- 2007: when Parshall oil field "discovered"; following the Elm Coulee field in Montana some years earlier
- 2008: one year of experience in the Bakken; and a huge drop in the market at the end of the year
- 2009: when the market dropped again in early 2009
Regardless, I think we are being offered a fourth opportunity.
- It looks like oil is going to trend higher, and when it pulls back, it will stay appreciably higher than in the past
- Outside analysts are finally recognizing the Bakken
But this $100 oil not a minor issue. EOG said a couple years ago that "we" are "robust" in the Bakken when oil hits $60. I can only imagine the words the EOG executives use to describe the Bakken when the price of oil hits $100. We've been at $100 oil for quite some time now, and we haven't gotten to summer driving season yet.
But what really has excited me is the outside interest in the Bakken "all of a sudden." It's been my impression that the "believers" in the Bakken tend to be those closely associated with the Bakken. Either they work there, live there, or grew up there, ("there" being the Williston Oil Basin) and have been following the story closely. But there have been relatively few -- in the big scheme of things -- investment stories in the mainstream media featuring the Bakken.
Now all of a sudden Jim Cramer (CNBC's "Mad Money") has had not less than three segments on the Bakken including interviews with the governor of the state and the CEO of Whiting. [Has Harold Hamm been on Cramer's show? If not, that's about the only place I have not see Mr Hamm recently.]
Now the highly respective oil consultant Ryder Scott has a huge story / analysis of the Bakken. To go direct to the PDF, click here. The opening paragraphs:
The world is watching the Bakken oil shale play. Net importers of oil—including China, France and Poland—are studying the Bakken as a model for their own countries, which contain geologically similar deposits, they say.Eight pages of information. And this note:
Companies from countries as far away as Australia have Bakken interests.
The unconventional play has become a proving ground for advanced drilling-and-completions (D&C) technology, including multistage hydraulic fracturing. The Bakken is to the future of UC oil production as the 20-year-old Barnett shale play has proved to be for UC gas, industry observers say.
Bakken operators are downspacing to 320 acres by drilling four wells on 1,280 acres. Increased well densities are boosting PUD locations while dragging down EURs per well.The degree to which EURs are being "dragged down" is still being discussed.
But I digress. Articles like these and television segments like Jim Cramer can only have a beneficial effect for Bakken investors.