水管理

响尾蛇交易可能标志着二叠纪大型水务交易的浪潮

响尾蛇能源公司已同意剥离其水务业务。现在,下一个是谁?

在一个黑暗、暴风雨的夜晚,高大、强大的跨海波浪破碎。
由于地震暴露了该国地下水储存能力的极限,低调的水服务行业已成为该国最大产油盆地日益重要的因素。
资料来源:菲利普瑟斯顿/盖蒂图片社

Diamondback Energy 与一家私募股权公司达成协议,出售了其采出水管道系统,在米德兰盆地创建了一家大型工业水公司。

与 Five Point Energy 的交易向 Diamondback 支付了 5 亿美元,Diamondback 保留了新公司 Deep Blue Midland Basin 30% 的股份,如果达到业绩目标,还将获得未来的激励付款。

拥有许多水务业务客户的能源行业顾问 Cap Energy 负责人劳拉·卡珀 (Laura Capper) 表示,深蓝最初是二叠纪盆地最大的水务公司之一。

由于地震暴露了该国地下水储存能力的极限,低调的水服务行业已成为该国最大产油盆地日益重要的因素。

“不祥之兆是,我们将看到更多的整合,”卡珀说。“我猜测,如果你愿意的话,将会有两三个家族成为中游的大玩家。”

整合的原因始于石油行业成熟的剥离勘探和生产业务以外的业务的战略。

“我们花了近十年的时间在米德兰盆地建立了一个差异化的水基础设施平台,并相信现在是通过这项业务货币化的最佳时机,同时通过我们的股权保留有意义的优势,”总裁兼首席执行官 Kaes Van Hof 说道。根据公告,响尾蛇公司首席财务官

新公司将建设 800 英里的管道、每日可处理 50 万桶压裂的采出水回收设施,以及每日可向容量超过 6500 万桶的区域注入 200 万桶的处理井。

Diamondback 已同意在 15 年内为米德兰盆地 12 个县提供采出水和压裂水。新闻稿称,该网络包括“两个投资级”客户,租赁面积达 20,000 英亩,预计到 2024 年产出水量将超过 75,000 B/D。

该公司将与其他水务公司竞争,扩大其在二叠纪的处理水量和足迹。

二叠纪地区的工业水务公司将需要建设覆盖大面积的管道网络,以确保客户能够处理水以继续生产石油。由于高注水量引发了一些地区的地震,导致监管机构限制附近的注水处理,各公司正在寻找备用处理方案。

从长远来看深蓝首席执行官斯科特·米切尔表示,他们计划“为我们的客户推动新技术解决方案的进步。”

他们是拥有海水淡化技术试点项目的公司之一。找到一种可靠、有效的方法来去除盐、矿物质、细菌和残留的碳氢化合物是第一个挑战。

从试点工厂扩大规模需要建立管道网络,为大规模运营提供水源,以净化水,将水输送给客户,并经济地处理堆积如山的去除固体。

卡珀表示,“要明白,为了发挥规模经济的作用,你确实必须聚集一些数量,”这增加了整合的压力。

增长还将提高水务中游业务的知名度,该业务已在二叠纪盆地扩展,而外界却很少注意到。

即使是那些关注该企业的人也必须进行一些挖掘以获取基本信息,例如目前正在运营的管道有多少英里,因为德克萨斯州从未要求石油公司租赁线路内诞生的企业披露信息。

Capper 表示,在新墨西哥州,信息公开和水回用是首要任务,采出水约占压裂用水的 70%。在德克萨斯州,她有根据的猜测是,该数字要低得多,但正在增长。

德克萨斯铁路委员会“正在考虑他们将要或不将进行什么样的报告改进。在追踪整个德克萨斯州的水资源方面,我们确实做得并不令人印象深刻。我们不定期报告产出水量。我们不报告回收量,”卡珀说。

反对监管者表示,监管机构不应强迫自来水公司放弃通过隐瞒信息获得的优势。卡珀反驳道,“这有点回到了那句古老的咒语:你无法真正管理你不衡量的东西。”

原文链接/jpt
Water management

Diamondback Deal Could Signal Wave of Big Water Deals in Permian

Diamondback Energy has agreed to spin off its water operations. Now, who’s next?

Tall powerful cross ocean wave breaking during a dark, stormy evening.
The low-profile water services sector has become an increasingly important factor in the nation’s largest oil-producing basin as earthquakes have revealed the limits of its underground water storage capacity.
Source: Philip Thurston/Getty Images

Diamondback Energy has offloaded its produced water pipeline system in a deal with a private-equity company, creating a large industrial water company in the Midland Basin.

The deal with Five Point Energy pays Diamondback $500 million, and Diamondback retains a 30% stake in the new company, Deep Blue Midland Basin, and will receive future incentive payments if it meets performance goals.

Deep Blue starts out as one of the biggest water players in the Permian Basin, said Laura Capper, principal at Cap Energy, an energy industry consultant with many clients in the water business.

The low-profile water services sector has become an increasingly important factor in the nation’s largest oil-producing basin as earthquakes have revealed the limits of its underground water storage capacity.

“The writing's on the wall that we we’re going see a lot more consolidation,” Capper said. “I'm kind of guessing there's going to be two or three families, if you will, big midstream players.”

Reasons for consolidation begin with the well-established oil-industry strategy of spinning off operations outside of exploration and production.

“We have spent nearly a decade building a differentiated water infrastructure platform in the Midland Basin, and believe this is the opportune time to monetize this business while retaining meaningful upside through our equity ownership,” said Kaes Van’t Hof, president and chief financial officer for Diamondback, according to the announcement.

The new company is starting with 800 miles of pipelines, produced water recycling facilities able to process 500,000 B/D for fracturing, and disposal wells able to inject 2 million B/D into zones capable of holding more than 65 million bbl.

Diamondback has agreed to provide produced water and to supply fracturing water within a 12-county area in the Midland Basin for 15 years. The network includes “two investment-grade” customers, with leases covering 20,000 acres with expected produced water volumes of over 75,000 B/D through 2024, the release said.

It will be competing with other water companies to expand its water volumes to be handled and footprint in the Permian.

Industrial water companies in the Permian will need to build pipeline networks covering large areas to ensure customers can dispose of water to continue producing oil. Companies are working for backup disposal options since high injection levels have triggered earthquakes in areas, leading regulators to limit water-injection disposal nearby.

Over the longer term, Scott Mitchell, CEO of Deep Blue, said they plan to be “driving the advancement of new technology solutions for our customers.”

They are among the companies with desalination technology pilot projects. Finding a reliable, efficient way to remove the salts, minerals, bacteria, and remaining hydrocarbons is the first challenge.

Scaling up from a pilot plant will require creating pipeline networks that deliver water to feed large-scale operations that clean up the water, deliver it to customers, and economically dispose of the mountain of removed solids.

“Understanding that to get the economies of scale working, you’ve really got to aggregate some volumes,” adding to the pressure to consolidate, Capper said.

Growth will also increase the visibility of the water midstream business which has expanded in the Permian with minimal outside notice.

Even those following the business must do some digging to get basic information like how many miles of pipelines are currently operating because Texas has never required disclosures by a business born within oil company lease lines.

In New Mexico, where disclosure is required and water reuse is a priority, produced water represents about 70% of the water used for fracturing, Capper said. In Texas, her educated guess is it is considerably lower but growing.

The Texas Railroad Commission “is figuring out what kind of reporting enhancements they're going to make or not. We really do a less-than-impressive job of tracking our water in Texas as a whole. We don't regularly report produced water volumes. We don't report recycled volumes,” said Capper.

Those against regulation say regulators should not force water companies to give up the advantage gained by withholding information. Capper countered by saying, “It's kind of back to that old mantra: You can't really manage what you don't measure.”