Yes, of Course...
Shale Threshold. “The market is going to be out of balance for quite some time,” Morris said.
Yergin, the confidante of oil ministers and chief executives, sees the threshold for reinvigorating shale between $50 and $60 a barrel. U.S. crude was trading above the $50 level as recently as Feb. 26.
“At $50, we’ll start to see a recovery and a step up in investment, so long as people feel safe about the price floor beneath them,” he said.
It’s funny that Yergin should put it that way. A big part of shale’s resilience lies in its unique geology. Unlike the so-called conventional fields in Saudi Arabia and Russia, North American shale is rock so dense that it doesn’t degrade or collapse on itself if oil production is interrupted. In other parts of the world, disrupting output can do irreversible damage.
That’s why the bulk of Chevron’s $4 billion spending cut will take place in the Permian, CEO Mike Wirth said Tuesday. It’s a rare field where production can be turned off almost instantly without adverse long-term impacts.
With shale, “the assets don’t go away because you haven’t destroyed the field,” said Ken Medlock, senior director of Rice University’s Center for Energy Studies. “We’ll see a thinning of the herd but the assets will still be there.”
Welcome to the shut-in party pal(s). Not to suggest otherwise, but I always believed that a frac job was to “blast” the rock with water and hydraulic pressure, opening a void for the oil or gas to flow to? Their point in this is; that not until you’ve systemically, comprehensively and financially destroyed everything in the oil and gas industry will you begin to shut-in properties. That you could have shut-in production when we completed development of the Preliminary Specification in December 2013, which suggests that unprofitability is the point in which you shut-in a property. A time period in which bureaucrats lied to everyone about, my list is far too long to include everything so I’ll just list my favorite lies here, market rebalancing, capital discipline and we’ll muddle through. I am going to add “doesn’t degrade or collapse” formations to the top of my list right now. Now with all the destruction they’ve caused they’ll admit shut-in production is the way to go. The issue bureaucrats had before, with shutting in production, was that it took effort to do so.
This problem isn’t going to go away I’m afraid. As I discovered decades ago the industry is not configured to function in this way. It uses the high throughput production model. Which sees maximum capacity produced at all times to offset its large overheads. The Preliminary Specification shifts the industry to the decentralized production model which makes all the producers' costs variable. Then any property that is shut-in incurs no costs. Overheads are incurred by the service providers who will not be conducting any work on shut-in production and therefore will not render any billing for their services. Shifting the overhead costs from industry to the service providers enables producers for the first time to be able to control their overhead costs.
Not only do the service providers have a role in this but also the Joint Operating Committee as the key organizational construct of the dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil and gas producer. The Joint Operating Committee is the industry standard legal, financial, operational decision making, cultural, communication, innovation and strategic framework of the industry. Using it aligns these frameworks with the compliance and governance that is “currently” managed by the bureaucracy.
This shut-in production enables producers to save the reserves for a time in which they can be produced profitably. The reserves will not have to increase their return on investment when it includes the additional losses of the property if it continues to produce unprofitably. Global oil and gas storage facilities will be augmented and better managed by assuming reserves are a natural form of storage. And the commodity markets will find the marginal price when the marginal barrels of oil equivalent are removed from the marketplace. It is this logic I assume that these people now find so compelling.
Therefore here are a handful of useful questions that people may want to ask these newly enlightened bureaucrats.
- Who will be the producers that shut-in their production? Profitability has been determined by PI&O to be the only means in which to allocate production fairly and reasonably. Therefore what we’ll see from the industry is the continuation of their favorite activity. “It's not them, its other producers, we’re profitable.” The blame game.
- Which properties will be shut-in? There is not a producer in the industry that knows within a range of +/- 25% of their revenues what their profitability at any property is. Ask for the detailed reports and focus on the actual overhead charges. There are no actual overhead costs charged to the properties, anywhere on the continent. Most, probably 85% of overhead is capitalized. It must be that properties manage themselves and the overhead supports the bureaucrats? Don’t ask me, I already know the answers, ask the producers these questions, that’s why they're profitable.
- If PI&O’s Preliminary Specification makes actual overhead variable, what does this renewed interest in shutting-in consider to do with the producers overhead? The key question, and why what they’re doing doesn’t work. Their overhead is 100% fixed. The same at any level of the production profile. Therefore their profits may appear even more specious as a result. But they do have a plan of course, just lay the overhead off. Those people that were just hanging on by their fingertips trying to keep up while doing ten peoples work, might be able to let go soon. And those that are remaining get ready for more work and soon it will be your turn too. Isn’t oil and gas fun!
Just as the producers told the service industry to cut their costs by 25%, they immediately jumped at the opportunity and reduced the volume of their business which was already on its knees due to this bureaucratically induced depression. This too will inspire and motivate the remaining few people left in the producers to redouble their efforts again. As I said on Friday to the bureaucrats, before you go, initiate and fund the Preliminary Specification. That way you can do something positive for once in your lives.
The Preliminary Specification, our user community and service providers provide for a dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil and gas industry with the most profitable means of oil and gas operations. Setting the foundation for profitable North American energy independence. People, Ideas & Objects have published a white paper “Profitable, North American Energy Independence -- Through the Commercialization of Shale.” that captures the vision of the Preliminary Specification and our actions. Users are welcome to join me here. Together we can begin to meet the future demands for energy. And don’t forget to join our network on Twitter @piobiz anyone can contact me at 403-200-2302 or email here.