The State of Oil and Gas: April 3, 2017

The Cheniere Energy gas liquefaction plant in Sabine Pass, Louisiana is selling it’s product overseas for about $7.50 MCF.  They have two of four “trains” online, with the other two expected to come online this year.  At least some of the gas being sent down there is from the Marcellus/Utica area.

March 21: Oil prices have been below $50/bbl for about two weeks.  OPEC is curbing production, but Libya is about to start shipping more oil and American producers are taking advantage of reasonably high prices.  The real question is, will American producers continue to produce and drive oil prices down?  Put another way, will banks continue to lend money to producers until they go bankrupt again?

Most of the major banks believe that oil prices will continue to go up throughout the rest of this year.  This is mainly due to their belief that the market is slowly working towards balance in production and consumption.

Goldman-Sachs thinks we’ll be back in an oversupply situation in 2018-2019, as shale drilling and new mega projects will bring lots of oil online in that time period.

We should end up with less gas in storage this year than we did last year.  That’s good for royalty checks.

This guy thinks that the major gains in efficiency in the American oil and gas industry are actually from the service companies slashing their prices, not from technological increases.

A study suggests that the Marcellus/Utica area could provide enough natural gas to supply a total of five cracker plants.  That’s a lot of gas.

Right now, most of the gas produced from the Marcellus/Utica is used in power generation and industry.

The guy who predicted the oil market crash (when most other people weren’t) is predicting oil will hit $60/bbl by the end of the year.  Everybody can be wrong, but it’s worth reading why he thinks that way.

Here’s a breakdown of oil production around the world, and some focus on oil production in the U.S. fracking fields.  The really short takeaway is that we have lots of oil in the U.S.  The same is true for natural gas.  The article actually points out that most of the rest of the world’s production is in decline, but it seems that the U.S. is going to be the producer that the world begins to rely on more and more.

The oil and gas industry does all kinds of things to improve output and cut costs.  The strangest one we’ve run across that actually seems to work is testing the DNA of microbes that come from the well.  Who came up with that one?

April 3, 2017: Oil prices broke $50/bbl at the end of last week, and natural gas prices have been above $3.00/MMBtu for about 10 days.  Price wise, it looks like the oil and gas industry is doing well.  I don’t see drilling slowing down any time soon here in West Virginia.  We’ll be here for anybody who needs us to help them navigate the murky waters of those oil and gas leases, pipeline easements, and surface use agreements.

2 thoughts on “The State of Oil and Gas: April 3, 2017

  1. Good report…..Antero in central WV is pushing gathering & transmission pipeline and expanding it’s Mark West cracker plant ($200M)….They had stalled overall exploration in 2016 but some pickup is occurring now…Largely due to Trump

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