Roundtable Discussion; The Future of Mineral Sands. Watch the video here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksRDSA.L Share News (RDSA)

  • There is currently no data for RDSA

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

FOCUS-How BP found shale profits with 'crystal ball' oilfield technology

Mon, 30th Jul 2018 06:00

* Companies harness big data, hi-tech to boost shale profits

* BP's $10 bln BHP shale buyout reflects confidence insector

By Ernest Scheyder and Ron Bousso

LUFKIN, Texas/LONDON, July 30 (Reuters) - In the pineforests of eastern Texas, oilfield workers equipped withvirtual-reality goggles are helping BP's shale businessturn a profit for the first time.

Thousands of automated wells feed data on their performanceinto the firm's supercomputers each evening. If they show a needfor maintenance, an Uber-style system summons a subcontractedrepair firm to keep the shale wells flowing at optimal outputand minimal cost.

Such technology has helped slash BP's shale oil and naturalgas production costs by 34 percent over five years. The shalebusiness turned a profit for the first time in 2017, BP said,although the company declined to disclose the figure.

BP's progress in shale underpinned its $10.5 billionacquisition last week of BHP Billiton's U.S. shaleoperations. The deal highlighted BP's newfound confidence in asector that has challenged oil majors, which initially struggledto adjust to the quick pace and fast-evolving methods used totap shale with horizontal drilling and hydraulicfracturing.

BP and other majors that had traditionally focused on large,multi-year conventional drilling projects - such as Royal DutchShell and Chevron - were left behind when theshale boom took off a decade ago.

The British energy giant is now catching up with smallerrivals, using technology and its institutional knowledge fromglobal operations to push shale into a second phase that ithopes will reward its massive scale over the agility of smallercompetitors.

"We spent the last four years retooling our business andgetting ready for this opportunity," David Lawler, who headsBP's shale business, said in a call with analysts after the BHPdeal announcement. "We're at the lowest production costs we'veseen in many years. We'll take that model, put that to work onthese (BHP) assets and dramatically improve production andperformance."

BP faces other large rivals in the race to grow U.S. shaleproduction and profits, including Exxon Mobil Corp,Chevron, Shell and Norway's Equinor. All are expandingdrilling and acquisitions, particularly in the Permian Basin ofWest Texas and New Mexico, the largest U.S. oil field and thecenter of the shale revolution.

They aim to capitalize on the vast resources unearthed bynew drilling technologies, which also allow companies to startand stop production quickly in response to market shifts. That'sa key advantage over the long-term commitments of billions ofdollars required by offshore oil or liquefied natural gas (LNG)projects.

The BHP deal will transform BP into one of the world'sbiggest shale oil and gas producers. BP's total shale outputwill increase from 315,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day(boed) to more than 500,000 boed. Its reserves will jump 57percent to 12.7 billion barrels of oil equivalent.

BP's output of shale oil - which is worth more than naturalgas - is poised to rise from about 10,000 barrels of oil per day(bpd) to about 200,000 bpd by the middle of the next decade.

The deal, BP's first major acquisition in 20 years, alsomarked a watershed moment for the company in the United Statesas it looks to leave behind the $65 billion fallout from thedeadly 2010 explosion of its Deepwater Horizon rig in the U.S.Gulf of Mexico.

The BHP deal will also re-establish BP as a major player inthe Permian Basin. BP had sold all of its assets there to ApacheCorp in August 2010, right after the Gulf disaster.

UBER, POKEMON AND OIL

Today, BP operates more than 1,000 shale wells that producemostly natural gas in the Haynesville basin, which straddleseastern Texas, Arkansas and Louisiana.

It has used the data from its automated wells to create astreamlined system that farms out maintenance to a fleet oflower-cost contractors. The firm now orders up repairs much inthe same way a homeowner uses a mobile app to hire a maintenanceperson or a passenger summons an Uber for a ride.

BP puts repair work out for bid to pre-approved contractors,who then compete for jobs. Each contractor is rated aftercompleting the work, and those with high rankings have a betterchance of getting hired again.

"This means we're not hiring and firing staff all the timedepending on market conditions," said Brian Pugh, chiefoperating office of BP's shale division, which the companycreated as a stand-alone unit in 2015.

BP equips field staff and contractors with augmented realitygoggles to make repairs more efficient, modeling its methods inpart on "Pokemon Go," a popular video game where virtual imagesappear to be in real-world surroundings on the player's screen.

The field workers are connected through their headsets toBP's Houston offices, where experts can see and show staff howto perform repairs while they work.

BP has started to collect many of these fixes in a videolibrary so staff can call up videos, much like YouTube, to fixproblems themselves without expert consultation.

The company's algorithms crunch data compiled from its wellseach evening. Operators wake up each morning to a report tellingthem which wells may need repair, a task that once took hourseach day as workers drove from well to well in search ofproblems.

The systems, BP said, cut downtime for wells needing repairsby 50 percent, boosting production last year by 70 million cubicfeet of natural gas across its shale portfolio.

The technology provides a panoramic view into the ongoingneeds of the oilfield, said Kimberly Krieger, who overseas BP'sshale operations in eastern Texas.

"It's like looking into a crystal ball," Krieger said.

SLASHING COSTS, TURNING PROFITS

The firm's success in reducing costs reflects its ability tospend money automating its oil fields and overhaul workprocesses to drive down service and equipment costs. BP alsoseparated its shale business from the main company to allow thebusiness, now headquartered in Denver, to form its own culture.

"We're able to leverage the best parts of our globalbusiness to boost our shale operations," Pugh said. "Our smallershale rivals in the U.S. don't necessarily have that."

Other majors are shooting for the same results.

Exxon expects its shale operations to produce $5 billion inprofit by 2022, compared to a $2 billion loss in 2016.

Chevron expects 10 percent of its profit to come from thePermian by 2020 after it lost money there during the oildownturn of 2014 to 2016.

Shell forecasts that shale operations will make money forthe first time next year and cash flow will hit $1 billion by2020.

"We use our global size to our advantage when we negotiatewith suppliers." Greg Guidry, who recently retired as Shell'sshale boss, told Reuters in March. "Costs keep coming down."

(Reporting by Ernest Scheyder and Ron BoussoEditing by Brian Thevenot)

More News
17 Jan 2022 10:06

Crown Estate Scotland offers 17 projects seabed rights for offshore wind

LONDON, Jan 17 (Reuters) - Crown Estate Scotland said on Monday it has made option agreements to 17 projects which reserve the rights to specific areas of seabed in its ScotWind leasing round which is aimed at supporting wind energy development.O...

Read more
17 Jan 2022 09:20

UPDATE 2-FTSE 100 hits two-year high as GSK boosts

(For a Reuters live blog on U.S., UK and European stock markets, click LIVE/ or type LIVE/ in a news window)* Unilever worst performer on the FTSE 100* Homebuilders gain as UK home prices soar in early 2022* Taylor Wimpey expects annual results in-l...

Read more
14 Jan 2022 17:48

UPDATE 1-Alberta prioritises oil sands' carbon storage hub, energy minister says

(Adds more details on CCUS)By Nia WilliamsCALGARY, Alberta, Jan 14 (Reuters) - The government of Alberta, Canada's main oil-producing province, plans to move forward "very, very quickly" on its next carbon sequestration hub in the Cold Lake region...

Read more
14 Jan 2022 13:56

UPDATE 1-Brazil's Petrobras trims 2022-2026 production outlook

(Recasts with details, context)SAO PAULO, Jan 14 (Reuters) - Petroleo Brasileiro SA (Petrobras) on Friday lowered its 2022-2026 production outlook to reflect production-sharing agreements involving the Atapu and Sepia oilfields.Brazil's state-run ...

Read more
14 Jan 2022 11:57

For BP, car chargers to overtake pumps in profitability race

* BP focusing on fast battery chargers, executives says* Fast chargers almost as profitable as petrol filling* BP and rivals targeting big growth in EV chargingBy Ron BoussoLONDON, Jan 14 (Reuters) - BP says its fast electric vehicle chargers are on...

Read more
14 Jan 2022 09:55

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: Exane BNP cuts BAE Systems and Rolls-Royce

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: Exane BNP cuts BAE Systems and Rolls-Royce

Read more
13 Jan 2022 18:49

Shell to hand over Deer Park refinery to Pemex next week -sources

By Ana Isabel MartinezMEXICO CITY, Jan 13 (Reuters) - Mexican state oil company Petroleos Mexicanos will take control of the Deer Park refinery in Houston, Texas on Jan. 20, three sources with knowledge of the matter said on Thursday.Royal Dutch S...

Read more
13 Jan 2022 09:50

Shell seismic tests approval complied with rules, S.Africa minister says

JOHANNESBURG, Jan 13 (Reuters) - Shell's plan for seismic testing on South Africa's Wild Coast, which critics say threatens dolphins, seals, whales, penguins and other rare sea life, received all necessary environmental approvals, the country's e...

Read more
13 Jan 2022 06:49

UPDATE 3-Activists behind Shell climate verdict target 30 multinationals

* KLM, ABN Amro among those to get letters* Milieudefensie seeks science-aligned net-zero plans* Warns court an option if companies slow to move (Adds company responses)By Anthony Deutsch and Simon JessopAMSTERDAM/LONDON, Jan 13 (Reuters) - The Dutc...

Read more
13 Jan 2022 06:49

UPDATE 2-Activists behind Shell climate verdict target 30 multinationals

* KLM, Ahold, ABN Amro among those to get letters* Milieudefensie seeks science-aligned net-zero plans* Warns court an option if companies slow to move (Adds other companies receiving letters; edits)By Anthony Deutsch and Simon JessopAMSTERDAM/LONDO...

Read more
13 Jan 2022 03:00

Activists behind Shell climate verdict target 30 multinationals

* KLM, Ahold, ABN Amro among those to get letters* Milieudefensie seeks science-aligned net-zero plans* Warns court an option if companies slow to moveBy Anthony Deutsch and Simon JessopAMSTERDAM/LONDON, Jan 13 (Reuters) - The Dutch wing of environm...

Read more
12 Jan 2022 06:43

UPDATE 4-Equinor warns of $1.8 bln UK oilfield impairment

* Mariner field is producing less oil than expected* Reserve estimate downgraded* Operator Equinor holds a 65% stake (Adds partners comment, background)By Terje Solsvik and Nerijus AdomaitisOSLO, Jan 12 (Reuters) - Norwegian energy group Equinor wa...

Read more
10 Jan 2022 12:16

Thyssenkrupp IPO candidate UCE to build 200 MW electrolyser for Shell

FRANKFURT, Jan 10 (Reuters) - Thyssenkrupp's hydrogen unit Uhde Chlorine Engineers (tkUCE), which the German conglomerate plans to list in spring, has signed a deal to deliver a 200-megawatt electrolyser to oil major Shell, it said on Monday.The ...

Read more
7 Jan 2022 09:28

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: Shell cut to Neutral; Centamin raised to Buy

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: Shell cut to Neutral; Centamin raised to Buy

Read more
7 Jan 2022 09:12

LONDON MARKET OPEN: "Apprehensive" trade as investors look to nonfarms

LONDON MARKET OPEN: "Apprehensive" trade as investors look to nonfarms

Read more

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.