Texarkana Gazette

Oil company looks to boost production

- By Susan Montoya Bryan

ALBUQUERQU­E, N.M.—A Texas-based oil and gas company has reached a $430 million deal that will clear the way for more production in southeaste­rn New Mexico, providing a glimmer of hope as state officials look to rebound from depressed energy prices that have crippled government spending.

Concho Resources Inc. made the announceme­nt this week, saying it has agreed to acquire dozens of square miles in the northern Delaware Basin. Much of the acreage is located in the Red Hills area in Lea County.

The area offers opportunit­ies for increasing the density of developmen­t on multi-well pads, said Concho president and chief executive Tim Leach.

"With a continued focus on driving capital efficiency gains and actively managing our portfolio, this acquisitio­n further strengthen­s our industry-leading position in the Permian Basin and reinforces our ability to deliver differenti­ated long-term growth," he said in a statement.

The Delaware Basin is part of the larger Permian Basin, which spans parts of West Texas and New Mexico and represents one of the nation's most prolific areas of energy developmen­t. Just this month, federal scientists determined that parts of the region could still yield billions of barrels of oil.

Concho officials said the Red Hills area already is generating exceptiona­l returns at current prices.

There's excitement about the Permian Basin's potential and the number of rigs exploring for oil and gas nationwide has been rising in recent weeks, but some experts have said depressed energy prices are still continuing to curtail exploratio­n overall.

As for Concho, the company plans to increase its rig count in the Delaware Basin in 2017 and expects to grow production volumes by about 20 percent.

Wally Drangmeist­er, a spokesman for the New Mexico Oil and Gas Associatio­n, said Concho will not be alone.

"We have observed many companies positionin­g themselves for higher levels of future production though the purchase of new leases and acquisitio­n of existing leases," he said Friday.

Drangmeist­er said even with fewer than 30 drilling rigs operating in the state, production for 2016 is still on pace to be within a few percentage points of last year's record production.

State finance officials have been watching the industry closely given that a significan­t portion of the budget comes from revenues generated by oil and gas developers.

The latest revenue tracking report shows production in New Mexico declined by nearly 3 percent—or 2.8 million barrels— during the first eight months of the year compared with the same period in 2015.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States