Note: the spreadsheet below was created very, very quickly. There are likely to be typographical errors. The data was taken from the NDIC statistics site. I do not know why daily production data and number of producing wells at the NDIC statistics site varies slightly from the daily activity reports.
I was curious about comparing the change in the number of producing wells (third column), the annual change in the overall number of producing wells, and the change in production.
I was curious to see if comments/projections at "Bakken Reality Check" produced back in 2015 held true. Compare this table with the screenshot of Figure 5 from that linked "Bakken Reality Check" below the spreadsheet.
Month
|
# # of producing wells
|
Producing wells
|
Crude oil production (bopd)
|
Crude oil production (bopd)
|
Producing wells
|
Crude oil production (bopd)
|
Change From Previous Month
|
BOPD
|
Change From Previous Month
|
Change from one year ago
|
Change from one year earlier
|
||
Jan 18
|
14,002
|
-7
|
1,175,638
|
-5,681
|
1,014
|
141,470
|
Dec 17
|
14,009
|
-14
|
1,181,319
|
-15,657
|
990
|
238,997
|
Nov 17
|
14,023
|
52
|
1,196,976
|
13,166
|
815
|
162,492
|
Oct 17
|
13,971
|
78
|
1,183,810
|
76,465
|
817
|
140,117
|
Sept 17
|
13,893
|
130
|
1,107,345
|
18,027
|
834
|
135,600
|
Aug 17
|
13,763
|
102
|
1,089,318
|
41,219
|
783
|
106,873
|
Jul 17
|
13,661
|
53
|
1,048,099
|
15,226
|
702
|
18,255
|
Jun 17
|
13,608
|
47
|
1,032,873
|
-8,122
|
678
|
5,507
|
May 17
|
13,561
|
118
|
1,040,995
|
-9,481
|
705
|
-6,153
|
Apr 17
|
13,443
|
129
|
1,050,476
|
-154
|
703
|
8,438
|
Mar 17
|
13,314
|
115
|
1,050,630
|
16,382
|
566
|
-61,157
|
Feb 17
|
13,199
|
211
|
1,034,248
|
80
|
484
|
-85,389
|
Jan 17
|
12,988
|
-31
|
1,034,168
|
91,846
|
162
|
-87,460
|
Dec 16
|
13,019
|
-189
|
942,322
|
-92,162
|
269
|
-209,598
|
Nov 16
|
13,208
|
54
|
1,034,484
|
-9,209
|
436
|
-147,540
|
Oct 16
|
13,154
|
95
|
1,043,693
|
71,948
|
330
|
-129,327
|
Sep 16
|
13,059
|
79
|
971,745
|
-10,700
|
459
|
-189,998
|
Aug 16
|
12,980
|
21
|
982,445
|
-47,399
|
324
|
-205,437
|
Jul 16
|
12,959
|
29
|
1,029,844
|
2,478
|
371
|
-178,085
|
Jun 16
|
12,930
|
74
|
1,027,366
|
-19,782
|
454
|
-184,628
|
May 16
|
12,856
|
116
|
1,047,148
|
5,110
|
588
|
-157,166
|
Apr 16
|
12,740
|
-8
|
1,042,038
|
-69,749
|
||
Mar 16
|
12,748
|
33
|
1,111,787
|
-7,850
|
||
Feb 16
|
12,715
|
-111
|
1,119,637
|
-1,991
|
||
Jan 16
|
12,826
|
76
|
1,121,628
|
-30,292
|
||
Dec 15
|
12,750
|
-22
|
1,151,920
|
-30,104
|
||
Nov 15
|
12,772
|
-52
|
1,182,024
|
9,004
|
||
Oct 15
|
12,824
|
224
|
1,173,020
|
11,277
|
||
Sept 15
|
12,600
|
-56
|
1,161,743
|
-26,139
|
||
Aug 15
|
12,656
|
68
|
1,187,882
|
-20,047
|
||
Jul 15
|
12,588
|
112
|
1,207,929
|
-4,065
|
||
Jun 15
|
12,476
|
208
|
1,211,994
|
7,680
|
||
May 15
|
12,268
|
143
|
1,204,314
|
32,498
|
||
Apr 15
|
12,125
|
1,171,816
|
The screenshot from the "Bakken Reality Check" linked above:
"Bakken Reality Check" suggests that operators need to add 157 wells each month (1,884 per year) to maintain peak production at 1.2 million.
Between the autumn of 2015, when the Bakken Reality Check was published, and January, 2018, the most recent month for which data has been released:
- due to the Saudi Surge (January 2015 - January 2017) and the severe decline in the price of WTI, North Dakota crude oil production dropped from 1,151,920 bopd (December, 2015) to a low of 942,322 bopd one year later (December, 2016)
- however, after things "started to return to normal," North Dakota crude oil production actually rose to 1,196,976 bopd by November, 2017
- from November, 2015, to November, 2016, there was an increase of 436 producing wells -- well below the 1,884 new wells / year that "Bakken Reality Check" suggested would be needed to "maintain" -- and one could argue, ND came close to "maintaining" production
- from November, 2016, to November, 2017, there were only 815 additional producing wells, again, well below the 1,884 threshhold suggested by "Bakken Reality Check"
- November, 2016 to November, 2017: production increased by 16% with number of additional producing wells well below the 1,884 threshhold
This is very much in line with an increasing number of analysts noting that there seems to be a "negative decline rate" developing in shale plays.
See the article by oilprice.com editor Nick Cunningham: "Can the oil industry continue to lower decline rates at mature fields?"
And this post from earlier this month:
“I cannot remember ever in my career having seen a negative decline rate,” the British oil-giant’s chief executive officer said in an interview on the sidelines of the CERAWeek by IHS Markit energy conference in Houston.
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