Expo/Industry events for the next few months
Downstream Petrochemical Value Chain
November 15, 2018
Eagle Sticks Golf Club
2655 Maysville Pike
Zanesville, OH
For other events visit
http://www.shaledirectories.com/site/oil-and-gas-expo-information.html
Latest facts and a rumor from the Marcellus, Utica, Permian, Eagle Ford, Bakken and Niobrara Shale Plays
Shell E&P Pulling out of PA. Shell is looking to sell its acreage in Tioga County, PA. Shell has been assigning well site workers to other Shell operations in other parts of the world. (RUMOR)
ExxonMobil’s CEO Comments on the Permian. The world’s biggest public energy company doesn’t worry about size when it comes to potential deal-making.
The driver of any acquisition for Irving-based Exxon Mobil Corp. isn’t the scope of the target; it’s whether the company finds more value in it than the market does, said chief executive officer Darren Woods at the New Economy Forum in Singapore. The explorer is looking for opportunities to purchase assets even as it plans to expand output at existing fields from West Texas to Mozambique.
“We have the capacity to do any size opportunity that can come about, so it’s really a function of looking at the value that Exxon Mobil can extract, and how we would integrate that into our portfolio,” Woods said in a Bloomberg TV interview, while declining to comment on any specific targets.
Exxon spent $6 billion buying drilling rights from the Bass family in the Permian Basin last year and has been cited by analysts a potential purchaser of Endeavor Energy Resources LP, the basin’s largest privately-held oil producer — an acquisition that could total more than $10 billion. The oil major certainly has the capability to do big deals, with more than $3 billion of cash on its balance sheet and low debt, according to Bloomberg data.
Woods sees a bright future for the oil industry, with 2.5 billion people set to enter the middle class in the next 20 years. That means more liquefied natural gas for electricity, more petrochemicals for plastics, and more oil to fuel the heavy-duty transportation required to move consumer goods.
The company is seeking to grow production with a focus on Guyana, Brazil, Papua New Guinea, Mozambique and the Permian Basin in West Texas and New Mexico. Exxon has already surpassed its plan to mobilize about 30 rigs in the U.S. shale region by year’s end: the company had 38 machines drilling Permian wells as of last week, a 40 percent increase in just six months.
Still, Woods said the company remains committed to not rushing development in the region. West Texas Intermediate crude prices had risen 26 percent this year through early October before giving back nearly all of the gains in the past month.