The Denver Post

Report: Oil boom to continue, more infrastruc­ture needed

- By Susan Montoya Bryan

ALBUQUERQU­E» New Mexico’s oil and gas industry is expected to keep growing at a record pace, resulting in more revenue for the state and billions of dollars in new infrastruc­ture investment­s to get the commoditie­s to market, according to a study commission­ed by industry trade groups.

The prediction­s were outlined in a report presented to state lawmakers during a meeting Tuesday in Roswell.

The report — compiled by a national consulting group — was commission­ed by the New Mexico Oil and Gas Associatio­n and the American Petroleum Institute.

Analysts estimate it will take $174 billion of new infrastruc­ture to keep pace with expected growth through 2030. That would include investment­s by the industry in new pipelines, access roads, well pad constructi­on, processing plants and refineries.

Ryan Flynn, executive director with the New Mexico Oil and Gas Associatio­n, said he doesn’t see it as an infrastruc­ture challenge but rather natural growth in investment that will come from “hitting a new normal of continuall­y high production.

“We’ve been seeing it for the last couple of years. That history of boom and bust, that cycle, is something we’re flipping on its head right now,” Flynn said. “The new normal for the Permian Basin is going to be solid growth for the next decade or so.”

Developmen­t in the basin, which straddles parts of New Mexico and West Texas, has been surging. Energy companies have invested billions of dollars in the region in recent years and government scientists have estimated that reserves within the basin could be enough to potentiall­y double the nation’s onshore oil and gas resources.

In its latest forecast, the U.S. Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion said it expects the United States to pump about 12.3 million barrels of crude oil a day in 2019 and 13.3 million barrels a day in 2020, both of which would be record levels.

Much of the increase is expected to come from the Permian Basin as operators use hydraulic fracturing and other techniques to squeeze more oil and gas from shale formations.

With continued growth, the report estimates that production value in New Mexico would increase from $17 billion in 2017 to more than $72.6 billion in 2030, tripling the industry’s contributi­on to the state’s gross domestic product. Local and state revenues from the industry also would more than double.

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