LONDON: There has always been a close link between US oil production, international prices and OPEC, so it should come as no surprise that North America’s shale drillers find themselves locked in a battle with Saudi Arabia over prices and market share.
Until the 1950s, the US accounted for more than half of all global oil production.
Big finds such as Oklahoma’s Glenn Pool (1905) and the East Texas field (1930) drove oil price changes around the rest of the world.
Since the 1970s, the US has been a net importer, and international prices have tended to drive changes in US exploration and production.
Drilling and output in major oil-producing states have been closely correlated with the rise and fall in real oil prices. And nowhere has the relationship been closer than North Dakota, where the fortunes of its oil industry have mirrored the rise and fall in prices, resulting in a brutal cycle of boom and bust.
LIGHT THE FLARE
After unsuccessful exploration for almost 40 years, the first oil was found in North Dakota in 1951, and the first well was drilled in the now-famous Bakken formation in 1953.
The extraordinary story of the state’s dogged oil pioneers was chronicled by North Dakota State Geologist John Bluemle in a monograph to mark the 50th anniversary of the first successful find in 2001.
Photographer Bill Shemorry, who was there on the night of April 4, 1951, later wrote: “When I reached the hill just west of Wheelock I could see the glow of a fire in the sky directly to the east” four miles further on (“Mud, sweat and oil” 1991).
Parking near the well, Shemorry recalled: “The drilling rig and surrounding area were lighted by a huge gas flare. It was almost as if it were daylight. The noise of the escaping gas that fed the flare was so loud spectators had to shout to make themselves heard.”
Clarence Iverson No. 1 well, named after the landowner, went on to produce more than half a million barrels of oil and 800 million cubic feet of natural gas over the next 28 years.
BOOMS AND BUSTS
After the initial burst of excitement, however, North Dakota settled into a role as a niche producer, drilling around 200 wells a year and producing perhaps 50,000 barrels per day throughout the rest of the 1950s and 1960s.
The state’s first oil boom came in the late 1970s and early 1980s as a direct consequence of the Arab oil embargo (1973), the Iranian revolution (1979) and the price increases demanded by OPEC.
The number of new wells drilled increased from just 90 in 1972 to peak at 834 in 1981 as the real price of oil surged from $14 to around $100 per barrel at today’s prices.
But the state’s oil industry fell into a deep and prolonged depression in the 15 years of low prices that followed the crash of 1986.
In 1989, just 188 new wells were drilled. By 1994, the number had fallen to 111. And in 1999, it fell to just 58.
BAKKEN DREAMS
Even as prices and drilling fell in the 1980s and 1990s, some of the most enterprising companies had begun to experiment with drilling horizontal wells in the Bakken formation.
Meridian Oil drilled the first horizontal well in the Bakken in 1987. For a few years, Bakken was the most active oil exploration play in the state, with dozens of wells drilled each year. “But by the end of 1995, drilling for the Bakken had ceased and the play was over,” according to Bluemle, the state geologist.
Writing in 2001, before horizontal drilling had been successfully coupled with hydraulic fracturing, Bluemle speculated about the possibility of renewed production from the Bakken. “However, for that to happen, we’d need to see the development of a significant new technology,” he wrote.
“Economic volumes of oil or gas cannot be produced using today’s technology. It was the application of an improved technology, horizontal drilling, that spurred the short-lived Bakken play during the late 1980s and early 1990s. But horizontal drilling wasn’t enough.”
Bluemle wondered: “Perhaps some other new technology will be developed that will allow the hydrocarbons trapped in the shale to become mobilized and produced at economic rates. If this happens, many wells will be drilled for the oil and gas in the Bakken formation.”
From 2005, just four years later, horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing were successfully employed together to release oil and gas trapped in the shale. The quadrupling of oil prices between 2002 and 2012 provided the financial incentive for another drilling boom.
And by 2013, the number of new wells drilled topped 2,000, and daily production hit 860,000 barrels. In August 2014, state oil production stood at more than 1.1 million barrels per day, more than 90 percent of it from the Bakken, according to North Dakota’s Department of Mineral Resources.
FORTUNES TOGETHER
North Dakota’s oil industry and other similar shale oil plays across the US are the product of events and price changes far beyond the state’s own borders — and indeed beyond North America. It is vital to remember that linkage when thinking about the next phase of the oil price cycle.
Craig Pirrong at the University of Houston doubts that Saudi Arabia is using a predatory pricing strategy to drive shale producers out of business.
There is no evidence that Saudi Arabia is deliberately engineering a volume or price war to stop the shale revolution (or indeed to intensify the pressure on other oil-exporting rivals such as Iran and Russia) rather than simply responding rationally to protect its market share.
Yet a prolonged period of low prices and a squeeze on the shale business may be inevitable, unless Saudi Arabia and OPEC are willing to accept a big drop in their market share.
Past experience suggests the fortunes of the US oil industry, Saudi Arabia and OPEC are bound tightly together. Part of the adjustment process now underway in the oil market is likely to be a prolonged period of lower prices and a slowdown in the growth of the US shale industry.
North Dakota’s Bakken has become a relatively mature play, so this time around it might be spared the worst of the slowdown.
Drilling has slowed in some outlying counties, but in counties at the core of play continue to report strong activity.
North Dakota’s Bakken is far more cost-competitive than it was in the 1990s thanks to technical advances and improvements in drilling efficiency.
The shale revolution will not be reversed, and the US will continue to have a much bigger role in global supply.
But some slowdown in shale growth is inevitable and will probably come on the fringes of the Bakken and in less developed shale oil plays, which have taken its place at the vulnerable high-cost frontier for US onshore oil exploration.
— John Kemp is a Reuters market analyst. The views expressed are his own
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