Has the Shale Bubble Already Burst?
By Igor Alexeev
Oilprice.com
August 26 2013

http://oilprice.com/Energy/Natural-Gas/Has-the-Shale-Bubble-Already-Burst.html

Just like the famous Gold Rushes of the 19th century, US shale gas development 
is turning out to be a limited and regional market opportunity. Across the 
Atlantic, the high financial and human costs to fracking also mean that Europe 
should forget any fantasies about repeating the US shale boom.

Many US shale companies that have been beating the drums of shale “revolution” 
are now facing oil and gas well depletion. In February 2013 the US Energy 
Information Administration (EIA) warned that “diminishing returns to scale and 
the depletion of high productivity sweet spots are expected to eventually slow 
the rate of growth in tight oil production”. It was a cautious but intriguing 
statement.

Arthur Berman, a prominent shale skeptic who runs Labyrinth Consulting firm in 
Sugarland, Texas, is not surprised. “The shale gas phenomenon has been funded 
mostly by debt and equity offerings. At this point, further debt and share 
dilution are less feasible for many companies” – he wrote in The Oil Drum blog 
several months ago.

Just like the famous Gold Rushes of the 19th century US shale gas development 
turned out to be a limited and regional market opportunity.

The average depletion rate of wells in the Bakken Formation (the largest tight 
oil play in the US) is reported to be 69 percent in the first year and 94 
percent over the first five years (37 percent and 50 percent in the Barnett 
Formation). Due to the lack of reliable data on the shale industry many experts 
(for example, Deborah Rogers from Energy Policy Forum) await possible future 
write-downs in shale assets. Naturally smaller investors will not hear about 
the write-downs in the news.

Rock-bottom gas prices on the American market make it extremely difficult to 
drill more wells and maintain current levels of production, unless technology 
radically changes.

“The cheap price bubble in the US will burst within two-to-four years,” 
believes David Hughes, a geoscientist and former team leader on unconventional 
gas for the Canadian Potential Gas Committee.“At a high enough price, the 
supply bubble will burst perhaps 10-to-15 years later, when drilling locations 
become sparse.”

It means that the natural gas market is successfully absorbing shale output for 
now.

The sharp inflection points for shale gas wells result from a well-known 
drawback of horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing technologies. 
Production peaks for a year or two but then the initial flow peters out. 
Overall lifespan of shale wells in Texas is about 8 years. A drilling company 
must continuously invest in the new wells or refrack the old ones. In 
comparison conventional, vertically drilled wells demonstrate more stable 
output for 20-30 years.

The fracking business model in 2009-2012 was based on enormous cashflow from 
investors attracted by tall promises of a natural gas bonanza. At the same time 
shale wells were considerably underperforming in dollar terms making the whole 
business a very risky venture. Lack of statistics was sugar coated by lucrative 
promises.

Will domestic gas prices be high enough to pay for the continuing exploration 
and development in the coming year? It is hardly probable. Natural gas futures 
for September and October 2013 slid to the lowest price in more than five 
months in New York after U.S. stockpiles increased more than forecast last 
week, Bloomberg reported.

There are also sensational industry reports that reveal how investment bankers 
promoted shale bubble in order to profit from a short-lived energy boom. The 
subprime mortgage crisis has shown that the Wall Street is very good at 
creating financial bubbles.

A lot of the small investors now being solicited by respected investment 
publications may lose their money, forecasts Professor Robert U. Ayres in 
Forbes. The shale gas boom was profitable in 2009 but now small players are 
late for dinner.

Europe Must Forget Fantasies About Repeating The US Shale Boom

Strong anti-fracking grassroots movements in Europe prove that people on the 
continent also understand the hidden dangers of shale gas development. Many 
countries in continental Europe have shelved unrealistic shale projects despite 
the fact that European energy prices are double those in the US. Germany set 
strong barriers against fracking. France's president Hollande blocked shale 
initiatives. The Paris-based International Energy Agency has strong doubts 
about shale gas in Europe pointing to the lack of drilling equipment, higher 
population density and environmental concerns. The only apologist of fracking 
in the European Union is Great Britain. London is strongly influenced by US 
companies trying to sell drilling equipment on the island.

In May 2013 the EU Cimate Commissioner Connie Hedegaard stressed that the 
geological and geographical factors of Europe shale did not make its 
large-scale exploitation as cost-effective as in North America. Finally, the 
Director of Strategy at the European Commission’s DG Environment Robin Meige 
has recently said that “in the most optimistic case, European shale gas can 
only compensate for declines in domestic conventional gas”. In other words, 
Europe must forget fantasies about repeating the US Shale Boom, writes online 
industry journal OilPrice.com.

Some Eastern European states are pushing forward the shale agenda for purely 
political reasons disregarding the interests of their own population. For 
instance, the government of Poland has painted itself into a corner by making 
loud and unsubstantiated statements about a shale gas “revolution”. Despite 
around 40 wells being drilled in the country since 2010 by oil majors, no 
company has announced that it can extract gas for commercial purposes. However 
heavy pro-fracking lobbying resulted in a dramatic corruption scandal. Seven 
officials were arrested last month in connection with licenses to explore and 
exploit  shale gas deposits.

At the same time Polish farmers have initiated massive protests against shale 
gas development. It seems they understand the situation far better than many 
professional energy analysts in London.

“If they go ahead with drilling thousands of meters underground, our water will 
be affected and there will be no more life in our fields,” villager Stefan 
Jablonski told IPS during a protest in Warsaw last week. “Not to mention that 
we might end up with no gas and no water too.”


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