Reuters/Rigzone is reporting that Whiting says it an still grow at low crude oil prices.
Whiting
Petroleum Corp, North Dakota's largest oil producer, can remain
profitable and increase production even at current crude prices, Chief
Executive Jim Volker said on Wednesday.
The
bullish comments come after weeks of uncertainty about the company's
future following rumors it was about to be sold and that Volker would
retire.
Those rumors,
which left many on Wall Street concerned about the potential for a fire
sale, were ultimately put to rest in a filing with the U.S. Securities
and Exchange Commission last week that denied any transaction.
Volker
declined to comment on the rumors on Wednesday, instead using a speech
at the DUG Conference in Denver to tout Whiting's growth potential.
"In
periods of low oil prices like we have today, we can still make money,"
Volker said, adding he is "rigging the company" to run with oil prices
at $45 to $55 per barrel. Whiting is spending only $2 billion this year,
about half 2014 levels.
Still, Volker said he is confident better technology and processes can help production rise in 2015.
"We
continue to drive that well cost even lower," he said. Whiting became
the largest North Dakota producer with its buyout of rival Kodiak Oil
& Gas last December, helping it eclipse Continental Resources
Inc for the top spot in the Bakken.
The deal gave Whiting more than 7,500 well sites to develop across North Dakota. For 2015, Whiting plans to use 13 drilling rigs, a number that could drop or rise depending on where prices go, Volker said.
The
company, though, does not plan to close, or "shut in," existing wells
as their economics, even at current oil prices, still fuel margins of at
least $25 per barrel, Volker said.
Reuters/Rigzone is reporting Germany sets very high standards for fracking.
German
Chancellor Angela Merkel's cabinet signed off on a draft law on
Wednesday that imposes an effective ban on the controversial technique
of fracking for shale gas.
Opposition is strong in
densely populated Germany due to concerns about the risk of
contaminating drinking water.
Anyone who thought the Germans would do something else hasn't been paying attention. The Germans like coal.
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