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This Innovation Will Help US Companies Win The Oil
Price War
By Michael McDonald
Oil Price, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, May 25, 2015
Although some US oil companies are struggling with low oil
prices, a
new wave of innovation is hitting the oil patch, allowing for a
significant reduction in drilling costs.
A variety of different
improvements in production are starting to show up at all levels across
the industry from small firms to oil majors. Statoil for example recently
noted that it is experimenting with different types of sand and
chemicals to improve production. And a number of companies have noted that
they are moving from drilling wells one at a time, on an ad hoc basis, to
drilling multiple wells at once. GE Oil & Gas has produced variable-use
pumps that can be turned on and off in order to save energy versus the
previous 24-hour a day operation cycle.
The end result of these
actions is that per-barrel costs of oil have fallen to around $60 today
versus $75 a year ago
according to Citi analysts. And executives from oil companies are now
forecasting that per barrel prices could fall to $50 or less before long.
America has not yet lost the price war.
Now, one small
Denver-based oil company has come up with a
whole new model for producing in order to further drive down costs.
Described as an "oil factory," Liberty Resources LLC and its CEO Chris
Wright have developed a novel method for extracting oil. The firm is
starting out by doing everything it can to eliminate the need for trucks
traveling to and from its site. The company notes that trucks are often an
irritant with local residents and more importantly, they add significantly
to the cost of producing oil.
To do that Liberty will build a
series of pipelines to its massive 10,000 acre Bakken site. The firm has
pipelines that carry water and gas produced by wells, as well as other
pipelines to carry oil. This technique is called ‘centralized resources’
and while other firms like Continental have explored it to some extent,
Liberty is pioneering the process. In essence, the firm is trying to bring
the efficiency focus of industrial engineering to the production focus of
petroleum engineering.
In addition, like Statoil and a few other
larger oil firms, Liberty is also focused on creating a production process
than can be stopped and started based on optimal production times, costs,
and oil prices. This could be an invaluable capability. Take Russia for
example. Russian oil wells
will freeze if they are shut down, and the country lacks significant
storage capacity. As a result, Russian oil producers cannot respond to
price downturns.
Moreover, Liberty is developing the entire
10,000-acre site to be fracked at once with nearly a 100 oil wells
operating simultaneously. By drilling multiple wells at once and
controlling inputs and output supply, the firm has significant cost
advantages versus traditional ad hoc production methods. Even employee
costs are lower, with Liberty citing the use of a third less workers than
a conventional production process.
So what is the combined result
of all these efficiency improvements? Liberty says it will still make
money even with oil at $50 a barrel. And the firm expects costs to keep
falling as oil service companies become more efficient and lower their own
prices. At these prices and efficiency levels, US production becomes
competitive with virtually
any other oil source. And if efficiency gains continue at this pace,
the US may weather the onslaught of Saudi oil much better than many
expected.
Source:
http://oilprice.com/Energy/Oil-Prices/This-Innovation-Will-Help-U.S.-Companies-Win-The-Oil-Price-War.html
***
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