The Oklahoman

Regulators deny request

- By Jack Money Business writer jmoney@oklahoman.com

The three-member Oklahoma Corporatio­n Commission on Wednesday denied a request to limit the amount of oil that can be produced from Oklahoma wells.

Commission Chairman Todd Hiett, Commission­er Dana Murphy and Commission­er Bob Anthony approved a final order that ended the agency's considerat­ion of the case.

The Oklahoma Energy Producers Alliance ( OEPA) and affiliated companies requested the relief in early April.

The O EPA represents mostly smaller, independen­t oil and gas producers who primarily operate older, vertical wells with smaller rates of production.

It had asked for a mandatory oil waste declaratio­n from commission­ers so that the agency could take additional steps to require operators to shut in wells or to take other actions deemed appropriat­e to cut crude oil production inside the state.

The O EPA had sought the relief as the price for a West Texas Intermedia­te barrel of crude oil approached $20 a barrel, based upon arguments that a curtailmen­t would help remove excess market supplies and improve crude oil's price.

The OEPA's request, however, was opposed by the Petroleum Alliance of Oklahoma and its member companies. Representa­tives of both the alliance and many larger oil and gas companies operating in Oklahoma countered that the free market would take care of excess supply issues on its own.

It has.

Oil prices have been steadily climbin gs in ce early May as demand for downstream petroleum products gradually returned and as the Organizati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries and Russia have stuck to pledged production cuts they made to ease a global glut of supply.

Closing prices for a barrel of West Texas Intermedia­te crude have ranged between $30 and $40 a barrel throughout June.

While commission­ers on Wednesday denied the OEPA's cause, another interim order they previously approved that relates to excess oil production remains in effect until Aug. 10.

That order allows oil and gas operators to decide if waste is occurring. Some operators have said that order gives them the ability to take whatever steps they deem necessary ( including shutting in wells) to prevent waste, while specifical­ly protecting correlativ­e rights held by the company, well investors and mineral rights owners.

Wednesday's final order was crafted by Murphy, who said changing market conditions warranted the action.

“I don' t believe the requested relief is necessary now, given conditions with pricing” and because the interim order remains in place, Murphy said.

Producers, meanwhile, continue to tweak their operations based upon those changing conditions.

Continenta­l Resources, which shut in 70% of operated oil production in May and June, recently announced it will begin to bring some of that production back in July.

Company officials said the company will still keep about 50% of its production shut in after modifying its operations.

"Continenta­l elected to defer production in order to preserve shareholde­r value over volumes and maximize the economics of the barrels we produce,” Bill Berry, Continenta­l's CEO, stated as part of the announceme­nt.

“As oil prices have stabilized and begun to recover, we have partially resumed production. As improved supply and demand fundamenta­ls benefit oil prices, we expect to continue restoring production in subsequent months."

 ?? OKLAHOMAN ARCHIVES] [THE ?? A crude oil storage barrel at a STACK well location is pictured.
OKLAHOMAN ARCHIVES] [THE A crude oil storage barrel at a STACK well location is pictured.

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