Santa Fe New Mexican

Jobs left behind as oil industry rebounds in West Texas

Many workers laid off during price lull being replaced by automation

- By Clifford Krauss

MIDLAND, Texas — In the land where oil jobs were once a guaranteed road to security for blue-collar workers, Eustasio Velazquez’s career has been upended by technology.

For 10 years, he laid cables for service companies doing seismic testing in the search for the next big gusher. Then, powerful computer hardware and software replaced cables with wireless data collection, and he lost his job. He found new work connecting pipes on rigs, but lost that job, too, when plunging oil prices in 2015 forced the driller he worked for to replace rig hands with cheaper, more reliable automated tools.

“I don’t see a future,” Velazquez, 44, said on a recent afternoon as he stooped over his shopping cart at a local grocery store. “Pretty soon every rig will have one worker and a robot.”

Oil and gas workers have traditiona­lly had some of the highest-paying blue-collar jobs — just the type that President Donald Trump has vowed to preserve and bring back. But the West Texas oil fields, where activity is gearing back up as prices rebound, illustrate how difficult it will be to meet that goal. As in other industries, automation is creating a new demand for high-tech workers — sometimes hundreds of miles away in a control center — but their numbers don’t offset the ranks of field hands no longer required to sling chains and lift iron.

So while there is a general sense of relief in the oil patch that a recovery is gaining momen-

tum, discussion­s at company meetings and family kitchen tables are rife with aching worries, especially among those who are middle-aged with no more than a high school education.

Roughly 163,000 oil jobs were lost nationally from the 2014 peak, or about 30 percent of the total, while oil prices plummeted, at one point by as much as 70 percent. The job losses just in Texas, the most productive oil-producing state, totaled 98,000.

Several thousand workers have come back to work in recent months as the price of oil has begun to rise again, but energy experts say that between a third and a half of the workers who lost their jobs are not returning. Many have migrated to constructi­on or even jobs in renewable energy, like wind power.

“People have left the industry, and they are not coming back,” said Michael Dynan, vice president for portfolio and strategic developmen­t at Schramm, a Pennsylvan­ia manufactur­er of drilling rigs. “If it’s a repetitive task, it can be automated, and I don’t need someone to do that. I can get a computer to do that.”

Indeed, computers now direct drill bits that were once directed manually. The wireless technology taking hold across the oil patch allows a handful of geoscienti­sts and engineers to monitor the drilling and completion of multiple wells at a time — onshore or miles out to sea — and supervise immediate fixes when something goes wrong, all without leaving their desks. It is a world where rigs walk on their own legs and sensors on wells alert headquarte­rs to a leak or loss of pressure, reducing the need for a technician to check.

And despite all the lost workers, U.S. oil production is galloping upward, to 9 million barrels a day from 8.6 million in September. Nationwide, with a bit more than one-third as many rigs operating as in 2014, production is not even down 10 percent from record levels.

Some of the best wells here in the Permian Basin that three years ago required an oil price of over $60 a barrel for an operator to break even now need about $35, well below the current price of about $53.

Much of the technology has been developed by the aviation and automotive industries, along with deepwater oil exploratio­n, over more than a decade. But companies drilling on land were slow to adapt until oil prices crashed and companies needed to get efficient quickly or go out of business.

All the big companies, and many smaller ones, have organized teams of technician­s that collect well and tank data to develop complex algorithms enabling them to duplicate the design for the most productive wells over and over, and to repair valves and other parts before they break down.

The result is improved production and safety, but also a far smaller workforce, and one that is increasing­ly morphing

from muscle to brain power.

Pioneer Natural Resources, one of the most productive West Texas producers, has slashed the number of days to drill and complete wells so drasticall­y that it has been able to cut costs by 25 percent in wells completed since early 2015. The typical rig that drilled eight to 12 wells a year just a few years ago now drills up to 16. Last year, the company added nearly 240 wells to its Permian Basin inventory without adding new employees.

The faster operations, Pioneer executives say, are due in large part to more effective well planning and drill steering. Both have been made possible by the real-time computer connection­s between the rig and top geoscienti­sts back at corporate headquarte­rs and intense analysis of the data gathered at every well.

With the loss of manual jobs has come a transforma­tion in the job force, with demand growing for more data analysts, math scientists, communicat­ions specialist­s and robotic design engineers. In the last two years, ABB, the Swiss technology company, has opened two plants in Houston for assembling and packaging robotics and integratin­g advanced instrument­ation into oil field operations.

A typical new oil company employee is Andre Nel, a 25-year-old mechanical engineer who is a rising star at Pioneer Natural Resources. In less than two years, he has helped rewrite computer software to instruct workers on the best designs for hydraulic fracturing, optimizing the amounts of fluids, sand and chemicals pumped into the wells.

Now, connected by computers to technician­s in the field, he is monitoring the production of 950 wells, instantly checking the maintenanc­e history and production trends of every well with the click of a mouse.

“I’m lucky and happy that the tech revolution in the oil field has created the need for engineers like me with background­s in computer science, he said.

 ?? ILANA PANICH-LINSMAN/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Driller Cristo Flores, left, and Michael Manga, a rig manager, address a drill issue earlier this month on Latshaw Drilling’s Oil Rig 43 in Midland, Texas. The rig is two years old, and requires a smaller crew to run it because of advancing technologi­es.
ILANA PANICH-LINSMAN/THE NEW YORK TIMES Driller Cristo Flores, left, and Michael Manga, a rig manager, address a drill issue earlier this month on Latshaw Drilling’s Oil Rig 43 in Midland, Texas. The rig is two years old, and requires a smaller crew to run it because of advancing technologi­es.
 ?? ILANA PANICH-LINSMAN/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Thomas Perley, a hydraulic fracturing operator and pump controller, works earlier this month in Midland, Texas. At a Pioneer Natural Resources frack site, controller­s sit inside a room in order to frack. As in other industries, automation is creating a...
ILANA PANICH-LINSMAN/THE NEW YORK TIMES Thomas Perley, a hydraulic fracturing operator and pump controller, works earlier this month in Midland, Texas. At a Pioneer Natural Resources frack site, controller­s sit inside a room in order to frack. As in other industries, automation is creating a...

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