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US Oil Drilling, Output Moving Higher With Energy Prices

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U.S. oil production forecasts are being revised upwards despite labor and supply chain constraints as higher prices spur more drilling and well completion activity, according to industry experts.

Calls for new oil supplies are being answered by more producers as U.S. prices stay above $100 per barrel, propelled by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Prices are up 70 percent year-over-year, offsetting worries of a second pandemic price drop and inflation.

U.S. output will end the year up 1.29 million barrels per day (bpd), at 12.86 million bpd, according to consultancy East Daley Capital, which closely tracks energy supplied to U.S. pipelines. Its latest forecast increase is roughly 300,000 bpd, or 23 percent, higher than in its December outlook.

The bulk of the projected annual rise—1.13 million bpd—comes from the Permian Basin, the top U.S. shale field that has propelled the United States to an energy powerhouse. There were 332 oil rigs drilling there last week, the most since April 2020.

“U.S. oil prices are $30 to $40 per barrel higher” than late last year and “rig counts are becoming more responsive” to that price movement, said AJ O’Donnell, a director at East Daley Capital.

Profits at Half the Level

At $104 per barrel, oil is roughly twice what Permian Basin producers said was needed to profitably drill wells, according to a Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas survey.

pumpjacks
Active pumpjacks from oil wells are pictured at the Inglewood Oil Field, the largest urban oil field in the United States, from the Baldwin Hills Scenic, Overlook in Culver City, Calif., on March 10, 2022. (Bing Guan/Reuters)

March filings for drilling permits there hit 904, a monthly high, which “reflects a robust expansion” for horizontal drilling in west Texas and eastern New Mexico, said Rystad Energy.

Shale firms also are tapping drilled-but-uncompleted wells, standbys that can be quickly added to production. The number of such wells fell in February to 4,372, the lowest since 2013, U.S. data shows.

On Tuesday, pipeline operator Enterprise Products Partners forecast U.S. oil production to reach 12.4 million bpd by December, up 800,000 bpd from a year ago, and within 5 percent of the pre-pandemic record.

“There are 9 million productive acres that we’ll call Tier 1 through Tier 4,” based on potential output, Tony Chovanec, a senior vice president, told analysts. “With $80 oil, we think 2 million acres moves from lower tier to top tier economics.”

Limits to Growth

Private companies have ramped up activity as major oil companies focus on cutting debt and increasing shareholder payouts. Publicly traded companies vowed to improve returns after years of overspending.

Compared to oil’s gains, U.S. rig count increases so far look “anemic,” said Tim Roberson, co-founder of Texas Standard Oil, pointing to spending restraints, investor cash going to renewable energy, and industry supply-chain problems.

But, he said, “the second half of the year, it would be likely that the pace of drilling picks up” as supply chain problems are either resolved or reduced.

Hess Corp. recently said it would strongly consider moving up the timeline for adding a fourth rig to its North Dakota operations if prices remain elevated.

Not everyone expects robust gains. The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) this week left unchanged its outlook for an 800,000 bpd increase to 12 million bpd this year. BTU Analytics, a Factset Company, puts U.S. output rising by 962,000 bpd to 12.2 million bpd by the year-end, slightly down from a prior forecast.

“We’ve been bullish on supply since the fourth quarter of last year. It has been slow to show up,” said Al Salazar, a senior vice president at Enverus, which expects U.S. output to exit the year 1 million bpd higher than 2021.

After declining during the pandemic, oil production began rising in March. Output stayed at 11.6 million bpd for nearly two months then rose to average 11.8 million bpd so far this month, according to the EIA.

“Further near-term upside is limited by tight labor markets and shortages for materials like steel and sand,” said Matt Hagerty, a BTU Analytics senior analyst.

By Liz Hampton

Reuters

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