Medicine Hat News

Oil output in North Dakota cut back to meet gas capture rules

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BISMARCK, N.D. Fearing sanctions by the state, some North Dakota oil drillers have begun cutting output to control the amount of natural gas that’s being burned off at well sites and wasted as a byproduct of crude production, industry and state officials say.

Rebounding oil prices and technology advances in western North Dakota’s oil patch have goosed crude production, spurring unanticipa­ted record levels of natural gas that comes with it, said Justin Kringstad, director of the North Dakota Pipeline Authority.

The state’s gas-gathering and processing capability is 2.1 billion cubic feet (0.06 billion cubic meters) daily. In November, the latest figures available, the industry was right at that ceiling — with a record 2.09 billion cubic feet (0.06 billion cubic meters) of natural gas produced daily.

Pipeline capacity is adequate to move the natural gas to market, but it’s the lack of gas-gathering and processing facilities in between that’s the problem. That forces some drillers to restrict oil output at some wells to meet gas flaring rules, said Ron Ness, president of the North Dakota Petroleum Council.

“We don’t want to be restricted by the state,” said Ness, whose group represents hundreds of companies working in North Dakota’s oil-producing region.

Ness said an industry group task force is being formed this month to pinpoint where gasgatheri­ng and processing infrastruc­ture is needed most.

The rules that went into effect in 2014 allow regulators to set production limits on oil companies if the targets are not met. Companies that fail to meet the goals could have production at a well limited to as little as 100 barrels a day, depending on the amount of gas flared.

The rules that were adopted by the state and endorsed by the industry require oil companies to capture 85 per cent of the gas by 2016, and 90 per cent by 2020. They came after as much of a third of the gas went up in smoke, drawing criticism from environmen­talist and many residents who said the state was losing revenue from the wasted gas, and that it contribute­d to unnecessar­y carbon dioxide emissions.

Less than 1 per cent of natural gas is flared from oil fields nationwide, and less than 3 per cent worldwide, the U.S. Energy Department said. North Dakota drillers in November burned off, or flared, about 14 per cent of the gas, said Alison Ritter, a spokeswoma­n for the Department of Mineral Resources.

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