US - update through July 2020
These interactive presentations contain the latest oil & gas production data from 138,315 horizontal wells in 13 US states, through July. Cumulative oil and gas production from these wells reached 15.4 billion bbl and 174 Tcf of natural gas. Ohio and West Virginia are excluded from most overviews, as they have not yet reported July production data.
Visit ShaleProfile blog to explore the full interactive dashboard
Total production
US tight oil production regained again some lost ground in July, increasing by about 0.4 million to 6.8 million bo/d (after upcoming revisions). Tight gas output also climbed, but with a relatively smaller amount (switch product to gas). It of course also fell less steep earlier this year.
Supply Projection dashboard
We expect to see another increase in August, but further gains are unlikely after that. Although the 242 rigs drilling horizontal wells as of last week (according to the Baker Hughes rig count) is 9% higher than a month ago, it is not yet sufficient to keep production from falling by itself:
Tight oil outlook at current drilling activity and well/rig productivity
The screenshot above was taken from our Supply Projection dashboard; assuming no further changes in rig count and productivity, we project that tight oil supply would fall to below 4 million bo/d by the end of the decade.
In a scenario where the rig count would keep increasing by 5% each month until the end of next year (reaching 505) and stay there, the outlook would be rather different, but still not reaching the former peak:
Scenario with 5% m-o-m increase in rig count until end of next year.
This is of course simply a hypothetical case. In our ShaleProfile Analytics service (Ultimate), you can easily run your own scenarios and save them.
Top operators
The 15 largest operators are listed in the last overview (“Top operators”). Selecting an operator in the legend will highlight its production curve and well locations. There is a lot of consolidation happening in the industry and almost half of these companies are in M&A situations (Pioneer, Concho, Devon, ConocoPhillips, WPX, Chevron and Noble Energy). Who else will follow?
Advanced Insights
This “Ultimate recovery” overview shows the relationship between production rates and cumulative production over time. The oil basins are preselected and the wells are grouped by the year in which production started.
You will see more recent data (and some steep declines at the tails) if you group these wells by quarter of first production instead.
Finally
We have started to expand outside US Shale. Professional & Ultimate subscribers are now able to see offshore oil & gas production data in the US Gulf of Mexico and in Brazil. These two areas are good for almost 5 million barrels of oil per day. Other areas will be included in the coming weeks/months.
In two weeks we will be back with a new post on North Dakota, which will release September production data in the coming days.
Production data is subject to revisions.
Sources
For these presentations, we used data gathered from the sources listed below.
- FracFocus.org
- Arkansas Oil & Gas Commission
- Colorado Oil & Gas Conservation Commission
- Louisiana Department of Natural Resources. Similar to Texas, lease/unit production is allocated over wells in order to estimate their individual production histories.
- Montana Board of Oil and Gas
- New Mexico Oil Conservation Commission
- North Dakota Department of Natural Resources
- Ohio Department of Natural Resources
- Oklahoma Corporation Commission – Oil & Gas Division
- Oklahoma Tax Commission
- Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection
- Texas Railroad Commission. Individual well production is estimated through the allocation of lease production data over the wells in a lease, and from pending lease production data.
- Utah Division of Oil, Gas, and Mining
- Automated Geographic Reference Center of Utah.
- West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection
- West Virginia Geological & Economic Survey
- Wyoming Oil & Gas Conservation Commission
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