Arthur Berman, a former Amoco scientist who now works as an industry consultant near Houston, said the Permian region of Texas and New Mexico that currently pumps more oil than any other North American field won’t last for long. And the Eagle Ford shale about 350 miles (560 kilometers) away in South Texas isn’t looking good either.
Berman’s grim outlook, based on analyses of reserves and production data from more than a dozen prominent shale drillers, flies in the face predictions from the U.S. Energy Department, Chevron Corp. and others that the Permian is becoming one of the dominant forces in global crude markets.
Permian output already exceeds that of three-fourths of OPEC members.
“The best years are behind us,” Berman told a gathering of engineers, geologists, lawyers and financiers at the Texas Energy Council’s annual gathering in Dallas on Thursday. “The growth is done.”
Berman came to prominence as a shale skeptic and peak-oil advocate during the first decade of the new century, when intensive fracking and sideways drilling techniques were just beginning to unlock vast reserves of gas from shale fields in Texas and Louisiana. At the time, his dire warnings that shale gas was mostly hype drew the ire of fracking pioneers including Devon Energy Corp. and Chesapeake Energy Corp.
In 2009, Devon’s exploration chief Dave Hager -- who has since risen to CEO -- published an op-ed piece in an Oklahoma City newspaper to refute Berman’s thesis. In it, Hager likened shale to a World Series-winning home run and said Berman “is in the stands speculating on whether the slugger is on steroids.”
Berman on Thursday said investors banking on shale fields to make major contributions to future global crude supplies will be disappointed: “The reserves are respectable but they ain’t great and ain’t going to save the world.”
Still, he hasn’t sold the stock of shale driller EOG Resources Inc. that he inherited from his deceased father “because they’re a pretty good company.”
His parting advice to the assembled was, “Conserve what you’ve got, learn to live with less, open your eyes and enjoy the rest of your day.” No one participated in the Q and A session.
To contact the reporter on this story: Joe Carroll in Houston at jcarroll8@bloomberg.net. To contact the editors responsible for this story: Reg Gale at rgale5@bloomberg.net Joe Carroll, Christine Buurma.
Tags: Art, Berman, contrarian, shale
No, actually I don't. :-)
He sold peak oil for so long that he doesn't know how to do anything else. I guess we should pity him. Too bad. I don't.
Skip:
Just for you - a blast from the past.
"Haynesville Shale Sizzle Turns to Fizzle" - Art Berman, March 6, 2009.
The much beloved Mr. Berman calls doubt as to the long term success and recoverable reserves, as early estimates show EURs of Haynesville wells averaged 1.5 Bcf.
EIA estimates of produced gas out of the Haynesville since March 2009 - approx. 15 TCF, in a predominantly low price environment since 3Q '08.
Reminding me of anything Art is like reminding me that I once had a boil on my butt. Thanks for the reminder, Dion. :-)
Thank you, Hayes. I was aiming for a little levity. Dion has a rather dry and wicked sense of humor. You gotta watch out for him.
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