Oman Daily Observer

As US shale oil activity surges, sand could be in short supply

- JARRETT RENSHAW

Demand for frac sand has surged in recent weeks as US producers rush back to the oil patch, stoking concern that supplies of the key component of drilling may not be able to keep up with demand later this year, industry profession­als said. The growing appetite for frac sand comes as oil producers have added hundreds of rigs in US oil fields from Texas to North Dakota. Last week, the US rig count hit 591, the highest since October 2015 and nearly double the figure seen seven months ago. Raymond James predicts the number of rigs could approach 1,000 by the end of 2018. “The worm has turned,” said Chris Keene, CEO of Rangeland Energy LLC, a privately held logistics company in Sugar Land, Texas. US producers pump frac sand and other materials into wells to break up shale rock and produce oil. Wells are getting longer and wider, requiring larger amounts of sand.

The frac sand industry was among the hardest hit during the oil rout of the past two years, as producers slashed capital budgets and looked to shed — or renegotiat­e — long-term supply contracts with sand companies that had been made during the boom years. Several of the major frac sand companies saw shares plummet amid investor scepticism.

But frac sand producers like Fairmount Santrol Holdings and US Silica Holdings are regaining their price leverage and producers are once again looking to lock in long-term supply contracts amid widespread optimism that global oil production cuts will provide stable, higher prices. Raymond James, in a January investor note, estimated frac sand demand would hit record levels this year at roughly 55 million tonnes and exceed 80 million tonnes by next year, 60 per cent above 2014 levels, due in large part to producers requiring more sand per well. Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co ran a US demand model early last year that significan­tly underestim­ated demand for 2017 and 2018, forcing the bank to revise its forecast in December to predict record demand for 2018. Tudor says tightening supplies and logistical challenges could send frac sand prices to 2014 levels, when there were 1,500 rigs in US oil patches.

Rangeland operates a frac sand terminal in New Mexico that delivers roughly 2 million tons of sand annually to producers in the Delaware Basin, an oil patch that stretches from West Texas into New Mexico. Rangeland CEO Keene said January frac sand deliveries out of the company’s terminal reached record levels.

Taylor Robinson, president of PLG Consulting, which helps companies solve transporta­tion issues, said frac sand demand has “significan­tly” picked up in the past six weeks, and demand is expected to skyrocket over the next seven months.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman