Eagle Ford Shale Still in Recovery After Hurricane

Hurricane impacts Eagle Ford

The oil and gas industry throughout Texas and the Eagle Ford is still recovering from the devastation of the record-breaking Hurricane Harvey. 

The Eagle Ford Shale: Hammered by Harvey

Two weeks after the storm slammed into the Lone Star State, much of the petrochemical and refining capacity is up and running. But activity in the Eagle Ford is still not 100%. 

The destruction has left some significant gaps in the Eagle Ford Shale supply chain, causing delays and frustrations for some operators. Even as many companies are resuming operations, they are faced with hard-to-travel roads and a reduced workforce. 

Texas’ energy infrastructure is recovering quickly from the devastating impacts of Hurricane Harvey. The industry and state and federal governments have worked expeditiously to ensure that citizens’ energy needs are met, primarily at the gas pump. Several Texas refineries have restarted although a few remain closed as assessments are completed. Pipeline infrastructure including the Magellan, Explorer and Colonial pipelines are all operational again.
— Texas Railroad Commissioner Ryan Sitton

During the storm, shut-in wells caused production to trickle, with some estimating that the storm affected 25 percent of the nation's crude oil refining capacity. Eagle Ford and other Texas operators cut production by 800,000-900,000 barrels per day during the week of the storm. The disruption even caused Baker Hughes to suspend its weekly rig count last week saying there was too little data coming in. 

Eagle Ford Increases Rig Count by One

Harvey's Effect on Gasoline Prices

Consumers felt an immediate impact at the gas pump, as prices spiked in the days following Hurricane Harvey's landfall. The Automobile Association of America said the average cost across Texas is up more than 50 cents a gallon to $2.53. The Energy Department announced this week that six refineries in the Gulf Coast region are still shut down. Five refineries have begun to come back online and another six are operating with reduced rates of gasoline production.

Effects on Eagle Ford Producers

In preparation for the storm, many operators in the Eagle Ford and across Texas were forced to slow or stop production. Some had wells in the path of the storm, while others were impacted when the stress on the infrastructure wouldn't allow them to get their product to market. 

Here is the latest update on the impact to Eagle Ford Operators:

  • ConocoPhillips announced this week that their Eagle Ford production was running at over 90 percent of our pre-storm production rate of 130 thousand barrels of oil equivalent per day. They expect to return to pre-storm levels in the next week or two. As of Thursday, Sept. 7
  • Carrizo Oil and Gas sustained no damage to its Eagle Ford assets. In preparation for the storm, the Company suspended its drilling and completions operations in the play, but crews were able to return to the field last week.
  • EOG saw third-quarter volumes cut by about 15,000 bpd
  • Pioneer Natural Resources stopped completing oil wells in the Eagle Ford Shale before the storm and saw a loss in output of 1,000 bpd to 2,000 bpd
  • Apache Corporation experienced some minor direct impacts from the storm in its Gulf of Mexico and Lower 48 regions, including production shut-ins between 1,000 and 2,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day. Apache's operations in the Eagle Ford play in Burleson and Brazos counties experienced a brief, yet negligible, interruption.
  • Silverbow Resources said their operations were largely unaffected by the storm, the company is experiencing delays due to equipment and crew availability
  • BHP Billiton Ltd. shut down drilling and completion activities at its Eagle Ford shale operations
  • Chesapeake Energy Corp suspended drilling and completion of new wells in the Eagle Ford
  • XTO Energy unit shut in some oil wells in the Eagle Ford 
  • Marathon Oil Corp. released non-essential personnel and suspended operations where appropriate
  • Noble Energy Inc. halted well completions 
  • Statoil ASA evacuated staff
  • Baytex Energy Corp. suspended drilling and completion operations and evacuated its Houston office
  • Sundance Energy Australia shut in about 75% of its Eagle Ford production; and
  • Lonestar Resources evacuated Eagle Ford Shale personnel before the storm hit. The “vast majority of its wells” in Dimmit and LaSalle counties, Texas, continued to produce or have resumed operations.

 

Eagle Ford Increases Rig Count by One

Eagle Ford Shale Rig Count

The Eagle Ford Shale rig count gained ground this week, increasing to 89 rigs running across our coverage area by midday Friday. 

Baker Hughes suspended its weekly rig count data last week for Texas because Hurricane Harvey made it difficult to get accurate information.

The Eagle Ford Shale: Hammered by Harvey

A total of 944 oil and gas rigs were running across the United States this week, four more over last two weeks. 187 rigs targeted natural gas ( an increase of seven) and 756 were targeting oil in the U.S. (decreased by three). The remainder were drilling service wells (e.g. disposal wells, injection wells, etc.) 455 of the rigs active in the U.S. were running in Texas.

Baker Hughes reports its own Eagle Ford Rig Count that covers the 14 core counties. The rig count published on EagleFordShale.com includes a 30 county area impacted by Eagle Ford development. A full list of the counties included can be found in the table below.

Eagle Ford Oil & Gas Rigs

10 rigs in the Eagle Ford region targeted natural gas this week with the commodity trading at $2.89/mmbtu.

79 Eagle Ford rigs were targeting oil with WTI oil prices at $47.48.

A total of 84 rigs are drilling horizontal wells, zero are drilling directional wells and five are vertical.

Karnes County leads activity in the region with 17 rigs in production. See the full list below in the Eagle Ford Shale Drilling by County below.

Eagle Ford Shale Drilling by County

Eagle Ford Shale Rig Count by County-September 8, 2017

Eagle Ford Shale Rig Count by County-September 8, 2017

 

Eagle Ford Shale News

The Eagle Ford Shale: Hammered by Harvey

Sanchez Reduces Spending and Drilling for 2018

Lonestar's New Eagle Ford Assets Play Significant Role in Growth

RRC Doubles Original Drilling Permits for June 2017

 

What is the Rig Count?

The Eagle Ford Shale Rig Count is an index of the total number of oil & gas drilling rigs running across a 30 county area in South Texas. The South Texas rigs referred to in this article are for ALL drilling reported by Baker Hughes and not solely wells targeting the Eagle Ford formation. All land rigs and onshore rig data shown here are based upon industry estimates provided by the Baker Hughes Rig Count.

The Eagle Ford Shale: Hammered by Harvey

Eagle Ford Shale Hurricane

The Eagle Ford Shale region of south Texas has been hammered hard by Tropical Storm Harvey and the impact may not be fully known for weeks.

Eagle Ford Shale Rig Count Sits at 88

Harvey, now a tropical storm, is being touted as the most powerful storm ever to hit Texas. The torrential rainfall and power outages have affected tens of thousands of square miles across Texas, including a significant portion of the state's shale oil and gas production in the Eagle Ford Shale.

The Eagle Ford was in the direct path of the storm as it headed inland last week. Many shale producers operating in the Eagle Ford shut down operations ahead of the storm including ConocoPhillips, EOG Resources, XTO Energy, Chesapeake Energy Corp., BHP Billiton, Murphy Oil and Statoil. 

Analysts suggest that the storm may have cut off as much as 15% of U.S. oil supplies and halted up to $800 million a day in energy industry revenue. Lost production is being estimated at between 400,000 and 500,000 barrels a day.

The full impact of Harvey on Texas shale production may not be known for a number of weeks. Even as producers bring wells back online, the energy infrastructure that is the backbone of the industry relies on assets such as ports, refineries and pipelines that sit in some of the hardest hit areas.

Hurricane Harvey will effect US offshore production, which is known per history, yet also will effect US shale production, primarily Eagle ford, and crude transportation (imports and exports) which is newer vs. history and lies in path of the stalled storm. Approximately 10% or 150 Mbpd of US offshore production is currently shut-in (39 platforms) and activity has likely slowed to stopped in the Eagle Ford shale, which represents ~1.4 MMbpd of production. The effect to shale could linger given the extent and catastrophic level of forecasted flooding which interferes with shale logistics and activity.
— Benny Wong - Analyst, Morgan Stanley

Looking Forward 

By midday Tuesday, a number of producers indicated they are looking to resume operations. ConocoPhillips has brought some wells back online and EOG Resources Inc. plans to resume drilling in the Eagle Ford when it is safe. 

Producers are feeling the effects of Harvey as shares dipped for many this week, according to CNBC on Monday.

  • EP Energy: - 7%
  • Carrizo Oil and Gas: - 6.5% 
  • Wildhorse Resources: - 4%
  • Sanchez Energy: - 4%

Refinery shutdowns will affect oil prices, though it's still too early to assess the full impact. Prices fell on Monday more than 2.5% Monday to $46.57 a barrel.

Eagle Ford Shale Rig Count Sits at 88

Eagle Ford Shale Rig Count

The Eagle Ford Shale rig count dropped this week to its lowest number since April, with 88 rigs running across our coverage area by midday Friday. 

In recent Eagle Ford Shale news, Sanchez Energy achieved record production from its Comanche area in Dimmit, LaSalle and Webb Counties.

Sanchez Reduces Spending and Drilling for 2018

A total of 940 oil and gas rigs were running across the United States this week, six less than last week. 180 rigs targeted natural gas (two less than the previous week) and 759 were targeting oil in the U.S. (four less than the previous week). The remainder were drilling service wells (e.g. disposal wells, injection wells, etc.) 456 of the rigs active in the U.S. were running in Texas.

Baker Hughes reports its own Eagle Ford Rig Count that covers the 14 core counties. The rig count published on EagleFordShale.com includes a 30 county area impacted by Eagle Ford development. A full list of the counties included can be found in the table below.

Eagle Ford Oil & Gas Rigs

Nine rigs in the Eagle Ford region targeted natural gas this week with the commodity trading at $2.89/mmbtu.

79 Eagle Ford rigs were targeting oil with WTI oil prices at $47.87.

A total of 86 rigs are drilling horizontal wells, zero are drilling directional wells and two are vertical.

Karnes County leads activity in the region with 19 rigs in production. See the full list below in the Eagle Ford Shale Drilling by County below.

Eagle Ford Shale Drilling by County

Eagle Ford Shale Rig Count by County-August 25, 2017

Eagle Ford Shale Rig Count by County-August 25, 2017

 

Eagle Ford Shale News

Sanchez Reduces Spending and Drilling for 2018

Lonestar's New Eagle Ford Assets Play Significant Role in Growth

RRC Doubles Original Drilling Permits for June 2017

 

What is the Rig Count?

The Eagle Ford Shale Rig Count is an index of the total number of oil & gas drilling rigs running across a 30 county area in South Texas. The South Texas rigs referred to in this article are for ALL drilling reported by Baker Hughes and not solely wells targeting the Eagle Ford formation. All land rigs and onshore rig data shown here are based upon industry estimates provided by the Baker Hughes Rig Count.

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Sanchez Reduces Spending and Drilling for 2018

Sanchez Energy Q2

Sanchez Energy is making plans for 2018 that include redicing drilling activity and cutting spending by $75 million to $100 million.

Sanchez Gains Eagle Ford Assets for $2.1 Billion

Sanchez reported its second quarter results last week that included increased revenues and a net income of $46.3 million, up from $9.7 million during the first quarter of 2017.

The Company achieved record production from its Comanche area in Dimmit, LaSalle and Webb Counties. The acquisition of the Comanche assets in March was instrumental in these record production levels.

In July 2017 we announced our intention to reduce our 2018 capital spending by approximately $75 million to $100 million, compared to our original $500 million guidance. This reduction in capital spending, together with our strong liquidity position and bank of 30 wells against our 2017-18 Catarina drilling commitment, provides us with a considerable amount of financial and operating flexibility as we look to execute our plans over the next 12 to 18 months, and drive shareholder value.
— Tony Sanchez, III, Chief Executive Officer

Q2 Highlights

Sanchez is currently running seven gross rigs in the Eagle Ford; five in Comanche and two in Catarina. Other second quarter highligts include:

  • Company revenues jumped 58% over last year at this time to approximately $175.7 million
  • Production totaled approximately 73,341 barrels of oil equivalent per day ("Boe/d"), an increase of approximately 43% over first quarter 2017 production
  • Company spud 48 gross wells and completed and turned on-line 63 gross wells
  • $3.9 million per well
  • Catarina experienced a reduction of approximately 4000 barrels of oil equivalent per day in 2017. Earlier this year, we made the move to shift Catarina completions to our Gen 3 design, using approximately 3000 pounds per foot of profit. The 25 wells have positive early indications with respect to pressures in rates, but saw a higher water production and the subsequent decline was dramatically steeper than anything we've seen previously.