Houston Chronicle Sunday

Drillers’ thifty new tactic

Explorers tap fuel from their own wells to run turbines that power drilling pumps, cutting flaring and saving $1M per month

- By Caleb Mutua and David Wethe

Gas prices spur frackers to switch to electric to run turbines and power pumps.

Thrifty drillers have found a new use for the glut of natural gas that’s sent prices for the fuel below zero in America’s biggest shale patch: use it to power fracking operations.

For decades, explorers have used massive diesel engines mounted on tractortra­ilers to shoot a mixture of water, sand and chemicals down wells and blast open layers of oil-soaked shale rock. That’s changing now that soaring output has crushed gas prices, especially in West Texas’ Permian Basin, where the fuel is a byproduct of crude oil extraction.

Explorers are switching to so-called e-fracking, using gas from their own wells to run turbines for electric motors that power drilling pumps. The move helps in two ways: It cuts about $1 million a month in fuel costs for a set of fracking equipment by 90 percent, according to Wells Fargo & Co., and it lessens the excess gas burned off at the well site, a practice environmen­tal groups frown upon. Tudor Pickering Holt & Co. predicts electric pumps will represent about a third of the market in roughly the next five years, from about 3 percent now.

The e-frac movement is “probably going to have some legs,” Jud Bailey, a senior

equity analyst at Wells Fargo in Houston, said in a phone interview. “It’s clearly a movement by some major operators to experiment with it,” though it’s not clear how quickly a shift would happen, he said.

The savings could be a boon for an industry pressed to trim spending and return cash to investors amid crudemarke­t volatility. Halliburto­n Co., the world’s biggest provider of fracking gear, and a unit of Royal Dutch Shell are already taking advantage.

Halliburto­n plans to deploy fleets — the term for rigs, pumps and other equipment that’s generally brought by truck to the well site — powered by electric motors in the third quarter. Shell subsidiary SWEPI LP signed an electric fracking equipment contract with U.S. Well Services Inc. in March, while oil field service provider ProPetro Holding Corp. has said it plans to deploy two e-fracking fleets by the end of the year.

ProPetro and Liberty Oilfield Services Inc., which uses pumps that can run on diesel or gas, “could lead the next phase of innovation/ transforma­tion in a sector that badly needs a new type of pumping hardware,” AltaCorp Capital Inc. analysts led by Waqar Syed wrote in a note to clients June 20.

The pumping equipment used in fracking “has seen no major innovation in the last 30 years, even as intensity of jobs has materially increased,” Syed wrote.

A convention­al fracking job involves using about 20 giant diesel-powered pumps, each the size of an 18-wheeler trailer. In e-fracking, a smalldiame­ter gas pipeline shuttles the fuel from the well to a turbine powering an electric motor.

Though the electric pumps are still mounted on trucks, they’re smaller than their diesel counterpar­ts. Some e-frac models can carry two pumps, significan­tly reducing the number of trailers and traffic and lowering labor costs. They’re also more reliable than diesel engines, according to U.S. Well Services.

“I liken it to a diesel-powered car with all the parts moving and the susceptibi­lity to failure versus the electric motor that runs in your refrigerat­or,” Josh Shapiro, vice president of investor relations at the Houston-based fracking gear provider, said in a phone interview. “You’ve probably never thought of replacing that.”

Switching to gas-powered electric motors could reduce flaring, which releases carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. The practice has reached record levels in the Permian as the oil boom leads to escalating output of gas. The total amount of gas burned off as waste worldwide in 2018 would have been enough to supply all of Central and South America, according to the World Bank.

Still, there are hurdles to widespread adoption. Oil field service operators struggling with a glut of gear may be reluctant to shoulder the upfront cost of deploying e-fracking, which Tudor Pickering estimates at $50 million to $60 million, compared with $30 million to $40 million for diesel fleets. Producers, meanwhile, are focused on capital discipline and pipeline constraint­s that keep wells from being completed.

Higher initial capital costs, the early-stage nature of the technology and commitment to generating free cash flow are adding to e-frac “hesitation,” which may lead to slow adoption and capital deployment, Wells Fargo’s Bailey wrote in a June 13 note to clients.

But there may be no turning back now. E-fracking will likely allow the best pumpers to differenti­ate themselves from the rest of the pack the same way land drillers did with their higher-technology rigs at the turn of the century, according to Wells Fargo.

“Broadly speaking,” Bailey wrote, “we think ‘the horse has left the barn.’ ”

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 ?? James Durbin / Associated Press ?? E-fracking savings may be a boon for an industry pressed to trim spending and return cash to investors amid market volatility.
James Durbin / Associated Press E-fracking savings may be a boon for an industry pressed to trim spending and return cash to investors amid market volatility.
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