North Dakota Director's Cut - 05/25/2012

The Director's Cut is an update on current activity in the North Dakota oil patch from the Director of the Department of Mineral Resources.
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5/25/2012 Director’s Cut Lynn Helms NDIC Department of Mineral Resources Feb Oil 16,198,174 barrels = 558,558 barrels/day Mar Oil 17,840,177 barrels = 575,490 barrels/day (preliminary) (NEW all-time high) Feb Gas 17,454,211 MCF = 601,869 MCF/day Mar Gas 19,246,290 MCF = 620,848 MCF/day (preliminary) (NEW all-time high) Feb Producing Wells = 6,726 Mar Producing Wells = 6,921 (NEW all-time high) Feb Permitting: 168 drilling and 5 seismic Mar Permitting: 181 drilling and 1 seismic (all time high was 245 in Nov 2010) Feb Sweet Crude Price = $83.26/barrel Mar Sweet Crude Price = $76.29/barrel Today Sweet Crude Price = $75.00/barrel ND (all-time high was $136.29 July 3, 2008) Feb rig count 202 Mar rig count 205 Apr rig count 209 Today’s rig count is 214 (New all-time high) Comments: The Williston Basin Petroleum Conference ended today with over 4,000 registered guests, speakers, and sponsors. In addition we had just under 200 grade school kids and chaperones tour the outdoor exhibits. The 6½ minute horizontal drilling/hydraulic fracturing video used in our Bakken Basics presentations is available to download for free from this web site (you will need Real Player to view it). http://www.voyageroil.com/drilling Draft BLM regulations for hydraulic fracturing on federal lands were published in the Federal Register. There is a 60 day comment period with comments due by 5pm EDT on July 10, 2012. All of our readers are urged to submit comments to the BLM as follows: http://www.regulations.gov/#!submitComment;D=BLM-2012-0001-0001 Page 1 of 3 5/25/2012 Mail: U.S. Department of the Interior, Director (630), Bureau of Land Management, Mail Stop 2134 LM, 1849 C St. NW., Washington, DC 20240, Attention: 1004-AE26. Fax: Office of Management and Budget (OMB), Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, Desk Officer for the Department of the Interior, fax 202-395- 5806. There are a significant number of concerns with the rule as proposed, but the major points that should be commented on are as follows: 1) This is a state’s rights issue. States that have adopted hydraulic fracturing rules that include chemical disclosure, well construction, and well bore pressure testing should be exempted from the rule. 2) The EPA study of potential hydraulic fracturing effects on ground water is not finished and there are currently no known environmental contamination incidents. 3) As Chairman Hall has testified, the required consultation with the Three Affiliated Tribes has not occurred. Draft EPA Guidance for permitting hydraulic fracturing using diesel fuel has been published. There is a 60 day comment period with comments due by 5pm EDT on July 9, 2012. I urge all of our readers to submit comments to the EPA as follows: Submit your comments, identified by Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OW-2011-1013 by one of the following methods: www.regulations.gov: Follow the on-line instructions for submitting comments. Email: [email protected] Mail: Permitting Guidance for Oil and Gas Hydraulic Fracturing Activities Using Diesel Fuels—Draft, Environmental Protection Agency, Mailcode: 4606M, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW., Washington, DC 20460. There are a significant number of concerns with the guidance as proposed, but the major points that should be commented on are as follows: 1) This is a state’s rights issue. States that have adopted hydraulic fracturing rules that include chemical disclosure, well construction, and well bore pressure testing should be explicitly exempted from the guidance. 2) The definition of diesel fuel is too broad because it includes six CASRNs as well as any materials referred to by one of these primary names or any associated common synonyms. 3) EPA made no attempt to identify dangerous concentrations of these materials. Hydraulic fracturing treatments that utilize concentrations of less than 1% of any material defined as diesel fuel should be exempt from permitting requirements. 4) The guidance is written for Enhanced Oil Recovery wells or disposal wells completed with tubing and packer. It shows a serious lack of understanding of the horizontal drilling-hydraulic fracturing process. Most of the requirements will not work mechanically on wells completed with swell packers and fractured down the production casing. Mild weather continued into March resulting in increased hydraulic fracturing activity and increased production. Rig count continues a slow rise and daily production increased 3% Page 2 of 3 5/25/2012 from February to March. This trend may not continue into April and May as spring weather brings load restrictions and slows well site construction. Over 95% of drilling still targets the Bakken and Three Forks formations. The idle well count fell a normal amount for the season leaving an estimated 248 wells now waiting on fracturing services. Crude oil take away capacity via pipeline is below production, but rail and truck transportation are adequate to keep up with near term production projections. The North Dakota Sweet posted price to NYMEX-WTI discount has dropped to -17% and NYMEXWTI to Brent discount has fallen to -15%. This is still forcing an increasing amount of North Dakota crude oil onto rail transportation so it can reach destinations that pay Brent price. Gasoline prices respond more slowly to crude oil price changes and price differential changes during summer due to the number of area specific summer blends required by EPA reduces the ability to move gasoline between markets. Rig counts in the Williston basin continue to increase slowly. Utilization of rigs capable of +20,000 feet remains over 95%. Many of the new rigs being built are scheduled to replace older less efficient ones. For shallow well rigs that drill to 7,000 feet or less utilization remains about 50%. Drilling permit activity is high, but well below record levels. The number of wells drilling on federal surface in the Dakota Prairie Grasslands remains at 1. The number of wells drilling on the Fort Berthold Reservation is 29 with 4 on fee lands and 25 on trust lands. Seismic is very busy with 3 surveys active, 2 remediating, 2 suspended, and 8 permitted. North Dakota leasing activity is mostly renewals and top leases in the Bakken - Three Forks area. Daily natural gas production is up while construction of processing plants and gathering systems accelerates with warmer weather. US natural gas storage has dropped to 38% above the five-year average but still means continued low prices for the foreseeable future. North Dakota shallow gas exploration is not economic at the current price. Natural gas delivered to Northern Border at Watford City is up to $2.29/MCF. This results in a current oil to gas price ratio of 33 to 1. The high liquids content makes gathering and processing of Bakken gas economic. Additions to the processing capacity are starting to show results as the percentage of gas being flared was up slightly to 32% with the a high of 36% in September 2011. The downward trend should continue in the coming months. Page 3 of 3