石油价格


在该地区开展业务的行业高管表示,今年二叠纪盆地的石油产量增长速度将慢于 2023 年。

在页岩油行业经历了强劲的 2023 年之后,二叠纪盆地的前景可能有些令人惊讶。然而,增长永远不会是一条线性的、向上的曲线。尤其是当价格被顽固地固定并且交易者继续 大量持有 空头头寸时。

上周,EOG Resources 总裁相当直率地表达了他的期望。 比利·赫尔姆斯在一次投资者活动中表示:“去年产量大幅增加,明年产量将大幅下降,以抵消这一影响 。” “这告诉你,美国的产量将无法继续以去年的速度增长。”

随后,杰富瑞的一项 调查 显示,大多数独立页岩油生产商今年计划仅小幅增加产量。据彭博社报道,超过三分之二的受访者表示,他们预计今年的产量将增长 5% 或更少,而同样比例的受访者则计划维持今年部署的钻机数量或减少。

现在,有些人可能会记得,该行业也没有 2023 年的宏伟计划。事实上,一些高管,尤其是先锋公司的斯科特·谢菲尔德 (Scott Sheffield) 在 2022 年底表示,大多数生产商实际上无法承担大幅增加钻探的费用,因为他们会耗尽资源。然而,去年的产量却出现了大幅增长,令人惊讶。

只有当价格走高时,我们很可能会看到这种意外的重演。根据杰富瑞 (Jefferies) 的调查,页岩气领域的大多数独立运营商都需要西德克萨斯中质油达到或高于每桶 70 美元才能盈利。目前,WTI 徘徊在该门槛价格附近。

然后,还有物理限制方面。去年,导致产量出人意料强劲增长的钻井生产率的提高大部分来自于水平井的较长分支井。Jefferies 表示,今年,钻探人员可能会继续挑战水平钻井的极限,尽管随着井长达到 10,000 英尺并达到顶峰,水平钻井的极限也会被“进一步适度”提升。

与此同时,需求持续强劲。事实上,由于最大的石油咽喉要道之一曼德海峡的安全局势仍然不稳定,这种情况最近变得更加严重。瑞穗证券分析师上周表示,由于红海航运形势,交易商一直在购买更多美国石油。

在也门胡塞武装对红海船只的持续袭击中,许多托运人正在改变船只航线。 但据 MarketWatch 报道,Bob Yawger 本周表示,在石油方面,一些人正在更换供应商 。

这位分析师在一份报告中写道:“自也门胡塞武装开始袭击红海国际航运以来,我们第一次看到美国出口激增。”他补充道,“显然,国际托运人担心受到影响。”在公海上遭到袭击,并且在好望角周围的长途航行中遭受更高的成本打击。与此同时,从美国采购石油仍然安全且便宜,这使其成为一些买家(尤其是欧洲买家)的首选选择。

如果这种需求持续存在——而且在欧洲也是如此,因为除了美国石油之外,欧洲几乎没有其他选择——开采商可能会重新考虑他们今年的原定计划。如果市场认识到需求的强劲程度以及大多数美国生产商的钻探计划,发生这种情况的可能性将会增加。如果说美国页岩油有什么特点的话,那就是它的灵活性。钻探人员已经一次又一次地证明了这一点。

 

作者:Irina Slav for Oilprice.com


原文链接/oilandgas360

Oil Price


Oil production in the Permian Basin this year is set to grow more slowly than in 2023, industry executives with operations in the area have signaled.

The outlook for the Permian may be somewhat surprising after the strong 2023 that the shale oil industry saw. Yet growth was never going to be a linear, upward curve. Especially when prices are stubbornly fixed in place and traders continue to pile into short positions.

Last week, the president of EOG Resources was quite blunt in his expectations. “Bringing on a lot of production last year, you’ve got a steeper decline to offset this next year,” Billy Helms said at an investor event. “That tells you that US production is not going to be able to continue to grow at the pace that it did last year.”

Then, a survey from Jefferies suggested that most independent shale producers were planning to increase their output only modestly this year. More than two-thirds of respondents in the survey said they expected their production this year to grow by 5% or less, Bloomberg reported, with the same percentage planning to either maintain the number of rigs they deploy this year or reduce it.

Now, some would remember that the industry did not have big plans for 2023 either. In fact, some executives, notably Pioneer’s Scott Sheffield, said in late 2022 that most producers could not really afford to boost drilling a lot because they would run out of resources. Yet production last year surprised with a significant increase.

We might well see a repeat of this surprise—but only if prices move higher. Per the Jefferies survey, mot independent operators in the shale patch need West Texas Intermediate to be at or above $70 per barrel to turn in a profit. At the moment, WTI is hovering around this threshold price.

Then, there is the physical constraints aspect. Last year, much of the drilling productivity gains that resulted in the surprisingly strong output growth came from longer laterals in horizontal wells. This year, per Jefferies, drillers are likely to continue pushing the limits of horizontal drilling, although it will be pushed “more modestly” as well lengths reach 10,000 feet and top it.

Demand, meanwhile, continues strong. In fact, it has recently become stronger as the security situation in the Bab el-Mandeb strait, one of the biggest oil chokepoints, remains volatile. A Mizuho Securities analyst said last week that due to the shipping situation in the Red Sea, traders have been buying more U.S. oil.

Amid continued attacks on ships in the Red Sea from Yemen’s Houthis, many shippers are rerouting their vessels. But when it comes to oil, some are switching suppliers, Bob Yawger said this week, as quoted by MarketWatch.

“For the first time since Houthi Yemeni rebels started to attack international shipping in the Red Sea, we are seeing a spike in U.S. exports,” the analyst wrote in a note, adding that “Apparently, international shippers are worried about being attacked on the open sea, and are getting beat” with higher costs for the longer journeys around the Cape of Good Hope. Meanwhile, sourcing oil from the U.S. remains safe and cheap, making it a preferred alternative for some buyers, especially in Europe.

If this demand holds—and it will in Europe, which has few alternatives to U.S. oil—drillers might reconsider their original plans for the year. The likelihood of that happening would increase if the market recognizes the strength of demand and the drilling plans that the majority of U.S. producers have. If there is one thing that U.S. shale is, it’s flexible. Drillers have proven it time and again.

 

By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com