The Denver Post

Pumping not slumping despite new energy law

Energy analysts say commodity prices have more bearing on production

- By John Aguilar

The more than two dozen drilling rigs operating today in Colorado’s oil and gas fields won’t be going silent any time soon, even with the enactment this year of a law that promises to make life tougher for the industry statewide.

For starters, most operators in Colorado already have hundreds of completed permits in the bag that will keep them busy for months to come regardless of what happens to the pace of future approvals to drill. A report from Moody’s Investor Service issued right after Senate Bill 181 was signed into law in April gave a relatively sanguine forecast for oil and gas production in the state.

The firm concluded that the new law — which grants local government­s more control over energy extraction and places emphasis on health and safety in oil and gas operations — would be blunted by the fact that “most of the producers have permitted activity in hand that would allow

them to operate normally for the next six months to two years.”

Then there’s the overriding reality, energy experts say, that the global price of minerals has exerted and will continue to exert a far greater influence on production levels in the state than will SB 181.

“Lots of geopolitic­al momentum is affecting a lot of these producers,” said Matt Hagerty, an analyst with Lakewood-based BTU Analytics.

Over the longer term, BTU Analytics projects that Colorado oil production will continue setting annual records for at least the next half dozen years, jumping about 39% from 2018 to 2024, when the firm expects nearly 250 million barrels of oil to be lifted from the ground.

Much of that increase, Hagerty said, is because of “productivi­ty improvemen­ts” realized out in the field in just the last couple of years.

“A well completed today produces a lot more oil and gas than a well completed back in 2014 or 2015,” he said. “The Denver-Julesburg Basin (largely centered on Weld County) is still an attractive basin from an economic perspectiv­e.”

But that doesn’t mean the industry isn’t keeping a close eye on SB 181. The specific rules for the new law have only begun to be debated by the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservati­on Commission and the uncertaint­y as to what might come out of that process could keep companies already here from expanding developmen­t plans while deterring new players from entering the state.

“If it’s me, I might choose other options in other parts of the country until I can see what’s happening in Colorado,” said Bernadette Johnson, vice president of market intelligen­ce for Drillingin­fo. “If you don’t know what it looks like, you don’t know how to plan.”

“All options on the table”

Colorado Rising, which spearheade­d an unsuccessf­ul attempt at the ballot box last fall to dramatical­ly increase the distance of new wells to homes and schools, is determined to make sure implementa­tion of SB 181 isn’t diluted with too many concession­s to the oil and gas industry.

Joe Salazar, the former Democratic state lawmaker who now leads the antifracki­ng group, said his organizati­on “is planning multiple actions related to rule-making, the ballot initiative process and for next legislativ­e session.”

“Colorado Rising will push for whatever protection­s are necessary for the state and environmen­t. Our current and future generation­s rely on us to keep all options on the table,” Salazar said.

Asked if that might include an attempt to eventually ban hydraulic fracturing in the state — the process by which shale rock is punctured and pried apart to release hydrocarbo­n deposits beneath the Earth’s surface — Salazar said yes.

“I think the more this industry pushes and abuses communitie­s, the more the appetite grows for a fracking ban,” he said.

So far, New York is the only state to ban fracking.

Dan Haley, president and CEO of the Colorado Oil and Gas Associatio­n, said any moves to severely curtail drilling in Colorado — up to and including a ban — would be a deceitful reading of the intent behind the new law.

“Legislator­s and members of the administra­tion testified repeatedly that SB 181 is not a moratorium or a ban on industry,” he said. “It’s up to the (Gov. Jared) Polis administra­tion to implement this sweeping law, to make sure local communitie­s understand the framework being developed, and to make sure it safeguards jobs and our environmen­t.

“Industry and environmen­tal protection are not mutually exclusive.”

The effort to draft rules for SB 181 hasn’t gotten off to the smoothest start, with two days of hearings in front of the COGCC at the end of July peppered with interrupti­ons, including coughing, finger-snapping and heckling from members of the audience.

Rule-making for the new law is expected to continue for the better part of the coming year.

Weld County as insurance

Who can best ride out the uncertaint­y surroundin­g the rollout of SB 181 will hinge on several factors, said Drillingin­fo’s Johnson.

“It depends on who you are, where you are and what your assets are,” she said. “The further away from the populace is better.”

Big, well-capitalize­d players, like Noble Energy and Anadarko Petroleum (which on Aug. 8 was officially acquired by Occidental Petroleum in a $38 billion deal), will have an easier time maintainin­g operations in the state. But SB 181 could pose “a particular business hazard” for smaller players, like SRC Energy and Extraction Oil and Gas, according to Moody’s.

While the state works out its rules, local government­s in Colorado are already moving ahead with plans to tighten their own regulation­s on oil and gas activity. This month, Adams County will become the first community in the state to consider doubling the setback for new wells to homes — potentiall­y bumping up the distance from 500 feet to 1,000 feet.

That could mean trouble for operators with energy plays along the Interstate 25 corridor north of Denver, considered by many to be the “sweet spot” in the Denver-Julesburg Basin but also heavily populated and prone to conflict between oil and gas companies and neighbors.

According to a BTU Analytics report issued in March, 29% of all drilling activity in the basin over the last four years occurred within a 10-mile radius of I-25.

Jason Oates, spokesman for Crestone Peak Resources, said a tighter regulatory regime brought about by SB 181 could actually work in the company’s favor because it has experience facing down opposition and community agitation over its operations.

“There may be growth opportunit­ies for those companies willing to operate in this complex environmen­t,” Oates said of the Firestone-based company, which has 1,600 wells in the state. “Our intent is to stay here, operate here and possibly grow here.”

The latest permit data from COGCC indicates that life after SB 181 is slowly ramping back up for operators in the state. Whereas only 41 drilling permits were issued in April — the same month the law took effect — approvals jumped to 166 wells in June and 130 wells last month.

That remains far below the 715 wells approved last November and the 687 wells approved in December, however.

Perhaps the industry’s most effective insurance policy against SB 181 as the law takes form is Weld County, which accounts for nearly 90% of all oil production in Colorado.

The county has made it more than clear that it intends to facilitate business for the oil and gas industry going forward, first declaring itself a “mineral resource area of interest” in June and this month opening the first-of-its-kind oil and gas department to process drillers’ permit applicatio­ns.

“Weld County, for the most part, is the oil and gas industry in Colorado — and it is still pro-oil and gas,” said BTU Analytics’ Hagerty.

 ?? Photos by Kelsey Brunner, The Denver Post ?? Liberty Oilfield Services’ Luke Welty walks through a fracking site near Henderson in July. Lakewood-based BTU Analytics projects that Colorado oil production will jump about 39% from 2018 to 2024.
Photos by Kelsey Brunner, The Denver Post Liberty Oilfield Services’ Luke Welty walks through a fracking site near Henderson in July. Lakewood-based BTU Analytics projects that Colorado oil production will jump about 39% from 2018 to 2024.
 ??  ?? From left, Luke Welty, Christophe­r Monaghan and Will Thorne talk about the layout of the Liberty fracking pad before beginning operations near Henderson in July.
From left, Luke Welty, Christophe­r Monaghan and Will Thorne talk about the layout of the Liberty fracking pad before beginning operations near Henderson in July.

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