The Oklahoman

Fracking crew shortage may push oil’s biggest bubble to 2018

- BY JOE CARROLL AND DAVID WETHE Bloomberg

Shale explorers pushing to expand oil production are struggling to find enough fracking crews after thousands of workers were dismissed during the crude rout.

Independen­t U.S. drillers underspent their first-quarter budgets by as much as $2.5 billion collective­ly, largely because they couldn’t find enough fracking crews to handle all the planned work, according to Infill Thinking LLC, a research and consulting firm focused on oil field services and exploratio­n. If the scarcity holds, output increases planned for this summer may get pushed into 2018, creating an unanticipa­ted production bulge with “scary” implicatio­ns for oil prices, said Joseph Triepke, Infill’s founder.

In some cases, active crews are walking away from jobs they signed up for months ago — and paying early-terminatio­n penalties — to take higher-paying assignment­s with other explorers. Workers earn anywhere from $29,000 to $72,000 a year before overtime, depending on the company and the region.

The tight fracking market “means U.S. oil production growth this year will be back-half weighted, and we may not understand the full extent of U.S. production growth until early 2018,” said Triepke, who previously was an analyst at Citadel LLC’s Surveyor Capital unit. “This point is particular­ly scary if you are rooting for higher oil prices.”

Oilfield-service companies contribute­d the largest chunk of more than 441,000 jobs slashed globally as prices plunged from more than $100 a barrel over the last three years, according to Houston-based industry consultant Graves & Co.

Shale drillers gear up

Now, with the price of oil settling at around $50 a barrel, shale drillers are once again gearing up in areas such as the Permian Basin, where break-even costs are as low as $30 a barrel.

The result: rising competitio­n for workers and equipment, which means higher costs. Fracking companies are now charging 60 percent to 70 percent more than a year ago as explorers engage in bidding wars to lock up crews, according to Infill data.

In response, servicers are scrambling to rehire hands and retrieve gear from storage, said Andrew Cosgrove, an analyst at Bloomberg Intelligen­ce.

A crew typically consists of 25 to 30 workers who operate a huge array of powerful truckmount­ed pumps, storage tanks for fluids and sand, hoses, gauges and safety gear.

Fracking, which involves pumping tons of water, sand and chemicals into a well to smash open the surroundin­g oiland gas-soaked rock, is the most expensive part of drilling a well, usually accounting for about 70 percent of the total cost.

So far, independen­t shale drillers are confident they’ll find ample fracking capacity and are leaving their ambitious double-digit output growth targets intact. West Texas Intermedia­te crude, the U.S. benchmark, is heading for a second weekly advance as U.S. stockpiles decline while Saudi Arabia and Russia indicate a willingnes­s to extend priceboost­ing production cuts.

Those efforts could be dashed in coming months, however, if shale explorers deliver a largerthan-expected bubble of supply.

“Every single pressure pumper is saying their order books are full through the third quarter and some as far ahead as the first quarter of ‘18,” Cosgrove said.

Frack crews follow money

EQT Corp. was left short of fracking crews during the first quarter when some pumping companies walked away for higher-paying contracts. Still, the Pittsburgh-based shale driller expects to attract enough fracking capacity by the beginning of June to stay on track and hit its fullyear growth forecast.

“A couple of our frack contractor­s decided to pay us the penalties to take their frack crews to jobs that were more profitable,” EQT CEO Steven Schlotterb­eck said during an April 27 conference call with analysts. “So we will get some penalty fees but that obviously is far less than the value of having the wells fracked on the schedule that we would have liked.”

The last time the shale patch boomed, Parsley Energy Inc. CEO Bryan Sheffield remembers personally delivering breakfast and giving away World Series tickets to get into good graces with fracking companies.

That was late 2011, when booming demand for fracking capacity meant service companies could fire clients to take better-paying gigs, Sheffield said in an interview. The 39-year-old Parsley founder was relatively unknown at the time, trying to get to the top of frack companies’ cancellati­on lists, so he could get a chance to hire them and get his oil flowing.

Those days are back, he said.

After the last boom that saw oil field truck drivers commanding more than $200,000 a year in the Bakken of North Dakota, companies are again hunting for more truckers — this time in the Permian Basin of Texas and New Mexico for hauling water, sand and oil. Fracking equipment prices began rising late last year, Sheffield said.

“This is exactly what we saw in 2011 and 2012,” Sheffield said. “The bottleneck moves down the chain.”

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