
Tiens au fait, on pourrait faire un RIC pour savoir ce qu'ils en pensent

Modérateurs : Rod, Modérateurs
Lorsque le propriétaire du terrain est aussi propriétaire de ce qui se trouve dessous, c'est complètement différent en France contrairement aux US le propriétaire du terrain n'est pas propriétaire du sous -sol
https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-Gene ... -2022.htmlChevron Looks To Double Permian Production By 2022
By Tsvetana Paraskova - Jan 30, 2019,
Unlike many oil and gas firms who had given up some of their acreage in the Permian before the shale revolution, supermajor Chevron and its legacy companies have been sticking with the huge acreage position in the basin since the early 1920s.
A century later, Chevron—unlike many other companies—doesn’t need to spend crazy per-acreage money to get access to what is currently the most prolific U.S. oil field thanks to the shale drilling technology.
Chevron plans to double its production in the Permian by 2022 and is investing in growing production at high-return short-cycle projects.
It’s not by chance that the U.S. supermajor has held onto its Permian position—it was a deliberate decision, Chevron’s vice president of global exploration, Liz Schwarze, said at a Permian-focused conference in Texas last week.
“We always knew that there was more to give from the Permian, but we didn’t quite know how,” Schwarze told the conference, as carried by E&P.
Now Chevron is trying new completion techniques to get more out of the wells and optimize operations to get more returns on investment, according to the Chevron manager.
In the upstream business, the company is investing this year US$10.4 billion to sustain and grow currently producing assets, including US$3.6 billion in the Permian and US$1.6 billion in other shale and tight projects, Chevron said in its 2019 budget plans announcement in December.
“Our investments are anchored in high-return short-cycle projects, with more than two-thirds of spend projected to realize cash flow within two years,” chairman and CEO Michael K. Wirth said.
In the third quarter of 2018, Chevron reported its highest quarterly production ever as net oil-equivalent production of 2.96 million bpd rose 9 percent annually, thanks to the ramp-up of Wheatstone in Australia and a surge in production in the Permian.
“Permian shale and tight production in the third quarter was 338,000 barrels per day, representing an increase of 150,000 barrels per day. Let me say it again: this is up 80% relative to the same quarter last year. As many of you will realize, that’s the equivalent of adding a midsized Permian pure play E&P company in a matter of months,” Chevron’s Vice President and CFO Pat Yarrington said on the Q3 earnings call in early November.
Referring to concerns about limits in the takeaway capacity out of the Permian, Yarrington said that Chevron “feel very nicely covered for our position out of Midland on those elements for the next couple of years.”
Going forward, Chevron plans to boost its Permian unconventional production to 650,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day (boed) by the end of 2022, according to its 2019 Investor Presentation this month.
The supermajor will be relying on lower costs, higher realizations, and an increase in net acres to grow production and value in the Permian. Currently, Chevron has 2.2 million net mineral acres in the basin, of which more than 80 percent has no royalty or is low-royalty acreage. The company also boasted an approximately 40-percent decrease in development and production costs per barrel of oil equivalent between 2015 and 2017.
Chevron is set to update the market on its Permian production and possibly how much the lower oil prices late last year impacted Q4 earnings in its Q4 results release on Friday, February 1.
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https://www.epmag.com/chesapeake-energy ... se-1730341Chesapeake Energy Closes Nearly $4 Billion Acquisition Of Eagle Ford Producer Wildhorse.
February 1, 2019 - 8
Chesapeake Energy Corp. said Feb. 1 that it has completed its acquisition of WildHorse Resource Development Corp., creating an Eagle Ford oil producing powerhouse for Oklahoma City-based Chesapeake.
The acquisition, previously announced in late October, is worth nearly $4 billion in cash and stock and also includes the assumption of WildHorse's $930 million net debt.
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Pro forma, Chesapeake’s position in the Eagle Ford will grow to roughly 655,000 net acres with about 150,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day of production, about 60% oil. The company also expects the combination to help it save between $200 million and $280 million in annual costs.
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Article intéressant, merci.Paulad a écrit : ↑10 févr. 2019, 23:33
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Pour compléter :
https://www.desmogblog.com/2019/01/10/f ... et-journal
Voici un article qui va dans le sens des sweets spots déjà "trop" utilisés et des projections "extrêmement optimiste" des acteurs du milieu.
Très bon article en effet. On peut facilement comparer avec les données de ce site:energy_isere a écrit : ↑11 févr. 2019, 08:54Article intéressant, merci.Paulad a écrit : ↑10 févr. 2019, 23:33
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Pour compléter :
https://www.desmogblog.com/2019/01/10/f ... et-journal
Voici un article qui va dans le sens des sweets spots déjà "trop" utilisés et des projections "extrêmement optimiste" des acteurs du milieu.
Et au sujet de Pioneer Natural Resources cité (un gros acteur du Permien) , je vois que leur action chute depuis bien 10 mois.
https://www.google.com/search?q=pioneer ... e&ie=UTF-8
Dans le graphe "ultimate recovery", on peut sélectionner l'opérateur (Pioneer).