The Emperor Has No Clothes
Even with the endowment of shale reserves, our good friends the bureaucrats have deliberately sought to destroy every element of the greater oil and gas economy in North America. Inaction is a deliberate act when it spans four decades. With an endowment of riches passed to them, they’ve only managed to turn it into a wasting resource where no one but them have benefited. Based on their culture, plans, understanding and most importantly what drives them, there will never be any value generated by them. It was only last year they concluded that shale was not commercially viable. That they needed to move to clean energy and pursue that without any plans or understanding how to make any money in an industry that has never prospered for anyone, has only survived on government benefits and has a history of accountability that gets bureaucrats drooling. And they can do this without consulting anyone or putting it forward, it’s just their decree and that’s that. Producer bureaucrats have never had to account for their litany of serial disasters as they’ve always had some bright shiny object to market as the focus of their next endeavor. When the new prospects inevitably turn into a financial disaster, almost exclusively as a result of chronic overproduction, they never address the issues, they only say they’ve moved on to bigger and better things. Never have they sought to remediate their poor performing assets and turn them profitable. All of the prior decades oil and gas production was sold at prices that were not profitable. Today producers may be treading water with their costs covered due to $90+ oil, but I highly doubt it. And in our immediate future we are incapable and unprepared in every way to approach the opportunity of fueling societies needs. In what can only be described as a constrained resource environment by those who may not share our political point of view.
I recall when I published the Preliminary Research Report documenting the use of the Joint Operating Committee as the key organizational construct in May 2004. The party was going strong in oil and gas and continued in that manner for a considerable period of time. This was the time when shale became the place to be and the shale gold rush was on. The public was inundated with the storyline of how innovative the producers had become to make shale the miracle that it was. Except in my contrarian point of view I argued in this blog that these producers were anything but innovative. They never had been and never would be, they don’t act and just sit there giving a thumbs up or down to those who should happen to spend their lives on breaking their brains solving big problems, and groveling to be heard by said bureaucrats. Only to repeatedly get the thumbs down. Such were the lives of those in the service industry and more specifically the coil tubing developers and Packers Plus. These people spent decades trying to convince producers to use their technologies but were denied at every turn. The only question I have to ask is, in oil and gas, who are the real innovators? Is it the ones with their greasy hands on the actual problems with machine shops at their disposal, or those that are sitting on the couch browsing the latest Ferrari brochures? I have no issue with wealth, I just feel people should earn it and do so by building value. Which is the absolute contrary situation here.
The fact of the matter is the history and culture that we’ve seen since the exit of the producers investors, and subsequently their bankers. Bureaucrats sitting on the couch is a satisfactory effort that is insatiable. Seven years of denial of new money has stimulated those innovative ideas throughout the bureaucracy. Ideas such as acceptance of negative $40 oil, never paying the service industry for work done in the field for 18 months. I need to give them some credit for being innovative. Why is it that I’m so critical of our good friends the bureaucrats? It's simple really, who’s responsible for all the damage done to the greater oil and gas economy? I can’t look at what has happened, particularly when alternatives were available and discussed on this blog, when the investors had given them the ultimate message of disapproval and yet, they’ve sat for all this time and continued to do nothing. Only to realize last year they needed to do something to save their lifelines and came up with the clean energy diversion and consolidation as the keys to their future prosperity. The world is moving to rapidly adopt decentralized models of organizations that are far more effective and business models that are more efficient. Yet tripling down on the bureaucracy through consolidation is seen as the saving grace of the industry? There’s the source of your industry innovation, that’s the source of where shale came from. We should wait in nervous anticipation at what innovative wonders will arrive next from these bureaucrats!
Predicting the demise of the industry as a result of chronic overproduction isn’t difficult to do. It’s a classic business issue that was initially diagnosed from 1929s great depression. What we know from that era is that the fallout from overproduction is catastrophic and felt throughout the greater economy and society in general. In oil and gas this developed through the initiation of the SEC’s Full Cost accounting regulations being misinterpreted by producers. Where they began to build balance sheets, put cash in the ground and conversely overreport profitability. That has become the cultural norm of the oil and gas business. Overreported profitability attracted too much investment inevitably causing overproduction, or as we call it unprofitable production. The consequences were initially realized by the greater oil and gas economy in the form of repeated commodity price collapses which began in the 1986 oil market. Without any remedy applied for the past four decades it was inevitable the industry's consequences would eventually spill over to a greater scope and scale of societal damage and destruction. This is the point that we’re entering now as a result of the declining capacity and capabilities of the greater North American oil and gas economy. This scope and scale is best represented in the value that society gains from oil and gas. Each barrel of oil equivalent is leveraged mechanically to at least 10,000 man hours. Therefore the U.S. is generating the equivalent man days of mechanical leverage of 38.1 billion man days, not hours, each and every day of the week. If we want to know the source of the next major international conflict, I’d suggest this may be a candidate. And remember with all that value extracted by one barrel of oil these producer bureaucrats are incapable of making a profit.
One of the symptoms of the damage we’ve experienced is the fact that the service industry is operating at 25% of its prior capacity and as a result is charging record prices for their services. The equipment, skills and people needed to run that industry at a higher throughput doesn’t exist. Therefore more capital investment will be required as the first step in that process. Past investors were witness to their investments being cut up for scrap metal. Many of those service industry companies are no longer in business. People who left the business have found work elsewhere in industries that don't offer the bust component of a boom / bust economy, but think they might be able to live with that. How this gets repaired is described in the Preliminary Specification which we published in August 2012. It addresses the specific issue of how the industry and service industry work together. Where the service industry is seen as an extension of the producer firm. Not what they’ve been alleged to be by producers as greedy and lazy when there’s not enough drilling rigs, and then quickly being forced into dropping their capacity utilization to 25% of prior years and producers slashing the service industries day rates unilaterally by 50%. Producers should consider what they would do if they suddenly lost 87.5% of their revenues, or better yet, remember 2020. The service industry is an exclusive resource of the producers that needs to be rebuilt. It exists for one reason only and that’s not to continually abuse it which is what producer bureaucrats have done. The consequences of not looking at this relationship productively will haunt them now for decades. Producers are involved in a primary industry and get paid no matter what they do. Those that are working for them in the service industry don’t. Therefore producers need to accept this responsibility and act accordingly. They need to do so quickly and begin this rebuilding process with the producer's cash. Maybe producers will understand better having some skin in the game. And none of this cash buys anything, the rule here is you broke it, you fix it. Exactly the approach I’ve taken in the development of the Preliminary Specification and our user community.
The prolific nature of shale is that the volume of reserves it exposes is dramatic, its deliverability is orders of magnitude better than anything else in North America however the decline curve is quick and steep. This is the next shoe to drop in both oil and gas in North American production deliverability. Natural gas was the first to be exploited by shale technologies and therefore it is reasonable that it’s also the first to realize the downside of the decline curve. We have two graphs from EIA that reflect its deliverability and its decline.
We see in the first graph of Monthly Dry Shale Gas Production. The period between mid 2017 and early 2020, a period of thirty months. That shale gas volumes increased from approximately 45 bcf / day to almost 75 bcf / day. A bcf / day / month increase on average. Alternatively in the second graph U.S. Monthly Marketed Natural Gas Production (2017 - 2023). The decline curve of shale is invoked with a total U.S. production of natural gas of 106 bcf / day in today’s market. And I’m suggesting that in mid 2024 will have declined to what I would suggest is 66 bcf / day. Therefore in the next 28 months we’ll see a more dramatic decline in shale production than we experienced in our best days of increasing deliverability. We can adjust the demand side relatively easily by cutting LNG sales of 12.4 bcf / day and exports to Mexico of 5.5 bcf / day. Increase Canadian imports I would suggest by up to 5 bcf / day. That still would leave 17 bcf / day that may be needed to be augmented in order to satisfy domestic demand. That’s less than the 1 / bcf / day / month increase that was previously realized; however, that is without capital and with the deprecated capacity and capabilities of the service industry. We have to recall too that clean energy is the future and maybe this will be too much of an ask. What we see here is the industry is finally running out of gas. The funding was cut in 2015 which caused the lead times in shale to stop. Think of this as no more foundations are being poured for new buildings in the downtown core. There’s still a supply of square footage coming onto the market. Yet for the market to turn around now, it will take seven years to reestablish itself to the point where its volumes increase on the basis of 2017 to 2020.
We remain constrained by the current organizational methods. We will never be able to break out of the routines of what has brought us to this point. There could even be a few shiny objects that distract the bureaucrats' focus. Our first act in approaching these issues is to organize ourselves so that we can approach this future constructively, productively, innovatively and profitably. That’s software in the 21st century, without the software and specifically the ERP software to define and support the organization there will be no change. Therefore our lead times may be longer than seven years. Miracles do happen, yet I think they’re all used up in this industry. What we see is the beginning of the hole that the bureaucracy began digging decades ago with their inability to care or take care of business. What should happen if we extend this out further? What if we find that during the great depression the other phenomenon of the separation of ownership and management. (Prior to stock markets and corporations was the era of the merchants.) Was that when management finds the situation untenable, they exit the scene for brighter climates in other industries. Such as Continentals Harold Hamm announced "Estate Planning." What we’re told is that the bureaucrats did not allegedly foresee this, and did not sign up for it. They may realize now that their tailor has been spoofing them all along. That their humiliation is imminent and they best skedaddle so nobody sees them naked or should ever remember their names.
On the other hand we have no shortage of work to do. Much needs to be done in the next few years. The Preliminary Specification needs to be built. The engineering and geological explicit knowledge needs to be captured as Intellectual Property and developed. New oil and gas firms need to be formed, capitalized and organized. Assets need to be transferred to these new producers in innovative, strategic and tactical ways. In this process we’ll all be helping the current producers to travel faster down their chosen journey to clean energy by disposing of dirty oil. This transition to the Preliminary Specification is something that must be done to deal with the financial difficulties the industry is plagued with from the current administration. This also needs to be done as preparation for the future. And to learn from the experience of this transition as we’ll be faced repeatedly with situations that share this same scope and scale of change in the near future of this business. We’ll therefore be somewhat prepared and experienced in challenges of this nature. Please review our Production Rights to see how everyone can participate in making this new oil and gas industry happen. An industry where it will be less important who you know, but what you know and what you're capable of delivering, what the value proposition is that you’re offering? We know we can, and we know how to make money in this business.
Those interested in joining our user community are People, Ideas & Objects priority and focus. The Preliminary Specification, our user community and their service provider organizations provide for a dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil and gas industry with the most profitable means of oil and gas operations, everywhere and always. Setting the foundation for profitable North American energy independence, everywhere and always. In addition, our software organizes the Intellectual Property of the exploration and production processes owned by the engineers and geologists. Enabling them to monetize their IP for a new oil & gas industry to begin with a means to be dynamic, innovative and performance oriented. Providing a new investment opportunity for those who see a bright future in the industry. A place where their administrative, accounting, exploration and production can be handled for the 21st century. People, Ideas & Objects have joined TBD and can be reached there. Anyone can contact me at 713-965-6720 in Houston or 587-735-2302 in Calgary, or email me here.