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Deepening
Doubts About Fracked Shale Gas Wells' Long Term Prospects
20
September, 2012
This
month, the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection
released its bi-annual report on how much natural gas has been
produced in the Marcellus Shale, a rock formation which stretches
underneath much of Appalachia.
Investors were shocked because the
production numbers seemed far lower
than expected.
Watched closely by market and energy analysts, the report sparked a
heated debate about the oil and gas industry's excited rhetoric about
fracked shale gas as the cure-all to many of America's energy and
jobs needs.
But
the story quickly got complicated. The report was released
despite lacking
data from
the state’s second largest driller, Chesapeake Energy, and state
regulators never flagged the omission. The amount of gas flowing out
of Pennsylvania had actually climbed
dramatically.
It
was a major flaw, and suddenly the searing spotlight of the
media honed
in on questions about
whether regulators were keeping accurate track of how much gas the
wells in their state really produce. How could they overlook such a
massive error? Can the public be sure that the updated tally gives an
accurate picture of how these wells are performing?
If regulators make mistakes in tracking energy production in their state, how reliable is the companion to that report, which tracks the toxic waste produced by these same companies?
Those are all valid questions that need honest answers. But the most important questions raised in the controversy were largely overlooked.
The
amount of natural gas produced from all the fracking going on in
Pennsylvania matters not just for the state's residents, its land-use
regulations, its waste disposal capacity, and its water use limits.
Unconventional gas production data from the Marcellus Shale matters
for the nation as a whole because national energy policy is being
crafted based on certain long-term assumptions about shale drilling
and the price of natural gas.
The
oil and gas industry has propagated a vision that fracking unleashes
vast amounts of gas which then flows relatively steadily
for decades.
But a growing mountain
of evidence suggests
that nothing could be further from the truth. Shale gas wells dry
up,
sometimes long before they have produced enough gas to cover the
costs of drilling and fracking them.
In
the oldest shale formation, Texas’s Barnett shale, many aging wells
have had to be re-fracked multiple times to keep them from running
dry. Re-fracking costs millions of dollars and requires millions of
gallons of water.
A review
last year by
the New
York Times found
that less than ten percent of 9,000 Texas shale wells had recouped
their estimated production costs within their first seven years.
This
is the dirty little secret that the oil and gas industry rarely will
acknowledge. Oil and gas companies don't want to discuss it because
high volume slickwater horizontal fracking is so new that there is
paltry data to show how wells generally perform over the long run
(read: twenty to fifty years).
Over
the past year, the total amount of Marcellus gas produced has indeed
risen dramatically. But this gas only matters if drillers can pull it
out of the ground at a profit. It also only matters if drillers can
discern how much money they will have to throw at a well to keep that
gas flowing via fracking.
This
is why the production data from places like Pennsylvania is so
fundamentally important. Not to judge whether more gas is coming out
of the Marcellus now -- the current drilling boom means that new
wells are constantly drilled across the state, adding an enormous
burst of gas each time a well is brought online. But because data
about individual wells, tracked over time, can show how quickly each
well runs low.
The
answer to that question is about far more than whether oil and gas
companies can make a profit on the gas or whether investors will lose
out. It's ultimately a far higher-stakes issue: whether renewables
will not only be far cleaner, but also cheaper than shale gas over
the long run. Can today’s low natural gas prices last, or are we on
the verge of a gas price
spike?
If
the accuracy of the production data is questionable, then
policymakers in Washington, investors on Wall Street and the public
at large will have a tough time getting an accurate picture of how
these wells perform over the long run.
Relying
on industry rhetoric for answers to these questions is perilous.
Consider, for example, Chesapeake Energy, the company behind this
summer's confusion over production data.
In
2009, Chesapeake was telling investors that its average Marcellus
well would produce 4.2
billion cubic
feet of gas equivalent (bcfe) of natural gas over its lifetime.
By 2010, it had hiked its estimate to 5.2
bcfe per
well.
But
according to a new
USGS report,
the industry-wide average for wells drilled in the interior Marcellus
region (the best performing area) in 2011 will actually be 1.2
billion cubic feet – roughly one fifth of the amount that
Chesapeake has told investors and the public its wells in the region
can produce.
Do
these federal estimates mean that Chesapeake was lying to investors?
No. Every company’s acreage is different – there are sweet
spots in
the shale, and every driller leases the land it thinks will be most
profitable and productive.
Chesapeake also includes natural gas liquids in its estimates (the "e" in bcfe indicates that they're including liquids like propane and ethane along with methane gas), but USGS does not, which could account for a small portion of the difference. And both the company and its federal regulators at USGS are making projections into the future with limited history to guide them -- after all, the fracking boom is just over a decade old.
But
it does show a wide gulf between the numbers that drillers brag
about, and the conclusions reached by independent analysts.
Federal
regulators have struggled for some time to get the numbers right when
it comes to fracking. When the Energy Information Administration
first released estimates for the total amount of gas trapped in the
Marcellus, their numbers were stunning. But within less than a year,
the agency was forced to drop
their projections by
roughly 80 percent, as more data showed that early guesses were
unreliable.
The
new USGS report also shows clearly that individual shale gas wells
can be fickle. Some wells are monster wells, able to produce
jaw-dropping amounts of gas and making the people who leased their
land millionaires overnight. But many other wells in the same region
produce very little gas.
For
example, the USGS report projects that in the Haynesville shale along
the Gulf Coast, the best wells can be expected to produce 20 bcf of
gas over their lifetimes. But the worst wells drilled in 2011 can
only be expected to generate 0.02 bcf – a thousand-fold difference.
The average well in the region will produce 2.6 bcf, the USGS
says.
Given that some investment analysts expected far more, and some investors have calculated that Haynesville wells need to produce 5.5 bcf to cover the costs of drilling and fracking, this could spell big trouble for drillers – and potentially a big price spike for consumers.
Given that some investment analysts expected far more, and some investors have calculated that Haynesville wells need to produce 5.5 bcf to cover the costs of drilling and fracking, this could spell big trouble for drillers – and potentially a big price spike for consumers.
Companies'
hyping of shale gas production and profitability has already had
consequences. In the past year or so many of the biggest
companies have
had to drastically writedown
their reserves,
partly because the cost of extracting the gas is higher than the
price drillers can sell it for. Even though it promised investors
untold riches from these shale plays, Chesapeake Energy has gone on
a selling
spree to
try to deal with staggering debt.
All
this deeply undercuts the industry's rhetoric and the refrain that
will most assuredly get mobilized once again during the upcoming
presidential debates about there being a 100-year supply of gas (this
myth is unpacked and debunked here).
So,
what does any of this have to do with the flap between Pennsylvania
and Chesapeake Energy about the well performance data?
It
goes to show, yet again, that the uncertainty surrounding our current
shale gas bet is as broad and deep as the shale itself.
In
Pennsylvania, these problems are especially pronounced. Unlike other
energy producing states, Pennsylvania does not have a severance tax
on the gas produced in the state, meaning it has less incentive to
accurately tally the history of each well. It is also unique in that
it only reports its data every six months – all other states
release figures monthly.
This
all makes it especially difficult for independent analysts who might
not have access to the statistics used by the USGS to make their own
predictions, to see whether the industry’s claims can be
corroborated -- or not.
Fracking
banned by Quebec
government
The
new Parti Quebecois government hasn’t wasted any time hinting about
a long-term ban on the shale gas industry.
Quebec
Natural Resources Minister Martine Ouellet
20
September, 2012
The
new Parti Quebecois government hasn’t wasted any time hinting about
a long-term ban on the shale gas industry.
Quebec’s
new natural-resources minister, Martine Ouellet, says she doesn’t
believe the controversial method of extracting natural gas from
shale, known as “fracking,” can ever be done safely....
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