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OIL BULL MARKET
UNCOVERS
TWO NEW OPPORTUNITIES
by Elliott H.
Gue
Editor, The Energy
Letter
March 14, 2008
There are few countries or
regions of the world that are seeing real growth in oil production. The
simple fact is that the large onshore fields that have met the world’s
oil demand for decades are now mature and already seeing declining
production.
To offset declines from
these easy-to-produce oil and gas fields, producers will increasingly
target smaller, more-complex fields, as well as fields that are harder
and more expensive to reach.
In other words, the
world isn’t necessarily running out of oil, but we’re already seeing
the end of easy oil. In addition, the era of cheap oil is over. To make
the production of hard oil economically viable, prices will need to
remain elevated.
But with oil production
growth declining from many traditional producing regions, companies with
the capacity to actually grow production are in the catbird’s seat.
Two areas of real production growth are deepwater and unconventional
reservoirs. A perfect example of the former is Brazil’s deepwater Tupi
oilfield.
Tupi is located
offshore of Rio de Janeiro; the field is roughly 800 kilometers long and
200 kilometers wide. That country’s national oil company (NOC), Petrobras,
believes that the field contains as much as 7 billion to 8 billion
barrels of oil.
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One of Petrobras’
major partners in the Tupi project has been even more optimistic,
projecting Tupi’s total reserves at as high as 30 billion barrels of
oil. But, in either case, Tupi is certainly the largest oilfield
discovered anywhere in the world since the early 1990s.
The field could
ultimately yield 1 million to 1.5 million barrels per day of oil
production, a significant amount when you consider that Brazil currently
produces just more than 2 million barrels of oil per day. Check out the
chart below.

Source: Petrobras
This chart shows
expected liquids production--mainly oil--for Petrobras out to 2012.
Petrobras made these estimates last year before factoring in Tupi; the
company could see growth beyond these levels once Tupi is included.
However, it’s clear that even without Tupi, Brazil’s oil production
was set to see strong growth in the coming years. Most of that growth is
coming courtesy of deepwater developments; Brazil’s onshore production
is relatively limited.
Companies levered to
promising developments like Tupi are among my favorite plays in the
energy patch. Of course, although Tupi is a major find and the
investment implications are significant, the field fits well with the
end-of-easy-oil thesis I outlined above.
Specifically, Tupi is
located in waters between roughly 6,500 and 10,000 feet in depth. That
means that only the most advanced ultra-deepwater drilling rigs are
capable of handling wells in this field. Petrobras has some rigs it
contracted years ago at day-rates that would be considered low today.
However, a company looking to contract an ultra-deepwater rig in a few
years’ time would likely pay north of $600,000 per day to lease that
rig.
On top of that, the
Tupi field is also geologically complex. The test wells that have been
dug in this field are more than 20,000 feet long and are directional
(non-vertical) wells. And producers had to drill through a mile-long
layer of salt to access the reservoir. Salt layers are notoriously
difficult to drill.
And the cost of leasing
a rig and drilling a well is just one problem. Petrobras is building a
series of floating offshore production platforms to process production
from Tupi and other deepwater oilfields; these platforms can cost more
than $1 billion and take considerable time to build.
Producing deepwater fields
also requires subsea equipment and a network of subsea pipelines to move
oil and gas produced from deepwater wells to floating platforms.
Engineering and construction firms that install this entire offshore
infrastructure are seeing multi-billion contract awards related to
deepwater fields.
As you can imagine, no
producer would bother going after a field like Tupi if there were giant,
cheap, easy-to-produce onshore oilfields that could still see growing
production.
Domestic Oil
As I noted earlier,
finding growing sources of oil production anywhere in the world is
difficult. Rarer still are reservoirs showing significant growth located
within the US and Canada.
One hot emerging play
is the Bakken Shale play centered over North Dakota and eastern Montana.
This play is really nothing new; it was extensively described by
geologists in the early ’50s. Producers have known that oil exists in
this area for many years. The problem was accessing that oil
efficiently.
The Bakken is an
unconventional oil reservoir, much like the unconventional gas plays I
described in the last issue of The Energy Letter. (See TEL,
Feb. 29, 2008, Natural
Gas: A Key Shift is Underway.) As I’ve explained before in this e-zine,
oil and gas don’t exist underground in massive caverns or lakes but
are trapped in the pores, cracks and crevices of rock. Oil flows through
this rock to wells powered by natural underground pressures. However, if
those pores and fractures aren’t well connected, the field lacks
permeability, and there’s no way for the oil to flow through the rock
to a well.
Producing such fields
requires the use of two key enabling technologies: horizontal drilling
and fracturing. Horizontal drilling allows producers to expose their
wells to more productive zones in a field. And fracturing involves
pumping a liquid or gel into the reservoir under tremendous pressure;
this actually creates artificial fractures and cracks through which oil
can flow.
In the Bakken,
producers were able to apply these newer technologies to produce a field
once thought unproductive. Check out the chart below.

Source: Energy
Information Administration
The chart shows that
Montana’s oil production looked to be tailing off sharply in the late
’90s. But when producers began targeting a particularly productive
field within the Bakken, production soared to new highs.
These are still
relatively small production numbers in the context of the US’ more
than 20 million barrels of daily oil production. But the numbers don’t
look small for the handful of producers that have built large acreage
positions in the Bakken and are drilling those plays. One of my
favorites in The
Energy Strategist has a 175,000-acre position in the region,
accumulated quietly over the past few years.
That company is looking
for oil production growth exceeding 30 percent per year for the next few
years. And, so far, these fields have been exceeding estimates.
And this is only the
beginning. A number of unconventional oil and gas plays in the US could
prove to be huge winners for companies that are well placed with acreage
positions.

© 2008 Elliott H. Gue
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