The Borneo Post

Pressured for profit, oil majors bet big on shale technology

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HOUSTON: Shale oil engineer Oscar Portillo spends his days drilling as many as five wells at once – without ever setting foot on a rig.

Part of a team working to cut the cost of drilling a new shale well by a third, Portillo works from a Royal Dutch Shell Plc office in suburban Houston, his eyes darting among 13 monitors flashing data on speed, temperatur­e and other metrics as he helps control rigs more than 500 miles (805 km) away in the Permian Basin, the largest US oilfield.

For the last decade, smaller oil companies have led the way in shale technology, slashing costs by as much as half with breakthrou­ghs such as horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracking that turned the United States into the world’s fastest-growing energy exporter.

Now, oil majors that were slow to seize on shale are seeking further efficienci­es by adapting technologi­es for highly automated offshore operations to shale and pursuingad­vancesindi­gitalizati­on that have reshaped industries from auto manufactur­ing to retail.

If they are successful, the US oil industry’s ability to bring more wells to production at lower cost could amp up future output and company profits.

The firms could also frustrate the ongoing effort by The Organizati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) effort to drain a global oil glut.

“We’re bringing science into the art of drilling wells,” Portillo said.

The technologi­cal push comes amid worries that US shale gains are slowing as investors press for higher financial returns.

Many investors want producers to restrain spending and focus on generating higher returns, not volume, prompting some to pull back on drilling.

Production at a majority of publicly traded shale producers rose just 1.3 per cent over the first three quarters this year, according to Morgan Stanley.

But many US shale producers vowed during third quarter earnings disclosure­s to deliver higher returns through technology, with many forecastin­g aggressive output hikes into 2018.

Chevron Corp is using drones equipped with thermal imaging to detect leaks in oil tanks and pipelines across its shale fields, avoiding traditiona­l ground inspection­s and lengthy shutdowns.

Ryan Lance, chief executive of ConocoPhil­lips – the largest US independen­t oil and gas producer – sees ample opportunit­y to boost both profits and output. Conoco also oversees remote drilling operations in a similar way to Shell.

“The people that don’t have shale in their portfolios don’t understand it, frankly,” Lance said in an interview. “They think it’s going to go away quickly because of the high decline rates, or that the resource is not nearly that substantia­l. They’re wrong on both counts.”

Shell, in an initiative called ‘iShale,’ has marshalled technology from a dozen oilfield suppliers, including devices from subsea specialist TechnipFMC Plc that separate fracking sand from oil and well- control software from Emerson Electric Co, to bring more automation and data analysis to shale operations. One idea borrowed from deepwater projects is using sensors to automatica­lly adjust well flows and control separators that divvy natural gas, oil and water.

Today, these subsea systems are expensive because they are built to operate at the extreme pressures and temperatur­es found miles under the ocean’s surface.

Shell’s initiative aims to create cheaper versions for onshore production by incorporat­ing lowcost sensors similar to those in Apple Inc’s Watch, eliminatin­g the need for workers to visit thousands of shale drilling rigs to read gauges and manually adjust valves. Shell envisions shale wells that predict when parts are near mechanical failure and schedule repairs automatica­lly.

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? An oil and gas processing plant fed by local shale wells is pictured along a highway outside Carrizo Springs, about 30 miles (48 km) from the Mexican border, in Dimmit County, Texas.
— Reuters photo An oil and gas processing plant fed by local shale wells is pictured along a highway outside Carrizo Springs, about 30 miles (48 km) from the Mexican border, in Dimmit County, Texas.

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