Empower ND Commission Meets In Stanley And Tours Oil
Transcription
Empower ND Commission Meets In Stanley And Tours Oil
Empower ND Commission Meets In Stanley And Tours Oil Patch By Mary Kilen, Mountrail County Promoter editor The Empower North Dakota Commission group is pictured at Nabors 148 drilling rig, an EOG well site located in James Hill Township. Oct. 21, 2009 - Members of the Empower North Dakota commission spent all day Monday, Oct. 19 in Stanley in the second of a series of informational gathering meetings they are holding throughout the state this year to develop recommendations for expanding the state’s energy industry. The meeting in Stanley was designed to talk about oil and gas exploration and production. The other meetings will deal with other areas of the energy industry in the state. The day began with morning tours around the Stanley area. Commission members toured an EOG well site housing Nabors Rig 148 in James Hill Township, a Murex Exploration frac site near the Belden church, EOG’s field crew housing site between Stanley and Palermo, and finally EOG’s new rail yard site northeast of Stanley. The tour gave commission members a real feel for the industry before they sat down for their afternoon meeting at EOG’s new office building in Stanley. The meeting featured updates about the industry as well as recommendations for future goals on how to work together for the state to prosper. Each segment is doing a Strength, Weakness, Opportunity and Threat (SWOT) analysis so that this commission can look at policy and ways to assist the industry. First on the agenda was Ron Ness of the ND Petroleum Council who welcomed everyone and thanked the hosts from EOG, Eric Dillé and John Boyd, for arranging the tours and Murex for the tour of the frac. He outlined the plan for this meeting to get information on where the industry is now and where it is heading. While it is early to be looking at the legislative agenda for the next session, it is valuable to gather the information and give commission members the full picture. The first speaker was Lynn Helms from the Department of Mineral Resources. He started with a look at the geology of the Bakken formation. There is the upper shale, middle and lower shale and then at the bottom is the Three Forks formation. He compared the development over the years to a sea floor, where the sediment washes in and fills in over the years. In the Bakken, the middle shale is where 90% of the drilling has happened to date. Helms compares that to the Oreo cookie with the good stuff in the middle, but now the Three Forks is showing great promise. The Bakken formation covers about 44,000 square miles and two-thirds of that is in North Dakota. The thermally mature portion of that measures around 14,000 square miles, most of that in western North Dakota. Historically, a formation is named after the spot where it comes to the surface. Since the Bakken does not do that, it was instead named after where it was first discovered north of Tioga. For the first 35 years after its discovery drilling was limited to vertical wells, which were not practical with the Bakken formation. Directional drilling gave the ability to steer where they drilled and for the next 25 years that drilling could go horizontal but they were mostly looking for natural fractures in the rock, still making the Bakken not very economic. Now with state of the art drilling rigs and hydraulic fracturing, they are now able to make progress with the Bakken formation. Even with that technology, Helms estimates it will take 10,000 to 20,000 well bores to fully develop the Bakken. 2008 recorded the second highest number of permits in one year. 2009 is shaping up to be another The tour stopped at this site near the Belden Church as crews good year although not quite that from Murex prepared for a frac job. The large number of high. It will still rank in the top tanks at the left hold the needed heated water for the frac. ten of all years. Rig counts and oil prices correlate. In North Dakota, Helms refers to the bungee jump when oil hit $30 and has now rebounded back to over $60. That has brought the rig count back to 57 as of this week. Last year was a record year for the North Dakota Industrial commission with the number of hearings they have held. Helms estimates that this will mean more activity in the Bakken formation and that the state should get ready for the boom seen in 2008 all over again. He estimates that next year there will be between 90 and 100 drilling rigs active in the state. Technology continues to advance with a new method of drilling called pad drilling. This method uses new rig types that can stand up and walk to the next well head up to 50 feet away. Electric driven, the new efficiencies with this type of rig are amazing as it can move from well to well in five to nine hours compared to the current three to five day rig move. This type of drilling uses a system of roads and corridors of pipelines, using pads and well bores that have less surface impact where the terrain allows. This method may or may not be practical with the Bakken formation and the terrain of North Dakota. Helm estimates that it will take another 15 to 20 years of development taking it to 2025 to 2030 to run out the drilling phase, especially if the Three Forks proves to be even half as good a producer as the middle Bakken. Right now recovery factors in the Bakken are 4 to 5 percent of the estimated 400 billion barrels that is there. As technology improves, that could improve as well. Next up was Ryan Rauschenberger of the state’s Tax Department. He explained to the commission how the tax incentives and structures impact the oil industry, as well as the impact the industry has on the state’s economy. In the first quarter of 2009, the industry provided 5500 direct employment jobs. In 2008 the industry accounted for 3.3% of all wages in the state. Oil and gas tax collections in 2008 were $391.8 million and 2009 is at $407.3 million. In the 2009 legislative session, a number of bills changed the taxes and incentives for the oil and gas production industry. Those changes implemented triggers for incentives and breaks that can be very confusing for anyone looking at the way they The field crew housing facility also located between Stanley and work. It also makes it a Palermo has helped to alleviate some of the housing crunch felt as challenge for both industry part of the Bakken play. Currently 140 people live in this site. and the state to figure revenues and budgets. Rauschenberger expressed it might be good for the commission to look at the taxation issues and keep that under consideration as they go forward. In many cases, a flatter tax structure rather than triggers and formulas may be a better way to accurately forecast revenues and expenditures for both industry and the state. Eric Dillé spoke next representing the ND Petroleum Council. Dillé is Manager of Government Relations for EOG Resources but for the purposes of this meeting was speaking representing the council. He serves on the ND Petroleum Council Executive Committee. He presented the SWOT for the oil and gas industry identifying the industries strengths and weaknesses, as well as the opportunities and threats that could affect the industry. Oil and gas has the potential for long term revenue for the state and counties, providing challenging and high paying jobs while providing significant economic benefit to rural communities and mineral owners. The industry has significant growth opportunities and helps to support the national domestic energy supply and energy security. Weaknesses include a tax environment that is much higher than competing states and a tax rate higher than competing energy industries. There are also the potential impacts to infrastructure in rural community and the processes to develop can be slow and bureaucratic. They face an aging workforce as well. Opportunities include the potential for growth, making significant revenue for state and counties, as well as developing skilled professionals and labor forces in the state. However, threats can include laws and regulations that restrict or slow exploration, and limited or restricted surface access to mineral resources. They also face a lack of employees and fluctuations in prices can also impact the industry. Goal identified by the SWOT include maintaining a business environment that supports and encourages the industry; providing a regulatory environment that promotes oil and gas activity; and maintaining the ability to access the resource. Each of these goals was accompanied by policy suggestions and action steps to take as they look to address the goals. As the commission looked at the last item, they began discussing the impact the increased activity has on the infrastructure. The potential lifespan of the industry means that the state needs to take a serious look at those impacts. One member described it as we need to "look through the windshield, not the rearview mirror", meaning they need to build to withstand the industry and speak with a collective voice to get the message heard. They discussed inviting the DOT to have a representative at their meetings to talk with them about the needs to stay on top of the infrastructure. Miles of pipe is pulled up into the air as part of the drilling process at Nabors 148 rig. Up next was the pipeline or midstream side of the industry. Speakers included Justin Kringstad of the ND Pipeline Authority. The authority works as an intermediary between industry, the state and more to facilitate the needs for transportation options. Kringstad talked about the existing pipeline options and the new projects that are underway, like Enbridge’s intention to expand their capabilities and EOG’s move for a new rail facility. These are just some of the options that are being considered or acted upon. However, the goal is to make sure that the long-term needs for transmission can be met. These projects take time to develop but there are projects underway and under consideration that will help to meet those goals. Stanley is quickly becoming one of the biggest hubs in North Dakota for getting the crude oil out to the system. These projects will also help to get some of the traffic off the roads. Kringstad also discussed the natural gas pipelines and projects that are also in place, underway or under consideration. These projects will help move the natural gas and more that is also part of the industry. Next Eric Dillé spoke on behalf of the Petroleum Council again, this time addressing the SWOT on the pipeline concerns. Strengths here include existing excess takeaway on major natural gas pipelines, ND gas has high natural gas liquids content which adds value, expansions and new plants can be permitted relatively easily and pipelines prevent flaring and reduce road traffic. Weaknesses include the increased truck traffic with insufficient pipeline capacity, too much gas flaring due to distance to wells, economics or plant capacity, the high well decline rates making a challenge to "right-size" gathering facilities, and the face that Bakken wells are farther east than existing gas infrastructure. Opportunities are there for substantial growth in oil and gas providing opportunities for expanding that infrastructure, recovery and sales of ethane are possible, and pipelines will eliminate flaring. Threats include large gas plays that results in oversupply and depressed prices, rail car/truck limitations for liquids and more government regulation. Goals identified here include expanding the oil and gas Commission members also toured EOG's new rail facility just northeast of Stanley. The facility will allow EOG to transport gathering, processing and export crude using railcars instead of trucks. The train will come capacity infrastructure, and through this building to be loaded. minimizing the flaring of natural gas while ensuring the industry has adequate time to evaluate and plan infrastructure needs. The Empower North Dakota commission has been encouraged by Governor John Hoeven to develop policy recommendations that will expand the state’s energy industry throughout the twenty-first century and help North Dakota realize the full potential of our diverse energy resources. The commission has additional meetings scheduled in November in Beulah, as well as Minot in January, Jamestown in March and Grand Forks in May. Mary Kilen, Editor Mountrail County Promoter PO Box 99 Stanley, ND (701) 628-2333 Fax: 701-628-2694