页岩油助推剂:折射增加是提高美国石油产量的廉价方式

美国页岩油生产商正在考虑将重复压裂井作为一种在预算范围内生产石油以抵消全球石油短缺的手段。

莉兹·汉普顿,路透社

美国页岩油生产商正在返回现有油井,并对其进行第二次高压喷射,以提高产量,而成本仅为完井新油井的一小部分。

随着页岩油生产商希望利用每桶 100 美元的原油,而不需要对新油井和油田进行大量投资,这些“重复压裂”正在占据主导地位。

全球石油短缺引发美国总统乔·拜登呼吁页岩油生产商将更多利润用于增加产量。但页岩油公司多年来一直面临来自股东的压力,要求他们关注回报而不是产量增长。

他们不愿投资更多产出,导致石油行业与白宫之间关系紧张,白宫面临着控制创纪录的每加仑 5 美元燃油价格的压力,这一价格导致了数十年的高通胀。

对于生产商来说,重复水力压裂可以说是一剂强心剂——与新井相比,用更少的投资就能快速增加产量。虽然一些生产商过去曾涉足重复压裂井,但随着技术的进步、老化油田侵蚀产量以及公司试图用更少的资源做更多的事情,该技术正在赢得更广泛的采用。

自一月份以来,钢铁、柴油、压裂砂和工人的短缺使油田通胀率翻了一番,使得这种提高产量的折扣方法更具吸引力。

专家称,重复压裂比新井便宜 40%。更重要的是,它可以使老化油井的石油流量增加一倍或三倍,帮助生产商优化该技术的 ResFrac 首席执行官加勒特·福勒 (Garrett Fowler) 表示。与往年相比,他的公司收到的与折射相关的询问数量大约是前几年的两倍。

对于石油生产商来说,重复压裂是增加现有管道产量的一种廉价方式。德文能源公司中部大陆资产的管理人员凯瑟琳·奥斯特表示,完井时间较短,意味着可以在新井作业之间安排重复压裂。

奥斯特说:“你回头看看一开始可能有哪些地方未完成和压裂不足。” 此外,“我们已经进行了基础设施投资。当你了解你的资源时,你会得到那些技术知识”,这有助于决定哪些井将从第二次注射中受益,她说。

折射如何工作

最常见的重复压裂方法是将钢衬管放置在原始井筒内,然后通过钢套管爆破孔以进入储层。ResFrac 的 Fowler 表示,在某些情况下,该工艺使用的钢材和压裂砂数量是新井的一半。

美国石油产量仍比 2020 年初 12.8 MMbbl/d 的峰值低约 1 MMbbl/d。限制产量的是页岩油井的快速下降速度,前 9 个月产量可能下降 70%。支出不变可能会将产出限制在当前水平。

虽然美国石油期货价格约为每桶 104 美元,比一年前上涨 40%,但由于材料和劳动力短缺,生产成本更高。由于担心经济衰退,一些生产商正在抑制新的支出。

德克萨斯州页岩油生产商 Callon Petroleum 本月表示,钻杆、劳动力和压裂砂成本导致钻井和完井服务成本较去年同期上涨约 20%。

在北达科他州巴肯页岩钻探的 Callon and Hess Corp. 最近提高了成本支出的资本支出预算。Hess 的支出增加了 2 亿美元,其中一半是由于通货膨胀,而 Callon 则增加了约 7500 万美元。

美国顶级水力压裂公司哈里伯顿的区域副总裁斯蒂芬·英格拉姆表示:“重复压裂等技术将使该行业能够继续从这些储层中开采石油和天然气。”

石油服务高管表示,另一个好处是重复压裂不需要额外的国家许可或与土地所有者进行新的谈判。他们说,对环境的破坏也较小,因为井场已经有道路通行。

能源咨询公司 Primary Vision Network 首席执行官马特·约翰逊 (Matt Johnson) 表示:“考虑到通货膨胀、供应链问题和工资上涨,现在是运营商开始寻找重复压裂机会的好时机。”

原文链接/hartenergy

A Shale Booster Shot: Refracs Rise as Cheap Way to Lift US Oil Output

Shale producers in the U.S. are looking at refracking wells as a means to produce oil on a budget to offset the global oil shortage.

Liz Hampton, Reuters

U.S. shale oil producers are returning to existing wells and giving them a second, high-pressure blast to lift output for a fraction of the cost of a finishing a new well.

These "refracs" are taking hold as shale oil producers look to take advantage of $100 a barrel crude without making big investments in new wells and fields.

A global oil shortage has triggered calls from U.S. President Joe Biden for shale producers to spend more of their profits on increasing output. But shale firms have been under pressure for years from shareholders to focus on returns rather than production growth.

Their reluctance to invest in more output has led to tensions between the oil industry and the White House, which is under pressure to rein in record $5 per gallon fuel prices that have contributed to decades-high inflation.

Refracking can be something of a booster shot for producers – a quick increase in output for smaller investment than a new well. While some producers have dabbled in refracturing wells in the past, the technique is winning broader adoption as technology improves, aging oilfields erode output, and companies try to do more with less.

Shortages of steel, diesel, frac sand and workers have doubled oilfield inflation since January, making this discount method of boosting output even more attractive.

A refrac can be up to 40% cheaper than a new well, according to experts. More importantly, it can double or triple oil flows from aging wells, said Garrett Fowler, CEO of ResFrac, which helps producers optimize the technique. His firm has seen about twice as many inquiries related to refracs compared to prior years.

For oil producers, refracs are a cheap way to add output to existing pipelines. Their shorter completion time means refracs can be scheduled between work on new wells, said Catherine Oster, who manages Devon Energy's mid-continent properties.

"You go back and find where you maybe under-completed and under-fracked in the beginning," said Oster. Besides, "we’ve made the infrastructure investment. As you learn about your resource, you get those technical learnings" that help decide which wells will benefit from a second shot, she said.

How refrac works

The most common refrac method involves placing a steel liner inside the original well bore and then blasting holes through the steel casing to access the reservoir. In some cases, the process uses half as much steel and frac sand than a new well, said ResFrac's Fowler.

U.S. oil production remains about 1 MMbbl/d below the 12.8 MMbbl/d peak in early 2020. Limiting output is the rapid decline rate of shale wells, which can see production fall by 70% in their first nine months. Flat spending could restrain output to current levels.

While U.S. oil futures are around $104 per barrel, up 40% from a year ago, production costs are higher on material and labor shortages. Some producers are holding back new spending over fears of a recession.

Drill pipe, labor and frac sand costs have driven drilling and well-completion service costs about 20% higher from a year ago, Texas shale producer Callon Petroleum said this month.

Callon and Hess Corp., which drills in North Dakota's Bakken shale, recently hiked capital spending budgets over the costs. Hess added $200 million to its spending, half due to inflation, while Callon added about $75 million.

"Techniques like refracturing will allow the industry to continue to harvest the oil and gas out of these reservoirs," said Stephen Ingram, a regional vice president at top U.S. hydraulic fracturing firm Halliburton.

Another benefit, say oil service executives, is refracs do not require additional state permits or new negotiations with landowners. The disruption to the environment also is less because well sites will already have road access, they said.

"Considering inflation, supply chain issues and rising wages, now is a great time for operators to start looking at wells for refrac opportunities," said Matt Johnson, CEO of energy consultancy Primary Vision Network.