商业/经济

西方石油斥资 120 亿美元收购米德兰盆地

总部位于休斯敦的西方石油公司表示,其收购私人生产商CrownRock的原因之一是为了获得更多进入相对未​​开发的Barnett地层深处的机会。

石油工人握手
资料来源:盖蒂图片社

西方石油公司 (Oxy) 宣布计划以 120 亿美元收购二叠纪盆地私营生产商 CrownRock,这是巩固美国页岩油行业的又一举措。该交易使 Oxy 的地位得到了近 94,000 英亩的净面积和 170,000 BOED 的增量,其中 80% 是液体。

此次收购以现金和股票交易的形式进行,标志着 Oxy 的战略重点从特拉华盆地转向更加平衡的投资组合,其中现在包括 CrownRock 的大量米德兰盆地资产。该公司将继承近 900 口总运营井和估计 1,700 处未开发井位,其中 70% 以上被归类为“可开发”井,油价低于 60 美元/桶。

此次交易的资金来源为 91 亿美元现金、发行 17 亿美元普通股以及承担 CrownRock 超过 12 亿美元的债务。总部位于米德兰的 CrownRock 成立于 2007 年,是私募股权集团 Lime Rock Partners 和 CrownQuest 之间的合资企业。

Oxy 首席执行官 Vicki Hollub 在评论这笔交易时表示,“我们相信收购 CrownRock 的资产将增强西方石油公司有史以来最强大、最具差异化的投资组合。” 我们发现 CrownRock 是一个战略契合者,它使我们有机会在米德兰盆地扩大规模,并使我们能够通过立即增加自由现金流来为股东创造价值。”

Oxy还表示,收购后可能会实施新的发展战略。这家总部位于休斯敦的独立运营商计划在新收购的区块中使用更宽的井距,这与 CrownRock 每段六至七口井的开发模板不同,改为每段五口井。此外,Oxy 的目标是钻探 3 英里的支管,这是二叠纪运营商近年来采用的最新效率改进之一。

除了近 900 口总运营井外,Oxy 还将获得约 1,700 处未开发井位,其中 70% 以上被描述为“可开发”,油价低于 60 美元/桶。两家公司发布的新闻稿补充说,未来 750 个井场的价格预计将低于 40 美元/桶。

能源分析公司 Enverus Intelligence Research (EIR) 在该交易消息传出后发布了一份报告,称西方石油公司以每英亩超过 50,000 美元的成本将二叠纪盆地的估值推升至自 2017 年所谓的土地抢购期以来从未见过的水平”2019。

EIR 高级副总裁安德鲁·迪特玛 (Andrew Dittmar) 解释说:“估值上涨背后的驱动力是大公司迫切需要确保剩余的优质美国页岩油库存。” 他补充说,EIR 估计美国最高质量的岩石只剩下 6 年的钻探时间,即以 45 美元/桶的价格获得 10% 的回报,而不断减少的库存中 70% 是在二叠纪地区发现的。

Oxy 的最新交易是在斥资 380 亿美元收购阿纳达科石油公司四年后完成的,距离重塑美国页岩油行业的另外两项收购仅几个月。

10月,埃克森美孚宣布将以价值约595亿美元的全股票交易收购二叠纪最大的石油和天然气生产商先锋自然资源公司(Pioneer Natural Resources) 。当月晚些时候,雪佛龙开始收购美国工业巨头赫斯公司 (Hess Corp.),这是另一笔价值 530 亿美元的全股票大型交易。

押注巴内特

Oxy 在其公告中表示,对 Barnett 组合的额外投资至少是该交易背后的部分推动力。该地层更为人所知的是德克萨斯州北部的干气层,它引发了页岩革命,但在德克萨斯州西部,它转变为富含石油的层。

Oxy 表示,在过去几年中,只有少数几家开始测试 Barnett 的米德兰盆地运营商中,其针对该地层的油井产量比盆地平均水平高出 34%。EIR 的分析师报告呼应了 Oxy 的信心,称该公司是二叠纪 Barnett 矿区的领导者,迄今为止已经产生了“非常有希望的结果”。

分析人士认为,这些井产量较高,但它们也是页岩油领域最昂贵的井之一,因为它们的平均深度约为 11,500 英尺,比最受欢迎的二叠纪目标 Wolfcamp 和 Spraberry 页岩深 2,000 至 2,500 英尺。

Oxy还表示,它将通过扩大其非常规提高石油采收率计划,从新收购的职位中寻求更多的好处,该计划旨在以在米德兰盆地成功进行的试点测试为基础。

Oxy 还强调,该交易包括一个重要的基础设施包,包括 10,000 英亩的地表权、55 英里的淡水管道、数量不详、容量为 473,000 B/D 的盐水处理井以及四个水回收厂。

待股东和监管机构批准后,Oxy 预计该交易将在新年第一季度完成。

原文链接/jpt
Business/economics

Occidental Leans Into Midland Basin With $12 Billion Acquisition

Houston-based Occidental said that one reason it is buying private producer CrownRock is to gain more access to the deep, relatively untapped Barnett formation.

Oil Worker Handshake
Source: Getty Images

In yet another move to consolidate the US shale sector, Occidental Petroleum (Oxy) has announced its plan to buy the private Permian Basin producer CrownRock for $12 billion. The deal bolsters Oxy’s position by nearly 94,000 net acres and an incremental 170,000 BOED, 80% of which is liquids.

The acquisition, structured as a cash-and-stock deal, marks a notable shift in Oxy's strategic focus from the Delaware Basin to a more balanced portfolio that now includes CrownRock's substantial Midland Basin assets. The company will inherit almost 900 gross operated wells and an estimated 1,700 undeveloped well locations—over 70% of which are classified as "development-ready" at oil prices below $60/bbl.

The transaction will be financed with $9.1 billion in cash, the issuance of $1.7 billion in common shares, and the assumption of CrownRock’s debt exceeding $1.2 billion. Midland-based CrownRock was formed in 2007 as a joint venture between private-equity groups Lime Rock Partners and CrownQuest.

Commenting on the deal, Vicki Hollub, CEO of Oxy, said, “We believe the acquisition of CrownRock’s assets adds to the strongest and most differentiated portfolio that Occidental has ever had. We found CrownRock to be a strategic fit, giving us the opportunity to build scale in the Midland Basin and positioning us to drive value creation for our shareholders with immediate free cash flow accretion.”

Oxy has also said that it is likely to implement a new development strategy upon the takeover. The Houston-based independent operator plans to use wider well spacing in the newly acquired acreage, diverging from CrownRock's development template of six to seven wells per section to five wells per section. Additionally, Oxy aims to drill 3-mile laterals, which represent one of the most recent efficiency improvements adopted by Permian operators in recent years.

In addition to almost 900 gross operated wells, Oxy will gain an estimated 1,700 undeveloped well locations, more than 70% of which are described as “development-ready” at oil prices below $60/bbl. A news release from the companies added that 750 of the future wellsites are expected to be economic at sub-$40/bbl prices.

Energy analytics firm Enverus Intelligence Research (EIR) issued a note following news of the deal that said at a cost of more than $50,000 per acre, Occidental has pushed Permian valuations back up to levels not seen since the so-called land rush period of 2017–2019.

"The driving force behind rising valuations is an urgency by large companies to secure the remaining high-quality US shale inventory," explained Andrew Dittmar, a senior vice president for EIR. He added that EIR estimates only 6 years of drilling left in the highest-quality rock in the US, defined as delivering a 10% return at $45/bbl prices, and that 70% of that dwindling inventory is found in the Permian region.

Oxy’s latest deal comes 4 years after it spent $38 billion to acquire Anadarko Petroleum and is only a couple of months on the heels of two other acquisitions that have reshaped the US shale sector.

In October, ExxonMobil announced it was buying out Pioneer Natural Resources, the Permian’s largest oil and gas producer, in an all-stock deal worth about $59.5 billion. Later that month, Chevron moved to acquire US industry stalwart Hess Corp. in another all-stock megadeal valued at $53 billion.

Betting on the Barnett

Oxy indicated in its announcement that additional exposure to the Barnett formation was at least a partial driver behind the deal. The formation is better known as the dry-gas play in north Texas that launched the shale revolution, but, in west Texas, it transforms into an oil-rich layer.

Among only a handful of Midland Basin operators who have begun testing the Barnett over the past couple of years, Oxy said its wells targeting the formation are 34% more productive than the basin average. The analyst note from EIR echoed Oxy's confidence, describing the company as a leader in the Permian Barnett play that has produced "very promising results" so far.

The wells are understood by analysts to be prolific, but they are also among the shale sector’s most expensive given their average depth of around 11,500 ft is from 2,000 to 2,500 ft deeper than the most popular Permian targets, the Wolfcamp and Spraberry shales.

Oxy also said it will seek additional upside from the newly acquired position by expanding its unconventional enhanced oil recovery program that aims to build off of a successful pilot test it did in the Midland Basin.

Oxy also highlighted that the transaction includes a significant infrastructure package consisting of 10,000 acres of surface rights, 55 miles of freshwater pipelines, an unspecified number of saltwater disposal wells with a capacity of 473,000 B/D, and four water recycling plants.

Subject to shareholder and regulatory approvals, Oxy expects the deal will close in the first quarter of the new year.