Roughneck News

Shale Drilling Revival Seen Taking Hold As Oil Price Recovers


September 30, 2016

Source: San Antoino Express News

The biggest reboot of U.S. oil and gas rigs in two years will gain traction as higher prices prompt producers to resume investment in the most profitable plays, according to a report by Platts RigData.


Demand for land rigs will rise 29 percent next year to 579, according to a report from the S&P Global Platts unit. Platts RigData forecasts average West Texas Intermediate crude prices will climb 23 percent to $52.18 a barrel in 2017 (Photo: John Davenport /San Antonio Express-News)Demand for land rigs will rise 29 percent next year to 579, the S&P Global Platts unit said in a report released at the Benposium East conference in New York. Platts RigData forecasts average West Texas Intermediate crude prices will climb 23 percent to $52.18 a barrel in 2017. The Henry Hub natural gas benchmark is seen increasing 26 percent to $3.05 per million British thermal units.

Producers from EOG Resources Inc. to Pioneer Natural Resources Co. are putting rigs back to work and buying acreage in some of the higher-return plays as they gear up to resume growth after crude prices rebounded. Oil got a further boost Wednesday when the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries agreed on the outline of a deal that will cut production for the first time in eight years. Futures jumped as much as 6.2 percent in New York, extending their rally from this year’s low to about 80 percent.

“Correlation between rigs and prices is very strong historically,” said Trey Cowan, senior industry analyst at Platts RigData. “The stars are aligning from the seasonal cycles, and the cycle is going to be dictated by recovering oil prices.” 

Drillers have put 107 oil and gas rigs back to work in the U.S. since the end of May, after idling almost 300 earlier this year and more than 1,100 in 2015, according to Baker Hughes weekly data. That’s the biggest revival since before the oil price crash started in mid-2014.

Oil field service companies would be among the first to benefit from a steady increase in drilling. Sanjel Energy Services Inc., the closely held Canadian oil services company formed from assets of bankrupt Sanjel Corp., sees an increase in activity in 2017 as producers consider boosting spending and put more rigs back to work.

Professional Grade Oilfield Impact Gloves EN388 4343 protection $17.95-Order Yours Here

“How much is yet to be seen,” CEO Shane Hooker said. Much will depend on the price of oil, with any increase above $50 a barrel seen as positive, he said. Activity ticked up when the price of oil rose briefly above $50 in June, he said.

WTI for November delivery climbed $2.38 to settle at $47.05 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange on Wednesday, the highest close since Sept. 8. In midday trading Thursday, it was just above $48.

Most of the new well activity in the first 18 months of the recovery will spread across the Southwest in Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana and New Mexico, with a major focus on the Permian Basin, according to the Platts RigData report. However, well activity is expected to shift in the second 18-month period to regions with more gas, such as the Gulf Coast, South Texas and Appalachia.

“The focus is on purely the best well economics,” Cowan said. “As oil and natural gas prices improve, you get normalization of industry.”

Comment On This Article


Roughneck Oilfield Drill Bit Keychains

Roughneck Impact Safety Gloves

Roughneck Oilfield Stickers

Roughneck Oilfield Safety Glasses

Oilfield Drilling Rig Models

Oilfield Drill Bit Paperweights