
The Research is In: Stop Fracking ASAP
October 2, 2019
Loopholes for Polluters
October 14, 2019By Justin Mikulka, DeSmogBlog, October 3, 2019
DCS has been publicizing the rapid decline rate of fracked wells since 2013. Read about it here and here.
This week, the Wall Street Journal highlighted that theΒ U.S. oil and gas shaleΒ industry, already struggling financially,Β is now facing βcore operational issues.β That should be a truly frightening prospect for investors in American fracking operations, but one which DeSmog has long been warningΒ of.
This one line from the JournalΒ sums up the problems:Β βUnlike several years ago, when shale production fell due to a global price collapse, the slowdown this year is driven partly by core operational issues, including wells producing less than expected after being drilled too close to one another, and sweet spots running out sooner thanΒ anticipated.β
As we have reported at DeSmog over the last year and a half, the shale oil and gas industry, which has driven the recent boom in American oil and gas production, has been on a more than decade-long money-losing streak,Β with estimated losses of approximately a quarter trillion dollars. Those losses have continued inΒ 2019.
This failure to generate profits led to the Financial Times recently reporting that shale investors are having a βcrisis of faithβΒ and turning away from U.S. oil and gas investments. That’s been bad news for frackers because the entire so-calledΒ βshale revolutionβ was fueled by massive borrowing, and these companies are increasinglyΒ declaring bankruptcy, unable to pay back what they borrowed because theyΒ haven’t been turning aΒ profit.
Scott Forbes, a vice president with leading energy industry research firm Wood Mackenzie, also has noted the structural problems in the finances of the fracking industry, referring to the current business model asΒ βunsustainable.β
When DeSmog first began reporting on the failed finances of the fracking industry, publications like the Wall Street Journal were writing about the optimistic financial future for shale companies.Β A year and a half later, that optimism has died. But all of these dynamics played out before the industry ran up against βcore operationalΒ issues.β
The shale patch is seeing some serious pain today in junk-bond land as oil prices drop. Diamond Offshore, Rowan Cos. & Valaris bonds are the biggest losers, with bonds down 5 or more cents on the dollar. pic.twitter.com/1jkVBjdX9P
β Lisa Abramowicz (@lisaabramowicz1) October 2, 2019
Core OperationalΒ Issues
Over the last 10 years, the fracking industry has made impressive gains with technological improvements that have resulted in lower costs and higher performing wells. But despite these improvements, shale companies haveΒ failed to be profitable, and two years ago,Β industry analysts at Wood MacKenzie were warningΒ about the limits of technology inΒ overcomingΒ geology.
More recently, the industryβs attempts to extract more oil and gas out of the shaleΒ β dubbed Fracking 2.0 by the Wall Street Journal β have flopped.Β Even the longest drilled wellsΒ have not made money,Β indicatingΒ a limit toΒ optimal well length. Likewise,Β attempts to drill many wells in the same area β so-called cube development β haven’t been the financial savior the industry needsΒ either.
Perhaps the surest sign of desperation amongΒ shale firmsΒ is the issue of βfrac hitsβ or βchild wells,βΒ an issue DeSmog flagged over a year ago. These companiesΒ are awareΒ that if secondary or βchild wellsβ are drilled too close together around the primary, or βparent well,β the fracking process can damage the nearby wells. And they also knowΒ that, as a result, these wells do not perform as wellΒ as those with greaterΒ spacing.
Nevertheless, they continue to doΒ it.
Instead, wells are declining faster, meaning the output of the wells drops off very quickly andΒ leadsΒ to lower overallΒ well production β and more losses for the increasinglyΒ financially insolventΒ companies.
James West, a managing director at Investment bank Evercore ISI, assessed the situation for the Wall Street Journal.Β βWeβre getting closer to peak production and we are reaching the peak of the general physics of these wells,β heΒ said.
Physics, Geology, and Disappearing SweetΒ Spots
Perhaps the most important fact in the Wall Street Journal’s recent storyΒ was only mentioned once:Β βsweet spots [are] running out sooner thanΒ anticipated.β
Sweet spots are the areas of shale basins that have the best-performing wells. David Hughes, earth scientist and author of the 2019 report, βHow Long Will The Shale Revolution Last: Technology versus Geology and the Lifecycle of Shale Plays,β has estimated that these sweet spots (also known as βTier 1 acreageβ) make up 15 to 20 percentΒ of a shale basin (also known asΒ aΒ βplayβ).
In a recent online presentation, Hughes noted that these productive areas, βof course, are exploitedΒ first.β
As shale companies have chased profits, they first drilled the sweet spots, but now that most of those have been depleted, drillersΒ must try to make a profit with Tier 2 acreage, which isnβt going soΒ well.
Scott Sheffield, CEO of Pioneer Resources, told investors in August that βTier 1 acreage is being exhausted at a very quickΒ rate.β
InΒ Hughesβ 2019 report, he maps the sweet spotsΒ of the Bakken Shale using well performance, withΒ the highest producers shown inΒ red.
Bakken wells showing peak month production. Credit: How Long Will the Shale RevolutionΒ Last?
As theΒ Wall Street Journal noted,Β βAcross North Dakotaβs Bakken Shale region, well productivity hasnβt improved since late 2017,β with a notably dismal example coming from fracking firm Hess.Β Bakken wells this company drilled in 2019Β ββ¦generated an average of about 82,000 barrels of oil in their first five months, 12 percentΒ below wells that began producing in 2018 and 16 percentΒ below 2017 wells,β the JournalΒ reported.
There is plenty of evidence β includingΒ warnings from industry leaders like Scott Sheffield β thatΒ the fracking industry has depleted most of the sweet spots in the major shale plays over the past decade or so. With fewer of those plum acresΒ left,Β firms are forced to drill in areas with less favorable geology for production, which means spending the same amount of money to drill wells but produce lessΒ oil.
And that means shale companiesΒ have no way to pay back the huge amount of debt, which theyΒ incurred to drill the sweet spots in the firstΒ place.
Even though it began as Enron Oil and Gas, a spinoff of Enron, EOGΒ is considered the gold standard of fracking companiesΒ and has earned the nickname βthe Apple ofΒ Oil.β
The Wall Street Journal reported the declining performance of new EOG wells in the Eagle Ford Shale, noting that EOG βdeclined to commentβ on this issue,Β which is rarely an indication of goodΒ news.
Many signs are pointing to the fact that geology βΒ how much oil and gas is present in the shaleΒ β will be the defining factor going forward for the U.S. frackingΒ industry.
In June DeSmog reported that Steve Schlotterbeck, former CEO of shale company EQT, told a petrochemical industry conference, βThe shale gas revolution has frankly been an unmitigated disaster for any buy-and-holdΒ investorβ¦β
Those buy-and-hold investors were buying and holding companies that were drilling sweet spots. But todayβs buy-and-hold investors are holding companies working with less productive shale, which doesn’t bode well for the industry’s futureΒ fortunes.
What. A. Sh*tshow. Sub $2Bn market cap E&P companiesβ¦
Most of these companies are dead men walking.
We all knew a reckoning was coming in 2016/2017 but never thought it would come with such force. Truly a bubble bursting⦠pic.twitter.com/QuYx1q8fWe
β EnergyCynic (@EnergyCynic) October 2, 2019
Follow the DeSmog investigative series:Β Finances of Fracking: Shale Industry Drills More DebtΒ ThanΒ Profit