US Shale Production Hindered By Sand Supply Crunch

US Shale Production Hindered By Sand Supply Crunch

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Yves here. Some time ago, during the previous shale boom, we highlighted some articles that pointed out that difficulty in getting fracking sand could constrain some operations. If oil prices remain high, which is a big boon to shale players, sand scarcity may again throw sand in the gears of these wells.

This situation should also serve as a reminder that the discussions of supply chain issues may serve to obscure how much of the impediment is actual supply, meaning natural resource shortages, as opposed to bottlenecks in manufacturing or transport or both.

By Tsvetana Paraskova, a writer for Oilprice.com with over a decade of experience writing for news outlets such as iNVEZZ and SeeNews. Originally published at OilPrice

  • US shale drillers will be eager to boost production as oil prices near $100 per barrel, but a looming frac sand shortage may stop them.
  • Combined with rising labor costs, a potential trucker shortage, and inflation, a frac sand shortage could become a major headache for shale producers.
  • US oil production is sure to increase over the year, but if these cost problems aren’t solved then expectations will have to be tempered.

US shale producers are tempted to boost production more than previously expected as oil prices rallied to over $90 a barrel with a potential to hit $100 soon. Yet, a supply chain bottleneck for a key material for fracking could slow the coming shale boom.

Frac sand in the biggest shale play, the Permian, is in short supply, threatening to slow drilling programs at some producers and sending sand prices skyrocketing. This adds further cost pressure to American oil producers, who are already grappling with cost inflation in equipment and labor shortages.

Total US crude oil production is set to rise to an average of 12.0 million barrels per day (bpd) in 2022 and 12.6 million bpd in 2023—an annual record high and 200,000 bpd above last month’s estimate, the EIA said in its February Short-Term Energy Outlook (STEO) last week. The previous annual average record of 12.3 million bpd was set in the pre-pandemic 2019.

Crude oil production in the seven most prolific US shale basins is set to increase to 8.707 million bpd in March—a 109,000 bpd rise over February’s 8.598 million bpd, and an increase of 271,000 bpd from January’s tally, the EIA’s latest Drilling Productivity Report showed.

However, cost pressures and sand shortages could slow the growth going forward.

“Ultimately it will slow everyone down if it doesn’t resolve itself,” Michael Oestmann, CEO of private equity-backed Tall City Exploration, told Reuterscommenting on the sand supply crunch in the Permian.

Not enough frac sand at a time when oil prices topped $90 a barrel could limit the growth as more and more shale firms – especially privately-held ones – seek to boost production materially to capture the high oil prices.

$100 oil could unleash a lot more US oil production, in theory, but supply chain constraints and record-high sand prices are likely to temper growth, analysts say.

“Although high prices would, in theory, trigger a burst in tight oil production, acute supply chain bottlenecks, a lag between price signals and its impact on production, and winter weather-related disruptions will slow growth. Added to this are expectations that spot sand prices will rise to a $50-$70 per ton range – a level unheard of in the industry’s modern history – which will hit operators’ wallets,” Artem Abramov, Rystad Energy’s head of shale research, said earlier this week

Sand tightness, cost pressures, and labor shortages could be deterrents to a massive outburst in US shale production, even if most public companies were to abandon restraint and risk angering Wall Street by seeking to significantly raise output.

Oilfield services firms, while hailing the coming of a “multi-year upcycle” in shale, are warning against sand tightness and labor and cost pressures.

“There is no doubt, the much-anticipated multiyear upcycle is now underway,” Jeff Miller, CEO at the biggest fracking services provider, Halliburton, said on the Q4 earnings call last month. But he also noted that “As activity accelerates, the market is seeing tightness related to trucking, labor, sand, and other inputs.”

During the fourth quarter, Halliburton saw the North American market moderate growth slightly in completions due to the holidays, sand supply tightness, and lower-efficiency levels typically experienced in the winter months, Miller said.

Liberty Oilfield Services, which bought last-mile frac sand logistics firm PropX during the COVID-inflicted downturn, also flagged “recent sand bottleneck challenges in the Permian Basin, both of sand availability and last mile transportation,” as chief executive Chris Wright said last week.

If sand and trucking shortages are not resolved soon, US shale producers – especially privately-held drillers who are already increasing production – may not benefit from $90 and $100 oil as much as they have thought.

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