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The Real Shale Revolution

The Real Shale Revolution thumbnail

By now everyone knows the shale revolution was made possible by the combination of horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing.

But although fracking has captured the popular imagination, and is often used as a synonym for the whole phenomenon, horizontal drilling was actually the more recent and important breakthrough.

Mastery of horizontal drilling around 1990, originally for oil rather than gas exploration, was the decisive innovation that lit the long fuse for the shale revolution that erupted 15 years later.

“Horizontal drilling is the real marvel of engineering and scientific innovation,” David Blackmon wrote in Forbes magazine last year (“Horizontal drilling: a technological marvel ignored”, January 2013).

“While impressive in its own right, the main innovations in fracking have been beefing up the generating horsepower to accommodate horizontal wells rather than vertical ones, and refining of the fluids used to conserve water and create better, longer lasting fractures in the target formation.”

Fracking has captured the imagination because it is controversial, sounds sinister and like an expletive, makes for good headlines, according to Blackmon.

But that has obscured the far more important role played by horizontal drilling in enabling oil and gas to be produced from previously inaccessible rock formations, revolutionising energy output and even international relations.

Dawn Of Fracking

Fracking has been in widespread use for more than 50 years. U.S. companies began to experiment with using fracturing to release coal seam gas in the 1940s.

“The basic principle behind underground coal gasification seeks to find an economically feasible process of burning coal seams that are so situated that they do not lend themselves to being mined profitably,” the New York Times explained in 1954 (“New tests made to gasify coal”, Oct. 31, 1954).

“The gases captured from burning the coal seams would eventually be turned into usable fuels for commercial or industrial power.”

“The test will be performed by hydraulic fracturing,” the paper noted, “in an effort to open up air passages inside the coal seam” to make it burn more freely and produce a greater quantity of natural gas.

“Waste petroleum oil bolstered with napalm is pumped into the well by high-pressure pumps. Sand is mixed with the oil. Pressure as high as 12,000 pounds per square inch can be built up.”

“The tremendous pressure cracks the formation and the penetrating liquid oozes into the open channels,” the Times observed. “Kerosene is added to thin the fracturing liquid and the opening is pumped out. The sand remains to prop open the fractures.”

In the next few decades, hydraulic fracture treatments, as well as treatments using concentrated acids to shatter carbonate formations, were performed on tens of thousands of ordinary oil and gas wells across the United States and in other parts of the world (though the use of napalm was eventually phased out).

The initial experiments were conducted by the U.S. Bureau of Mines, in conjunction with oilfield services firm Halliburton and others – underscoring the critical role which the federal government has played in association with private enterprise in fostering innovation at every stage in the energy revolution.
The Turning Point

Horizontal drilling is both newer and older than fracking.

The first horizontal wells were drilled more than 2,000 years ago to produce water on Iran’s central plateau and in Egypt’s Western Desert at the time of the pharaohs.

Horizontal wells were noted by the ancient Greek historian Polybius, who explained how they were used to increase water production. The history of horizontal drilling was related in the January 1996 special edition of Schlumberger’s “Middle East Well Evaluation Review: Horizontal Highlights,” which is worth reading in full.

The modern history of horizontal drilling dates back around 100 years. The first patent for a horizontal drilling technique was issued in 1891. The main application was for dental work but the applicant noted the same techniques could be used for heavy-duty engineering.

The first true horizontal oil well was drilled in Texas in 1929. Another one was drilled in Pennsylvania in 1944.

China tried horizontal drilling in 1957 and the Soviet Union tried the technique in the 1960s and 1970s, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) (“Drilling sideways: a review of horizontal well technology and its domestic application”, April 1993).

But horizontal drilling was expensive, costing up to three times as much as conventional vertical wells, and therefore remained rare.

The turning point when horizontal drilling went mainstream can be dated quite precisely.

“Before 1990, horizontal drilling was not a popular technique. The oil industry only drilled horizontal wells as a last resort,” Schlumberger explained.

“The global total for 1989 was just over 200 horizontal wells. In 1990, that total leapt to almost 1,200 wells, with nearly 1,000 of these drilled in the United States.”

The extra cost for drilling horizontally had shrunk to just 17 percent, according to the EIA, as more companies experimented with the technique and benefited from learning curve effects.

To drill horizontal wells quickly and cost effectively, the industry had to master the use of flexible drill pipe and steerable down-hole motors, as well as technology enabling drillers to monitor changes in the rock in real time so the well bore can be kept within the target formation.

The Long Fuse

Most oil and gas is found in sedimentary basins where the rock formations underground are layered like a stack of pancakes.

The most promising formations may only be a few hundred feet thick, even if they extend for hundreds of square miles in area.

For that reason, vertical wells only come into contact with the reservoir rock for a few hundred feet. By contrast, a well drilled through the target formation horizontally can contact the reservoir for hundreds of metres or even several kilometres.

Originally, horizontal drilling was restricted to formations which were hard to produce because they had low permeability (like shale and chalk), or were nearing exhaustion, or where conventional drilling produced too much water too quickly and not enough oil and gas.

French oil firm Elf Aquitaine drilled the first modern horizontal wells in southwest France and in the Mediterranean off Italy in the early 1980s. BP used horizontal wells at Prudhoe Bay in Alaska to minimise unwanted water and gas intrusions into its oil reservoir.

But from 1990, the technique started to proliferate. Most of the early wells were drilled into the Austin Chalk in Texas at the Giddings Field and Pearsall Field, as many as 850 in 1990 alone. Most of the rest were drilled into North Dakota’s Bakken, according to the EIA.

By August 1990, horizontal wells were producing 70,000 barrels per day of oil in Texas.

In 1986, Oman’s national oil company drilled three horizontal wells into a problematic reservoir, with disappointing results. But from 1990, a much more ambitious and successful programme was begun. By the end of 1994, Petroleum Development Oman had drilled more than 200 horizontal wells.

In the early 1990s, more than 50 horizontal wells were also drilled in Abu Dhabi, and Saudi Arabia also embraced the technique for its depleted Watra oil field in the Neutral Zone shared with Kuwait, according to Schlumberger.
Ambitions Fulfilled

The tremendous potential of horizontal drilling was recognised right from the start. “Success led some people to speculate that by the end of the century 50 percent of all new wells drilled in the United States would be horizontal,” Schlumberger wrote in 1996.

That prediction turned out to be premature – but only by a few years. The number of oil and gas wells being drilled horizontally overtook the combined number of vertical and directional (slanted) wells for the first time in March 2010.

Two-thirds of oil and gas wells are now drilled horizontally, according to the weekly rig counts published by oilfield services company Baker Hughes.

It took roughly a decade of experimentation, between 1993 and 2003, to work out how to combine horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing in the Barnett shale in Texas, an approach pioneered by George Mitchell at the eponymous Mitchell Energy.

Many of the improvements developed producing gas from the Barnett were then applied back to oil production from North Dakota’s Bakken and then the Eagle Ford shale in Texas.

From 2003, however, the number of wells drilled horizontally has grown exponentially. In fact, horizontal wells have largely replaced vertical and directional wells, on account of their greater reservoir contact and efficiency.

The shift was foreseen by Schlumberger: “In simple terms, horizontal wells allow us to do things more efficiently than vertical wells. It would be short-sighted to ignore a technique which offers improved drainage in typical reservoirs and more discrete compartments in complex reservoirs, while helping reduce gas and water coning.”
Lessons Learned

Commentators often write about the shale revolution as if it began in Texas in the early years of the 21st century. But no revolution emerges from nowhere. The fuse for the shale revolution was lit at least at decade earlier.

The authors of articles about horizontal drilling back in the late 1980s and mid-1990s would have been surprised it is seen as a 21st century phenomenon given how much of the revolution had been anticipated 20 years earlier.

Commentators, particularly those sceptical about fracking, also draw a sharp distinction between “good” conventional oil and gas well and “bad” unconventional fracked ones.

But history shows there is no clear division between conventional and unconventional oil and gas production.

Fracking and horizontal drilling have both been widely applied in both conventional and unconventional contexts.

Techniques pioneered to extract oil and gas from conventional but complicated formations have then been applied back into unconventional contexts, and vice versa.

Finally, the history of fracking and horizontal drilling demonstrates the long lead times needed to perfect and diffuse new technologies.

New technologies often go unrecognised, at least by those outside the field, for years before they burst into mainstream discourse.

So the next generation of technologies which will revolutionise oil and gas production are probably already out there being practised on a small scale – waiting to be improved and discovered more widely.

RIGZONE



16 Comments on "The Real Shale Revolution"

  1. Perk Earl on Mon, 14th Jul 2014 12:49 pm 

    “But history shows there is no clear division between conventional and unconventional oil and gas production.”

    First it started with tossing in all other oils in with crude to make oil sound like it was going up in spite of a plateau in crude production.

    But now we have an opening being pushed that allows us to be so confused about what is and isn’t unconventional oil, we might as well toss into the same pile with conventional.

    This is how that got decided: “I’m so confused, I really don’t know the difference anymore. Tell you what, as long as it’s oil I don’t care. Just move the merchandise and let’s agree any and all oil is really very good and much the same (no matter how much more it cost to extract or how much higher the decline rates are).

    We are now firmly in the monkey speak, hear and see no evil post cheap oil era.

  2. eugene on Mon, 14th Jul 2014 1:14 pm 

    Horizontal drilling started in the late 1920s and has been used since. Both fracking and horizontal drilling have been around for a long time. Both came into their own when cheap conventional oil ended. I agree with Perk, we are truly in the era of “monkey speak”. I wish the mass media reporters/writers (?) were as smart as monkeys. They would at least be entertaining instead of just stupid.

  3. Nony on Mon, 14th Jul 2014 1:34 pm 

    Great article.

  4. J-Gav on Mon, 14th Jul 2014 1:49 pm 

    Perk – True. And I’m sure you also noticed that there is exactly zero mention of sky-rocketing exploration and extraction costs in this pathetic attempt to bring public opinion around to the future wonders technology is supposed to work on our energy predicament.

  5. rockman on Mon, 14th Jul 2014 2:05 pm 

    True Eugene but it really did blossom in the 90’s in the Austin Chalk trend in Texas. “…horizontal drilling…was the decisive innovation that lit the long fuse for the shale revolution that erupted 15 years later.” Obviously that isn’t true. The oil in both the Bakken an Eagle Ford, the prime shale plays today, was known for decades. So why didn’t EFS, which is separated by just a few hundred feet vertically from the AC in the same area, also boom in the 90’s? Easy answer: because it wasn’t economical to do so for $30/bbl oil. Had the right tech and knew the oil was there. Just as we did for the AC which is why it became the hottest oil play on the planet in the 90’s.

    “…the main innovations in fracking have been beefing up the generating horsepower to accommodate horizontal wells rather than vertical ones, and refining of the fluids used to conserve water and create better, longer lasting fractures in the target formation.” Utter BS. First, in 1978, 34 years ago, I did my first “mega-frac”: 500,000 pounds of sand in a carbonate shale in a vertical well. A great deal more hp then the are using on most individual fracs today. They might do 20+ francs in current hz wells but the hp for each of those is much less than I used. In fact, it isn’t impossible that one of the frac trucks I used is still in service today. Frac trucks haven’t gotten bigger. They can’t because they have to be road legal. They way you generate more hp for your frac is to pull more trucks onto the well site. It isn’t uncommon to have 10+ trucks on location.

    As far as better fluids? Yes…been tweaked some but not a game changer by any means IMHO. And “longer lasting fracs”? I have no idea what they mean: the frac produces as long as the reservoir gives up its storage.

  6. meld on Mon, 14th Jul 2014 2:45 pm 

    No peak oil because we can make oil in a lab n shit.

    In other news I see BP say there is 53 years of oil left. Not 53 years till peak, 53 years left…. Possibly the scariest thing any oil company has ever said EVER! dressed up as some macabre piece of hopium.

  7. Nony on Mon, 14th Jul 2014 3:08 pm 

    Rockman:

    Quite a few articles have discussed how innovation occurred in the Barnett. You gloss over that big time.

    There was a lot of innovation in the Austin Chalk. But it was NOT mostly combined horizontal/fracking. It was mostly one or the other. MOSTLY. I posted a link to this previously.

    Oh…and Marecellus. How does that fit into your “everyone knew about it and it just needed price” meme? Hmm?

  8. keith on Mon, 14th Jul 2014 3:08 pm 

    i thought it was o% interest rates that caused the shale revolution?

  9. shortonoil on Mon, 14th Jul 2014 4:05 pm 

    When shale goes into catastrophic decline over the next few years it won’t cost the author of this article one cent. He will be shorting EOG, Continental, and Pioneer stock long before you have even heard about it. In the mean time, PUMP, PUMP, PUMP.

  10. Tom S on Mon, 14th Jul 2014 5:15 pm 

    Peak Earl:

    “First it started with tossing in all other oils in with crude to make oil sound like it was going up in spite of a plateau in crude production.”

    From what I remember, they were always included. Colin Campbell’s graphs from the early 2000s almost always were for all liquids. ASPO’s projections and graphs usually included all liquids. Kjell Aleklett’s most recent book (“Peeking at Peak Oil”) included all liquids.

    Most of those graphs over the years from Campbell, aspo, etc, included things like extra-heavy oil, tar sands, deepwater, polar, natural gas liquids, etc. Some of them were labelled “all liquids”.

    -Tom S

  11. M1 on Mon, 14th Jul 2014 6:47 pm 

    5 Million Gallons of Water Polluted with Every Well.

    This is a Revolution in CRIMINAL Behavior.

  12. Norm on Mon, 14th Jul 2014 10:13 pm 

    Ya, make oil in a lab. in a test tube. just mix baking soda and vinegar. no more oil shortage.

  13. GregT on Tue, 15th Jul 2014 12:49 am 

    ‘Tom S’,

    Time to launder the sock.

  14. Beery on Tue, 15th Jul 2014 5:37 am 

    One would think that a financial analyst like John Kemp would be able to figure out that the shale revolution has more to do with price than technology. But maybe I underestimate the need of many folks to stick their heads in the sand rather than accept an unwelcome reality.

  15. Dredd on Tue, 15th Jul 2014 5:46 am 

    It is not a revolution, rather, it is an obvious act of desperation and further evidence of social dementia.

    The apparent success of that desperation provided by the prestitutes is so typical of the Oil-Qaeda propaganda matrix.

  16. Nony on Tue, 15th Jul 2014 4:35 pm 

    I’ve been reading some of Kemp’s articles. He is top notch.

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