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Big Oil Pours Billions In The Permian Basin

Posted on 12/17/22 at 9:27 am
Posted by ragincajun03
Member since Nov 2007
21161 posts
Posted on 12/17/22 at 9:27 am
quote:

A couple of months ago, U.S. President Joe Biden urged energy companies to stop ‘war profiteering’ and even threatened to slap them with windfall tax if they failed to invest their profits in lowering costs for Americans and increasing production. The calls came at a time when Big Oil has been posting record profits amid high commodity and energy prices.

The majority of energy companies have avoided spending big to expand production in the aftermath of the 2020 oil crisis, prioritizing returning more cash to shareholders in the form of dividends and share buybacks. Well, Biden might not fully get his wish but there are signs that companies are willing to spend more in the coming year(s) even as a raft of energy companies have announced major spending and capex hikes.

And few places have captured the attention of Big Oil more than the Permian Basin.

Some of the basin’s largest oil and gas producers have unveiled plans to ramp up extraction operations and investments in the region next year as production was forecast to increase despite oil prices projected to dip due to an impending global recession.


quote:

ExxonMobil Corp. (NYSE: XOM) has not announced a drastic increase in spending, but has said that its capital spending for 2023 will be closer to the top end of its annual target of $20B-$25B, a level it expects to maintain through 2027. The company said more than 70% of its capital investments will be deployed in the U.S. Permian Basin, Guyana, Brazil and LNG projects across the globe. These investments will help increase the company's upstream production by 500K boe/day to 4.2M boe/day by 2027 with half of that expected to come from the high return regions in the Permian Basin and other high-return regions. Exxon also unveiled plans to boost spending on lower emission projects by 15% through 2027 to ~$17B through 2027.

Exxon’s peer Chevron Corp. (NYSE: CVX) announced on Wednesday that FY 2023 capital spending budget will clock in at $17B, at the top end of its $15B-$17B medium-term range and up more than 25% from expected spending in 2022.

The company said that upstream capex includes more than $4B for Permian Basin development; ~$2B for other shale and tight assets and ~$2B to go into projects that lower carbon emissions or increase renewable fuels production capacity, more than double the 2022 budget. Although Chevron’s spending for 2023 will be considerably higher than capital spending in the 2020-21 pandemic years, it’s still much lower than the $30B annual average of the 2012-19 period.

"Our capex budgets remain in line with prior guidance despite inflation," Chairman and CEO Mike Wirth said
, as cited by Bloomberg.

Overall, more and more energy companies are opening up to the idea of increasing spending and production.


LINK

I still dislike when authors use the "Big Oil" term, but I'm starting to warm up to it. Big Oil provides jobs and economic growth, and more is coming in 2023 from that sector.

Truck nuts for Christmas?
Posted by Powerman
Member since Jan 2004
162198 posts
Posted on 12/17/22 at 9:29 am to
I know XOM had a few decent sized midstream projects in the works with their subsidiary XTO out that way when I was working in that area earlier this year.

There is a ton of midstream development going on in the Permian Basin right now.
Posted by JohnnyKilroy
Cajun Navy Vice Admiral
Member since Oct 2012
35289 posts
Posted on 12/17/22 at 9:30 am to
Love to see it.
Posted by ragincajun03
Member since Nov 2007
21161 posts
Posted on 12/17/22 at 9:33 am to
quote:

There is a ton of midstream development going on in the Permian Basin right now.


Well the NMOCD practically nixed flaring/venting already, and the BLM is cracking down on it.

Now the EPA is reaching into emissions even on private surface, so that'll affect Permian Texas. Going to need ALOT more gas takeaway capacity in order to keep the oil flowing.

Midstream companies investing and going to be making a killing for the foreseeable future.
Posted by supatigah
CEO of the Keith Hernandez Fan Club
Member since Mar 2004
87374 posts
Posted on 12/17/22 at 9:40 am to
Big earthquake in midland yesterday

5.4 on the scale

Posted by Powerman
Member since Jan 2004
162198 posts
Posted on 12/17/22 at 9:42 am to
quote:

Big earthquake in midland yesterday

5.4 on the scale


That's not a "big earthquake"

Unusual to have one of that magnitude in that area though
Posted by ragincajun03
Member since Nov 2007
21161 posts
Posted on 12/17/22 at 9:53 am to
quote:

Big earthquake in midland yesterday


Yep.

Some who are ignorant are going to blame fracking.

Those who blame SWD injection will likely be correct. Going to need to get water recycling programs increased more, and I've always thought industry should get together and fund downstream pipelines that dump into the Gulf of Mexico.

Get all the nasty stuff skimmed and cleaned up, and send the saltwater out there. Would take a massive, collaborative effort, but I don't see how even the TRRC is going to keep approving these deep 30k per day injection wells long-term.
Posted by GeauxTigersLee
Atlanta
Member since Sep 2010
4641 posts
Posted on 12/17/22 at 10:03 am to
quote:

U.S. President Joe Biden urged energy companies to stop ‘war profiteering’ and even threatened to slap them with windfall tax if they failed to invest their profits in lowering costs for Americans and increasing production
Oil is bad and let's kill pipelines and move to all EV, but don't hoard profits and invest them in oil. Makes total sense.
Posted by waiting4saturday
Covington, LA
Member since Sep 2005
9713 posts
Posted on 12/17/22 at 10:06 am to
The Permian is easy because if you have land, you have oil. You basically can’t miss.
Posted by NPComb
Member since Jan 2019
27261 posts
Posted on 12/17/22 at 10:18 am to
Posted by Cycledude
Member since Jul 2018
1706 posts
Posted on 12/17/22 at 10:18 am to
Doesn’t matter that much if the oil is drilled from the U.S. It’s a global commodity and just goes out to the global market. US refineries still buy their oil from the global markets. The Exxon Refinery uses almost exclusively middle eastern sour crude.
Posted by WeeWee
Member since Aug 2012
40091 posts
Posted on 12/17/22 at 10:26 am to
quote:

Doesn’t matter that much if the oil is drilled from the U.S. It’s a global commodity and just goes out to the global market. US refineries still buy their oil from the global markets.


1. More American oil on the global market helps insulate the USA from the effects of oil reductions elsewhere.

2. More American oil on the global market weakens the power of OPEC+.

3. More American oil on the global market means more jobs in the USA. Which is a good thing even if that means we have to look at more truck nuts on the highways.
Posted by ragincajun03
Member since Nov 2007
21161 posts
Posted on 12/17/22 at 10:36 am to
quote:

3. More American oil on the global market means more jobs in the USA. Which is a good thing even if that means we have to look at more truck nuts on the highways.


You envy my nutz, baw?
Posted by Klark Kent
Houston via BR
Member since Jan 2008
66706 posts
Posted on 12/17/22 at 10:39 am to
quote:

with their subsidiary XTO


XOM and XTO are fully integrated these days. One and the same.
Posted by Cosmo
glassman's guest house
Member since Oct 2003
120175 posts
Posted on 12/17/22 at 10:40 am to
Muh record profits

Yeah they dump those profits back into more projects
Posted by oldskule
Down South
Member since Mar 2016
15476 posts
Posted on 12/17/22 at 10:42 am to
Hydrocarbons >>>>>>> Lithium
Posted by billjamin
Houston
Member since Jun 2019
12391 posts
Posted on 12/17/22 at 10:45 am to
quote:

Going to need to get water recycling programs increased more

Recycling it really isn’t that hard, it’s handling and transporting it that’s such a PITA. Most water transfer hands are borderline retarded and you put those guys in charge of moving produced water all around and your going to pollute a lot of ranch land.
This post was edited on 12/17/22 at 10:46 am
Posted by Powerman
Member since Jan 2004
162198 posts
Posted on 12/17/22 at 10:46 am to
quote:


XOM and XTO are fully integrated these days. One and the same.



Literally from the XTO energy website

quote:

Learn about the management and history of XTO Energy, an ExxonMobil subsidiary.


LINK

Posted by NorCali
Member since Feb 2015
1044 posts
Posted on 12/17/22 at 10:48 am to
What exactly is a midstream company for us ignorant of the production process?
Posted by Double Oh
Louisiana
Member since Sep 2008
17743 posts
Posted on 12/17/22 at 10:50 am to
The Permian is booming these days. Is the rig count over 400 yet?
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