Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Oil giants making moves into shale turf

ExxonMobil, Shell, Chevron injecting billions in fields wildcatter­s once ruled

- JAVIER BLAS BLOOMBERG NEWS

The oil industry is muscling in on shale country.

ExxonMobil, Royal Dutch Shell and Chevron are jumping into American shale with gusto, planning to spend a combined $10 billion this year, up from next to nothing only a few years ago.

The giants are gaining a foothold in west Texas with such projects as Bongo 76-43, a well being drilled 10,000 feet beneath the table-flat, sagescente­d desert, and which then extends horizontal­ly for a mile, blasting through rock to capture light crude from the sprawling Permian Basin.

While the first chapter of the U.S. shale revolution belonged to wildcatter­s such as Harold Hamm and the late Aubrey McClendon, who parlayed borrowed money into billions, Bongo 76-43 is financed by Shell.

If the big companies are successful, they’ll scramble the U.S. energy business, increase American oil production, keep prices low, and steal influence from big producers, such as Saudi Arabia. And even with their enviable balance sheets, they have been as relentless in transformi­ng shale drilling into a more economical operation than the pioneering wildcatter­s before them.

“We’ve turned shale drilling from art into science,” Cindy Taff, Shell’s vice president of unconventi­onal wells, said on a recent visit to Bongo 76-43, about 100 miles west of Midland, Texas, capital of the Permian.

Bongo 76-43, named after an African antelope, is an example of a leaner, faster industry nicknamed “Shale 2.0” after the 2014 oil-price crash. Traditiona­lly, oil companies drilled one well per pad — the flat area they clear to put in the rig. At Bongo 76-43, Shell is drilling five wells in a single pad for the first time, each about 20 feet apart. That saves money otherwise spent moving rigs from site to site. Shell said it’s now able to drill 16 wells with a single rig every year, up from six in 2013.

With multiple wells on the same pad, a single fracking crew can work several weeks consecutiv­ely without having to travel from one pad to other. At Bongo 76-43, Shell is using three times more sand and fluids to break up the shale, a

process called fracking, than it did four years ago. The company said it spends about $5.5 million per well today in the Permian, down nearly 60 percent from 2013.

“We’re literally down to measuring efficiency in minutes, rather than hours or days,” said Bryan Boyles, Bongo 76-43’s manager.

Independen­t companies are watching the big three’s arrival with ambivalenc­e. Exxon, Shell, and Chevron will be able to spend more than independen­ts can for service contracts and prime drilling acreage. But if the majors pursue acquisitio­n deals, as they’ve done before, the wildcatter­s stand to reap the benefits.

Exxon invested big in shale in 2010 when it bought XTO Energy Inc. in a deal valued at $41 billion. For years, however, the major companies spent little on shale, instead focusing on their traditiona­l turf: multibilli­on-dollar engineerin­g marvels in the middle of nowhere that took years to build. The wells that Big Oil drilled were mostly in deep water, where a single hole could cost $100 million, rather than shale wells that can be set up for as little as $5 million each.

All that changed after oil prices crashed in 2014. Big companies were forced to cut costs and focus on projects that delivered cash quickly and could easily be sped up or slowed down. Shale was the solution.

“The arrival of Big Oil is very significan­t for shale,” said Deborah Byers, U.S. energy leader at consultant Ernst & Young in Houston. “It marries a great geological resource with a very strong balance sheet.”

The big three have all hatched ambitious catch-up strategies. Shell plans to spend about $2.5 billion a year, or about one-tenth of its total spending — a bet that’s bigger than those of some pureplay shale companies such as Hamm’s Continenta­l Resources Inc.

“The majors arrived late,” said Greg Guidry, who runs Shell’s shale business. “We want to be as nimble as the independen­ts but levering the capabiliti­es of a major.”

Chevron said it estimates its shale output will increase as much as 30 percent per year for the next decade, with production expanding to 500,000 barrels a day by 2020, from about 100,000 now. “We can see production above 700,000 barrels a day within a decade,” Chevron Chief Executive Officer John Watson told investors this month.

Exxon said it plans to spend one-third of its drilling budget this year on shale, with a goal to lift output to nearly 800,000 barrels a day by 2025, up from less than 200,000 barrels now. The company doubled its Permian footprint with a $6.6 billion acquisitio­n of properties from the billionair­e Bass family. Darren Woods, Exxon’s new CEO, said shale isn’t “on a discovery mode, it’s in an extraction mode.”

The price of oil is starting to reflect rising U.S. output. West Texas Intermedia­te, the national benchmark, this month dropped below $50 a barrel for the first time this year, down 10 percent from its 2008 peak.

The oil companies’ dive into shale could weaken the hand of Saudi Arabia and other big exporters by raising U.S. output. Economical­ly, the countries would have to contend with lower oil prices. Geopolitic­ally, their share of the global energy market would fall, and the United States would depend less on foreign supplies.

U.S. domestic production is likely to top 10 million barrels a day by December 2018, a level surpassed only twice, in October and November 1970, according to the U.S. Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion.

Some investors remain unconvince­d.

Shale, they argue, is a very different business for the big companies. Huge projects, their mainstays, require a big initial investment before becoming cash cows for decades with relatively little spending. Shale, on the other hand, requires ongoing spending because output quickly falls after an initial burst.

Guidry, head of Shell’s shale section, said the company could make money in the Permian with oil at $40 a barrel, with new wells profitable at $20 a barrel.

A lesson of the oil-price crash was how important it was to keep cash on hand. The independen­ts typically overspent, taking on debt to keep drilling, so when prices fell, they slowed their operations. The big three will experience no such pinch, said Bryan Sheffield, the billionair­e third-generation oilman who heads Parsley Energy Inc.

“Big Oil is cash-flow positive, so they can take a longerterm view,” Sheffield said. “You’re going to see them investing more in shale.”

 ?? Bloomberg News/MATTHEW BUSCH ?? Precision Drilling oil rig operators install a bit guide on the floor of a Royal Dutch Shell oil rig near Mentone, Texas, in early March.
Bloomberg News/MATTHEW BUSCH Precision Drilling oil rig operators install a bit guide on the floor of a Royal Dutch Shell oil rig near Mentone, Texas, in early March.

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