Don’t bite off more gas than the U.S. can chew
BY JOHN-LAURENT TRONCHE
October 27, 2008
Caught up in the whirlwind of competitive lease offers and the rush to secure drill sites, it appears many Barnett Shale operators stopped short of asking a crucial question: Where is all this natural gas going?
Although dry-gas production grew 8.6 percent from July 2007 to July 2008, natural gas consumption grew just 3.6 percent during the same time period, according to the Energy Information Administration, and some analysts fear future consumption could prove less than rosy should a recession appear likely.
“I think there’s a broad consensus we have too much natural gas, which is why it’s trading at $6, $6.50 and it was twice that a few months ago,” said David Pursell, chairman of the Independent Petroleum Association of America’s Supply and Demand Committee. “Part of the glut we have here, not only do we have supply growth but we’re also entering a time when demand could be contracting. So the glut could be exacerbated by that.”
The production growth spurred in large part by shale development “is pretty phenomenal,” said Phil Budzik, an analyst with the Energy Information Administration, the U.S. Department of Energy agency that acts as statistician to the energy industry.
“Much of that production increase is coming from shale production, so like I say, they’re a victim of their own success,” he said of exploration companies. “The shale beds have turned out to be highly prolific in terms of not only the amount of gas in place, but also the amount of gas that can be produced per well.”
What began in the Barnett Shale has now gone nationwide; the Marcellus, Fayetteville, Woodford and Haynesville shales are just some of the more than 20 areas being explored and developed across North America.
“Just a few months ago, I believe it was in July, prices were up to $13 per million [British thermal units], so it’s not like [natural gas producers] were crazy to do it,” Budzik said. “When prices are high, you try to produce as much as possible.”
But efforts to capitalize on high gas prices outpaced consumption, and furthermore natural gas prices have plummeted by more than 50 percent in the past few months as oil fell, too.
“In any case you can see you’ve got over an 8 percent production growth and a 3 percent growth in consumption, and that’s why prices go down,” Budzik said. “Production grew much faster than consumption – supply and demand, economics 101.”
Heater vs. sweater
Deutsche Bank’s Adam Sieminski, chief energy economist, said he remains bullish on natural gas, but added operators pulling back will help alleviate any fears of a surplus.
“The shale plays have very high depletion rates so we should begin to see some impact on the production numbers over the course of the next six months,” Sieminski said.
A colder winter than usual also could increase consumption as residents heat their homes, but that situation has its flaws, too.
“What appears to be a surplus of natural gas now is relatively temporary, and conditions in the marketplace are likely to be a lot tighter in the future,” Sieminski said. “The only thing that worries me at all is the likelihood that the U.S. is going to have a recession and lower GDP growth is going to mean lower natural gas consumption.”
The R-word also concerns Budzik, who said if one is in store “people will cut back.”
“In the winter, they’ll wear a sweater instead of heat their house,” he said.
So what’s the solution?
“In terms of what companies need to do is mange expenses, hunker down but prepare for better times,” Sieminski said.
Pursell puts it more bluntly.
“Quit drilling,” said Pursell, adding there are about 1,500 drilling rigs in the Lower 48. “Seriously, quit drilling. That’s what they need to do.”
Loud and clear
Some companies already got the
message.
In late September, Chesapeake Energy Corp. said it would cut its drilling budget by $3.2 billion, or 17 percent, over the next two years amid “concerns about the possibility of an emerging U.S. natural gas surplus,” according to a statement.
The Oklahoma City-based company, along with XTO Energy Inc. and Vantage Energy LLC, also has stepped back from high-dollar leases – between $25,000 and $30,000 an acre – it signed with North Texas residents and neighborhood groups.
“What [exploration companies] are faced with now is a glut of leases,” Budzik said. “The lease cost is an upfront cost, and everybody – including ourselves – looks at these rates of returns from net cash flows, after-tax cash flows. It’s the upfront costs that kill you.”
Despite current problems facing the industry, Pursell shares Sieminski’s view that the future could prove brighter than the present
“I think over the next five years, I absolutely expect the U.S. economy to expand,” he said. “If the U.S. economy expands, natural gas will grow the electric power sector.”