
Shale pioneer Mark Papa, chief executive officer at Centennial Resource Development Inc(CDEV.O), said Tuesday that he expects U.S. oil output will grow by 700,000 barrels per day in 2020, which is slower than government estimates.
The U.S. shale business is feeling the effects of lower crude oil prices, capital constraints imposed by Wall Street investors demanding fiscal discipline and well spacing issues, Papa told investors at a Barclays energy conference in New York.
“We’re seeing a lot of difficulty in growing U.S. oil production,” Papa said, noting that U.S. output has been hovering around 12.1 million bpd for months.
He said the best locations in the major U.S. shale basins – the Permian Basin, Bakken and Eagle Ford Shale – are being depleted and the need to move drilling to second- and third-tier locations will have a “profound” effect in six months to three years.
In separate remarks in Toronto, Dallas Federal Reserve Bank President Robert Kaplan noted that U.S. energy companies are being cautious about capital spending, with much of this year’s production growth coming from shale wells drilled previously that only needed to be hydraulically fractured.
“If that cautiousness continues, we would expect net production growth is going to be meaningfully lower next year than it is this year,” Kaplan said.
The U.S. government has estimated that the country’s crude oil production will average 13.3 million bpd in 2020, which would be a record level.
本文来源 网站,文章版权归原作者及原出处所有,内容为个人观点,并不代表本站赞同其观点和对其真实性负责,本站只提供参考并不构成任何投资及应用建议。我们已经尽可能的对作者和来源进行了通告,如有异议请及时联系我们,我们将根据著作权人的要求,立即更正或者删除有关内容。
本文内容为作者个人观点,OILUP仅提供信息发布平台