US Shale Is Immune To An Oil Price Crash In 2017
By Tsvetana
Paraskova
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, May
18, 2017
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Since OPEC announced the production cut deal at the end of
November, industry analysts have been warning that rising production
from producers outside the deal—U.S. shale in particular—is effectively
capping the oil price gains from that agreement.
Four months
after the OPEC/NOPEC deal took effect, oil prices
dropped to the levels preceding the agreement, amid concerns over
still stubbornly high inventories and rising U.S. output.
Shale
production has been gaining 'significant momentum', and there is a
limited downside risk in the short run, Norway-based consultancy Rystad
Energy said in a
report last week.
Oil production in the Lower 48 excluding
the Gulf of Mexico is expected to rise until the end of the year even if
the price of oil plunges to US$40, Rystad's analysis shows.
Since December 2016, oil output in the Lower 48 states, minus the Gulf
of Mexico, has been on a continuous expansion, with 430,000 bpd growth
so far. The growth from the average level in the fourth quarter of 2016
to May 2017 is around 340,000 bpd, Rystad said.
According to the
EIA
data, Lower 48 states' field production of crude oil has been
growing each week since early December, right after OPEC said it would
curb supply to try to balance the market and lift the price of oil.
Despite the worries that
cost inflation may slow down production growth, Rystad believes that
completion activity is poised to surge for the rest of this year. At WTI
price of US$50 per barrel, Lower 48 output is seen to be growing by an
additional 390,000 bpd between May 2017 and December 2017, the
consultancy noted.
The U.S. operators have built up a new
inventory of drilled uncompleted wells (DUCs) as the rig count recovery
has been outpacing completion growth since the second half of 2016. If
the price of oil was to crash to US$40 or even US$30 per barrel, a major
part of those DUCs would still be commercially viable for completion,
due to the fact that "drilling costs are sunk", Rystad said.
"Therefore, a drastic downward shift in the market conditions will not
lead to a rapid collapse of the U.S. oil production," the consultancy
noted.
The U.S. operators are expected to relatively quickly
adjust even to $30 per barrel oil, and they will rely on hedging gains
or just outspend more in the short term.
According to Rystad
Energy, no more than 500,000 bpd of December 2017 production are at risk
should the WTI price drop to US$30.
"If the prices go down to 30
USD/bbl and we assume that operators behave rationally, we should
observe relatively quick adjustment of activity, which will result in a
temporary contraction of output with stabilization in 4Q at the level
100 MBbld lower than the current output as base production gets more
mature," Artem Abramov, Vice President Analysis at Rystad Energy, said
in the report.
"In reality, history tells us that many operators
will rely on hedging gains or simply outspend more, so short-term
evolution of supply in the 30 USD/bbl world might end up much closer to
the rational 40 or even 50 USD/bbl scenarios," Abramov noted.
U.S. producers rushed to lock in oil prices above US$50 after OPEC's
deal was announced, and most of the new oil derivatives since Q4 2016
have been added at strike prices between US$50 and US$60 a barrel, Wood
Mackenzie said in an
analysis at
the end of March.
U.S. shale survived the oil price crash with
cost cuts and lower breakeven prices, and emerged more resilient from
the slump. According to a Rystad Energy
analysis, since 2013, the average wellhead breakeven price (BEP) for
key shale plays has dropped from US$80/barrel to US$35/barrel.
Last month, oil prices were seen dropping to
US$40 or lower on fears that OPEC may not roll over the production
cuts.
But as the cartel and partners found their goal to reduce
global oversupply to an acceptable level by June increasingly elusive,
on Monday Saudi Oil Minister Khalid Al-Falih and Russia's Energy
Minister Alexander Novak said in a joint
statement that they
"agreed to do whatever it takes" to reduce the global commercial oil
inventories to their five-year average, and the production deal "should
be extended by 9 months, through March 31, 2018."
If this latest
OPEC/NOPEC tactic to talk prices up succeeds, U.S. producers will feel
more comfortable to increase production with WTI prices closer to US$50
than US$40 or lower.
Link to original article:
http://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/US-Shale-Is-Immune-To-An-Oil-Price-Crash-In-2017.html
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