Occidental's Bakken Assets on the Table

Occidental Bakken Acreage
Occidental Bakken Acreage

Occidental Petroleum (NYSE: OXY) appears to be on the verge of divesting its acreage in the Williston Basin, according to a Bloomberg report, which cited "people with knowledge of the matter."

Currently, OXY has ~500,000 gross acres (~335,000 net) in the Williston Basin, and is working with investment bank Tudor Pickering Holt & Co. to sell the assets.

The company is in the process of restructuring, and could draw as much as $3-billion from the sale of its Williston Basin assets, according to Bloomberg's sources. In October of last year, OXY announced it would pursue "stategic alternatives" for the trade or sale of select midcontinent assets.

In 2012, OXY's net Bakken production was 14 Mboe/d, and in the first half of last year, it was 17 Mboe/d. Proved reserves at the end of 2012 were 87 Mmboe.

OXY has increased its focus on production from fields in the Permian Basin in Texas and New Mexico.

Vitesse Energy Grabs 19,000 Net Bakken Acres -Sept. 2014

Bakken Oil Workers
Bakken Oil Workers

Centennial, CO-based Vitesse Energy, LLC has purchased non-operated oil and gas assets in the Williston Basin from EnerVest Operating, LLC for $186.5-million. Included in the deal are working interests in approximately 600 wells and over 19,000 net acres in core Bakken Counties of Williams, McKenzie and Mountrail.

Vitesse CEO Bob Gerrity, said, “this acquisition represents a synergistic addition to our existing high-quality acreage in the core area of the Bakken and Three Forks play, and also provides new growth opportunities in developing areas of the field where technology continues to enhance returns.

The agreement was signed on August 1st, and closed on September 8th. Vitesse Energy, LLC is a subsidiary of U.S.-based holding company Leucadia National Corporation.

Read more at vitesseoil.com

ND Regulators Hold Hearing About Bakken Crude Treatment

Oil Rail Car Image
Oil Rail Car Image

Executives at top oil and gas companies in the Bakken are fighting back against North Dakota regulators, opposing the treatment of Bakken crude before it shipped via rail, according to the Wall Street Journal (WSJ). On Tuesday, the North Dakota Industrial Commission (NDIC) heard testimony from oil executives, who claim Bakken oil is sufficiently treated at the well site. The paper first reported the NDIC would be holding hearings in August concerning further treatment of Bakken crude, which has been linked to several explosions, resulting from train derailments. Just under 70% of Bakken crude is transported out of North Dakota by rail to coastal refining markets and hubs like Cushing, OK.

Read more: NDIC Considers Bakken Crude Treatment

Critics believe Bakken crude is dangerous, and needs to undergo stabilization. In similar plays like the Eagle Ford Shale in South Texas, crude is routinely stabilized before transport. At the hearing, representatives from the Dakota Resource Council, a nonprofit environmental group, asked for a moratorium on drilling permits, according to the paper.

The most appropriate action is probably somewhere between a moratorium on drilling permits and letting industry write its own ticket. As a matter of public safety, a thorough analysis of this issue is not unwarranted, but extreme measures to completely halt new development should be met with total disregard.

An issue not often discussed surrounding this issue is pipelines. North Dakota is woefully behind on its pipeline infrastructure. There are bascially two reasons - economics and regulation. It's cheap to transport oil by rail, and pipelines are expensive to build. For the companies that build pipelines, it can sometimes be difficult to secure commitments, and furthermore, state and federal government regulations have made building pipelines more challenging.

Ultimately, the transport of Bakken crude needs to be viewed from a standpoint of both safety and economics. It seems like common sense, and it would be nice if both the oil companies and the regulatory bodies could get on the same page in this respect.

Read more at wsj.com

Bentek Energy: ND Bakken Hit 1.2 Million b/d - Aug. 2014

ND Pump Jack Photo
ND Pump Jack Photo

Crude oil production in North Dakota's section of the Bakken Shale averaged nearly 1.2 million b/d in August, according to consultancy Bentek Energy, a unit of Platts. That's a 227,000 b/d increase over August 2013.

Combined oil production from the Bakken and South Texas' Eagle Ford Shale rose by more than 78,000 b/d in August 2014. That's a 3.1% increase over July.

Bakken oil prices are on the downward trend, and fell to the mid $80.00 per bbl mark around the first of September. Eagle Ford oil prices have been below $100.00 per barrel since the middle of August. 

According to Bentek Energy, increased production from shale will help keep storage levels at the Cushing, Oklahoma oil hub on pace with domestic refinery demand.

Continental Resources Appoints New President

Continental President & COO Jack Stark
Continental President & COO Jack Stark

Continental Resources appointed a new president and COO this week, following the reportedly unexpected resignation of Rick Bott last week.

Read more: Major Bakken Producer's President Quits - Continental Resources

The company provided few details when Bott left his position, other than he was leaving "to pursue other opportunities." Bott's replacement is Jack Stark, 59. Stark has been with Continental since 1992, and was formerly the company's Senior VP of Exploration.

Continental Stock Dips Slightly

In the midst of its leadership change, Continental also announced that it plans to increase its' portfolio-wide capital expenditures budget for 2014 to $4.55-billion ($2.85-billion in the Bakken). The reason for the increase has to do with Bakken well costs, which the company revealed this week are $10-million per well. That's more than $2-million per well, compared to the same time last year. This comes at at time when most operators in the area are reducing the well costs. According to Forbes, as a result of the higher than expected well costs, the company's stock dropped ~8% (about $5 per share) on Sept. 18th.

Continental is the largest oil producer in the Rockies,  Bakken Shale play and the SCOOP play combined. It is the second largest producer in the Bakken, behind Whiting Petroleum, which just recently acquired Kodiak Oil & Gas.