Tuesday, July 23, 2019

Two Wells Coming Off Confidential List Today -- July 23, 2019

Wells coming off the confidential list today -- Tuesday, July 23, 2019: 40 for the month; 40  for the quarter;
  • 35177, SI/NC, MRO, State Elias 34-36TFH, Killdeer, no production data, 
  • 35164, SI/NC, Hunt, Halliday 146-92-19-18H-3, Werner, no production data,
Active rigs:

$55.977/23/201907/23/201807/23/201707/23/201607/23/2015
Active Rigs5666583270

RBN Energy: western Canada's natural gas production is nearing all-time highs, part 2.
Once consigned to a flat or declining profile, natural gas production in Western Canada has been increasing steadily since 2012, to the extent that it has now begun to stretch the ability of the existing pipeline network to the breaking point. Most striking is that this expansion in production has been taking place in an era of declining natural gas prices and weakening basis for Western Canada’s primary natural price marker, AECO, and rising and relentless competition from U.S. gas supplies in several of Canada’s key domestic and export markets. If the pricing, pipe egress and export situation has become so dire, why are producers still drilling for and pumping out even more natural gas? Today, we address this question in the second part of our series investigating Western Canada’s natural gas supply and demand balance.
Growing natural gas supplies from Western Canada have been depressing the AECO gas price and widening AECO’s discounts versus the U.S. benchmark Henry Hub (i.e. basis). Although the decline in the absolute AECO price has been part of a broader downturn in natural gas prices across North America, driven by rapidly rising U.S. gas supplies, it is the weakening of AECO basis (the local price relative to the U.S. benchmark Henry Hub) that suggests that the Western Canada gas market is facing additional challenges in the form of being oversupplied and/or under-piped. In the series opener (Part 1), we considered that big-picture trend — rising production in Western Canada and what has become a situation of insufficient export capacity in getting all that gas to market. We’ve also explored some of these issues previously having discussed additional operational issues on TC Energy’s Alberta pipeline system that may be contributing to weaker pricing and the widening basis outcomes for AECO. We’ll update our analysis on infrastructure constraints as well as local demand trends later in this series. First, today, we dive deeper into the production trends that have led the market to this point and their effects on prices.

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