水资源管理被二叠纪盆地运营商称为“被动逆风”

Aris Water Solutions 首席执行官阿曼达·布洛克 (Amanda Brock) 表示,需要采取多种措施来解决水力压裂产生的采出水量不断增加的问题。


德克萨斯州米德兰 — 随着产量不断增长,二叠纪盆地的水资源管理对“每个运营商的雷达屏幕上”来说都是一个挑战,Aris Water Solutions 首席执行官阿曼达布洛克 11 月 20 日在 Hart Energy 的DUG 执行石油会议和博览会上表示。

“目前这无疑是一个巨大的阻力,”布罗克说,他的公司位于休斯顿,在二叠纪盆地开发和运营生产水基础设施。“这个盆地生产大量的水,这些水必须流向某个地方。如果没有地方让水流出,就会影响生产。”

二叠纪盆地另一家水资源管理公司 Deep Blue 的首席商务官罗伯特诺顿表示,随着水力压裂技术的不断发展,该行业的用水量越来越大。

“我们最近完成了一项三重同步压裂作业,每天需要将 60 万桶石油运送到一个地点,”他说道,“而要做到这一点,你必须拥有惊人的规模或资本预算。”

布罗克说,如何处理采出水的问题需要不止一个答案。其中的可能性包括扩大水力压裂水的再利用、将水处理用于农业以及提取锂等矿物。布罗克和诺顿都提到了与废水处理有关的地震活动的担忧。

诺顿表示,无论如何,水资源管理成本都在上升,这对 Aris 和 Deep Blue 等公司来说是一个机会。他说,市场正在意识到,水中游业务正在变成类似于天然气的收集和加工业务。

他说道:“这为 Aris 和 Deep Blue 这样的公司创造了独特的环境,使他们能够整合盆地内的其他资产,通过购买系统与运营商合作,真正利用供应业务和将 50 万桶水运送到某个地点的能力,以换取这些长期的承诺。”

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Water Management Called ‘Massive Headwind’ for Permian Operators

Amanda Brock, CEO of Aris Water Solutions, says multiple answers will be needed to solve the growing amounts of produced water generated by fracking.


MIDLAND, Texas — Water management in the Permian Basin is a challenge “on every operator’s radar screen” as production keeps growing, the CEO of Aris Water Solutions Amanda Brock said Nov. 20 at Hart Energy’s DUG Executive Oil Conference & Expo.

“It’s certainly a massive headwind at this point,” said Brock, whose Houston-based company develops and operates produced water infrastructure in the Permian. “This basin is producing just a tremendous amount of water and it’s got to go somewhere. If you don’t have a place for the water to go, it impacts production.”

The industry is using even more water as fracking technology continues to evolve, said Robert Norton, chief commercial officer of Deep Blue, another water management company in the Permian.

“We've recently completed a triple simul frack job where we had to get 600,000 barrels a day to one location,” he said. “And to do that, you have to have amazing size and scale or a capital budget.”

The question of how to deal with produced water will require more than one answer, Brock said. Among the possibilities are expanding the reuse of fracking water, treating the water for use in agriculture and extracting minerals like lithium. Both Brock and Norton noted the concern about seismic activity linked to wastewater disposal.

Either way, Norton said, the cost of water management is going up, and that’s an opportunity for companies including Aris and Deep Blue. He said the market is realizing that the water midstream business is becoming a gathering and processing business similar to natural gas.

“It’s creating this unique environment for companies like Aris, companies like Deep Blue to aggregate other assets in the basin, partner with operators by buying their systems and really use the supply business and the ability to get 500,000 barrels of water to a certain location in exchange for these long-term dedications,” he said.

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