Permian still primed for growth
Expansion prospects for the dominant oil shale basin remain in 2023
“The notion that somehow the Permian cannot grow, we do not believe is true. As long as WTI prices remain above c.$65/bl, it can and will grow. You are not going to hit the sweet spot exhaustion point until you get to the second half of the 2020s.” So says Raoul LeBlanc, vice-president, energy, at intelligence firm S&P Global Commodity Insights. And other analysts agree. Research firm Enverus forecasts Permian production rising by 400,000bl/d year-on-year— with associated gas up by 1.6bn ft³/d (45.3mn m³/d)—in 2023, while consultancy Wood Mackenzie expects the West Texas basin to account for more than 70pc of its almost 700,000bl/d annual increase in US onshore production, or c.490,000bl
Also in this section
24 January 2025
Domestic companies in Nigeria and other African jurisdictions are buying assets from existing majors they view as more likely to deliver production upside under their stewardship
23 January 2025
The end of transit, though widely anticipated, leaves Europe paying a third more for gas than a year ago and greatly exposed to supply shocks
23 January 2025
The country’s government and E&P companies are leaving no stone unturned in their quest to increase domestic crude output as BP–ONGC tie-up leads the way
22 January 2025
The return of Donald Trump gives further evidence of ‘big oil’ as an investable asset, with the only question being whether anyone is really surprised