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- <text id=90TT2268>
- <link 93TG0136>
- <link 93TG0086>
- <link 90TT2884>
- <link 89TT0889>
- <title>
- Aug. 27, 1990: Gushing With Enthusiasm
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Aug. 27, 1990 Talk Of War
- The American Economy
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 46
- Gushing With Enthusiasm
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As the gulf crisis propels oil prices upward, U.S. wildcatters
- are eager to dig more wells but lack the means to do so
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Woodbury/Houston--With reporting by David
- Postman/Juneau
- </p>
- <p> As the price of crude oil headed toward $30 per bbl. last
- week, the smile on Bud Champlin's face broadened into a grin.
- The Oklahoma wildcatter has large oil holdings in south Texas
- and stands to make a sturdy profit from the run-up in oil
- prices that was precipitated by the Iraq crisis. Higher prices
- also made drilling ventures in west Texas and Oklahoma that he
- has been considering look better. "No one's happy with the
- events in the Middle East, but it's going to make for some good
- activity here," said Champlin. "If prices stay up, deals are
- going to get done."
- </p>
- <p> Oil drillers at first reacted cautiously to news from world
- petroleum markets. "Uncertainty is the problem," said Julian
- Martin, executive vice president of the Texas Independent
- Producers & Royalty Owners Association. "Too many people have
- got burned on the downside before." But as prices kept rising
- through the week, optimism began to spread across the oil
- patch. Drilling companies prepared to scout for workers. Supply
- firms hastily took inventories of equipment. Geologists pulled
- out maps and started searching for choice wildcatting sites.
- "The price jump is looking more permanent," said Houston oilman
- Michael Prescott. "Hopefully, good times are coming."
- </p>
- <p> That sentiment was echoed in Alaska, where oil money funds
- 85% of state spending. Declining tax revenues last month forced
- Governor Steve Cowper to slice $325 million from the budget,
- but last week there was brief talk of restoring the cuts.
- Cowper pleaded with residents not to gloat over the expected
- revenue windfall.
- </p>
- <p> Oil drilling and production have already been on the rise
- for several months as a result of a small hike in prices. In
- south Texas' Austin chalk formation near San Antonio, for
- example, dozens of new wells were sunk after engineers
- perfected a technique of drilling into rock formations
- horizontally. Across the U.S. last week, 992 drilling rigs were
- working, in contrast to 858 a year ago. Still, that number is
- far short of the 4,500 operating at the height of the drilling
- boom in 1981.
- </p>
- <p> But even if prices stay in the $25-$30 per bbl. range for
- several months and skeptics are convinced that higher prices
- are here to stay for a while, the oil industry will not be able
- to rev up a new drilling boom. The oil business has shrunk and
- wasted since the glory days of the early '80s. Thousands of
- geologists, engineers, roughnecks and roustabouts scattered to
- take other jobs. Equipment was auctioned off, sold to scrap
- dealers or left to gather dust among the tumbleweeds. Says
- Houston oilman George Mitchell: "The industry has been
- devastated."
- </p>
- <p> In west Texas' vast Permian Basin, the drilling capital of
- the continental U.S., barely 104 rigs were running last week,
- down from 600 nine years ago. U.S. Highway 80 between Midland
- and Odessa, which was once a thriving tent city of transient
- oil-rig workers, is now lined with half-empty warehouses.
- </p>
- <p> The slump was felt most acutely by the small independent
- oilmen who discover 50% of America's oil and gas. More than
- 8,000 independent companies--two-thirds of the total--have
- gone out of business in the past four years. The number of
- drilling contractors has declined 60%, and many others are on
- the edge of bankruptcy. "Drillers need a co-signer now to buy
- a beer," says Stephen Larkin of the Petroleum Equipment
- Suppliers Association.
- </p>
- <p> More worrisome is the shortage of young engineers and
- geologists to staff the drilling sites. "Everybody's looking
- for workers," said Bob Prock, who runs a recently reopened
- Texas A&M class for roughnecks in Abilene. Last spring only 205
- students at Texas A&M were enrolled in the petroleum
- engineering program; in 1983 there were 1,600. "Companies
- weren't hiring, so students looked for careers elsewhere,"
- explains department head Doug Von Gonten. At the University of
- Texas, a third of the graduate engineering students are
- foreigners who will probably return to their own countries.
- "Full-fledged machine operators are just not around," laments
- Gil Tausch, a Houston manufacturer of drilling equipment. The
- industry is so shorthanded that it could get only 300 or so
- more rigs drilling on short notice.
- </p>
- <p> Oil-field equipment is also scarce. For example, the
- high-strength steel pipe that is used to rotate drill bits has
- become extremely difficult to get because only one U.S. company
- still makes it.
- </p>
- <p> The problems of the financial industry will be another
- handicap. Banks and savings and loan institutions still
- suffering from the bad loans made to drillers in the early '80s
- are not going to rush to sign up new applicants. "Nobody's got
- any money," says Texas A&M economist Jared Hazleton. "Who's
- going to finance all the drilling? We won't attract
- neurosurgeons this time around." Ralph Carestio Jr., executive
- vice president of the NCNB bank in Texas, is more optimistic.
- Says he: "There won't be a credit crunch for deals that make
- sense. An awful lot of production loans will start to look good
- again if prices stabilize in the low 20s."
- </p>
- <p> Drillers are also not rushing to start work, because they
- know that most of the good wellsites have already been found.
- With only a few interruptions, U.S. oil production has been
- declining since 1970, when it peaked at 9.6 million bbl. a day.
- Output has dropped to 7 million bbl. a day. At the same time,
- known reserves are going down. In 20 years they have shrunk
- nearly one-third, from a high of 39 billion bbl. to 27 billion
- bbl. The drop-offs are particularly evident in Texas, where
- production is barely half the level of the early '70s.
- </p>
- <p> The industry is unlikely to reverse those trends unless
- environmental barriers are lowered. By some estimates, as much
- as 40% of potential energy reserves lie in environmentally
- sensitive areas, including vast gas deposits on the outer
- continental shelf. Some of the fields are tantalizingly close,
- like the huge Point Arguello field off Santa Barbara, Calif.
- Developed by 18 oil companies at a cost of $2 billion, it was
- set to begin pumping last year. But after the Exxon Valdez
- disaster, community groups got a vital permit revoked, and today
- the wells sit idle.
- </p>
- <p> Though President Bush has banned drilling along vast
- sections of the coasts, the pressures to open those areas, as
- well as Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, are likely
- to mount. The waning production from Prudhoe Bay, which
- accounts for 25% of U.S. output, will increase the need to open
- new regions for drilling.
- </p>
- <p> If prices stay high, the industry could get more oil from
- existing fields that are underutilized. Oil in the ground that
- may not be worth pumping if the price is $20 per bbl. can look
- more attractive if the price goes to $30 per bbl. One such
- source lies in the thousands of old wells, known as strippers,
- that produce less than 10 bbl. of crude each day. By some
- estimates, extraction techniques like water flooding or
- chemical injection could be used on those wells to add as much
- as 50 billion bbl. to the U.S. supply. "The technology is
- there. It just takes a reasonable price," says Dallas energy
- consultant Ed Vetter.
- </p>
- <p> The oil game has always been one of big risks and big
- rewards. The odds that a driller will hit a big oil or gas
- field when he starts digging are 100 to 1. "Drilling will
- always be one large gamble," said Michael Prescott in Houston.
- "Higher prices don't change the odds, but they do make the
- reward higher." That prospect seems likely to stir wildcatters
- to action across the oil patch.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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