atlantic Coast Pipeline ‘tragedy’

Sollee’s remarks were part of a panel discussion on U.S. electricity capacity, particularly to supply reliable power to data centers.

As for getting more Marcellus gas out of the Appalachian Basin to demand centers, Brett Vassey, president and CEO of the Virginia Manufacturers Association, said the eventual cancellation of the Atlantic Coast Pipeline project is “probably one of the greatest national fails.”

Brett Vassey
Brett Vassey, president and CEO of the Virginia Manufacturers Association (Source: Hart Energy)

Dominion Energy and Duke Energy dropped the 600-mile, 1.5 Bcf/d joint project in 2020 after spending seven years trying to clear anti-hydrocarbon organizations’ challenges. Cost estimates grew to $8 billion.

Energy infrastructure has become “entirely politicized,” Vassey said.

Opponents “are outspending us by 20 to one in every state and nationally … and Virginia is a great example: A billion dollars in the ground for Atlantic Coast Pipeline and it's just rusting away.

“I mean that is a national tragedy.”

Nathan Ough, president and CEO of power management and generation operator VoltaGrid, noted former Google chief Eric Schmidt’s remarks concerning electric power and climate change in a recent media interview.

“He said, ‘Look, unleash the American energy machine and then let AI go solve the climate problem.’ He said it will do a better job than the version we're all doing today.”

Ryan Ullman, IPAA vice president, government relations and political affairs, said, “We don't need ‘drill, baby, drill’ so much as we need ‘build, baby, build.’”

Nathan Ough
Nathan Ough, president and CEO of VoltaGrid (Source: Hart Energy)

The grid

Diamondback has been using some of its associated gas to power field operations.

“If we can get power to our developments, we get the lowest LOE [lease operating expense],” Sollee said.

West Texas is electron-short. “We spent a bunch of money on power generation because we can't be served by the [Texas] grid,” Sollee said. “As Permian Basin development just really exploded, the grid is not able to keep up.”

The Texas Legislature recently passed the Permian Basin Reliability Plan.

“It's supposed to get transmission assets and power into the basin so that we can continue to grow and to be served. But in the meantime, we're using our own natural gas to power most of our new developments.”

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