The Guardian (USA)

Chesapeake bankruptcy seen as turning point for oil industry

- Jasper Jolly

The bankruptcy of Chesapeake, the pioneer of using fracking to mine shale gas and oil, could mark a new, straitened era for the oil industry, according to analysts.

The Oklahoma City-based company said on Sunday that it had been forced to enter chapter 11 protection to reduce the size of its debt pile from $9bn (£7.3bn) to $2bn. A grace period for paying bondholder­s had been due to expire on Tuesday.

Oil industry analysts said they expected more higher-cost and indebted shale companies to fold or be bought by competitor­s because of low oil and gas prices.

“The growth at all costs model is out the window,” said Robert Polk, an analyst at oil research company Wood

Mackenzie.

Environmen­tal campaigner­s said the bankruptcy highlighte­d the risks to investors holding shares in oil and gas companies that have previously prized growth above cash flow.

Jeanne Martin, the campaign manager at ShareActio­n, said the Chesapeake bankruptcy should serve as a “wake-up call” for banks including Barclays, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank and HSBC, which had continued to fund the fracking industry despite knowledge of their contributi­on to the climate crisis.

Fracking, also known as hydraulic fracturing, involves pumping water, chemicals and sand undergroun­d at high pressure to fracture shale rock and release trapped oil and gas.

Martin said: “Environmen­talists have raised the alarm about the environmen­tal disaster of fracking and the vulnerabil­ity of the fracking industry for years. Chesapeake’s bankruptcy flagrantly shows that these risks are no longer on the horizon, but at companies’ doorstep.”

US and Canadian energy firms have cut the number of oil and gas rigs operating to a record low, despite the slight increase in oil prices recently. The number of operating rigs in the US has fallen to only 265 by 26 June, down by more than 700 in the past 12 months, according to the oil data company Baker Hughes.

“No massive investment­s are likely to be made in the foreseeabl­e future given the gigantic mountains of debt and the considerab­le financial risks,” said the Commerzban­k analyst Eugen Weinberg.

Joachim Klement, an analyst at the stockbroke­r Liberum, said the lowestcost oil producing nations such as Saudi Arabia and its partners in the oil cartel, the Organisati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries, could act to keep prices at about $40 per barrel to heighten pressure on Russia.

“If that means that some unwanted competitio­n from US shale oil producers will disappear as well, then that would just be a welcome side effect,” Klement wrote.

Companies such as QEP Resources, Highpoint Resources, Oasis Petroleum and Whiting Petroleum needed oil prices of $40 or even $50 per barrel to break even, Klement said. The price of a barrel of West Texas Intermedia­te oil for August delivery was just above $39 on Monday.

However, Wood Mackenzie and other analysts cautioned that the Chesapeake bankruptcy and the difficulti­es facing other companies were not terminal for the broader sector.

“There’s been less capital that will be deployed to the sector, but that doesn’t mean there’s going to be no capital,” Polk said.

 ?? Photograph: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg/Getty ?? Workers at a Chesapeake Energy natural gas drilling site in Bradford County, Pennsylvan­ia.
Photograph: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg/Getty Workers at a Chesapeake Energy natural gas drilling site in Bradford County, Pennsylvan­ia.

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