API JAS-2015 2014 JOINT ASSOCIATION SURVEY ON DRILLING COSTS (62nd Edition).pdf
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1、 JOINT ASSOCIATION SURVEY ON 2013 DRILLING COSTS Sponsored by AMERICAN PETROLEUM INSTITUTE INDEPENDENT PETROLEUM ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA MID-CONTINENT OIL please feel free to contact Franziska Economy in APIs Statistics Department at EconomyFapi.org or 202-682-8039. Washington, D.C. March 2015 Copyri
2、ght 2015 The American Petroleum Institute ix UNDERSTANDING THE JAS DATA On a regular basis, the API receives well drilling and completion data from the IHS Energy Group, which is added to the well drilling database, the Dynamic Well Data System (DWDS). The DWDS, insofar as possible, contains reasona
3、ble and reliable data and is, to our knowledge, the most comprehensive and detailed source for domestic oil and gas drilling activity available. This database is a crucial tool that has been used by the API Statistics Department for over sixty years to produce the publication, the Joint Association
4、Survey on Drilling Costs (JAS).This report is the leader in delivering drilling and completion expenditures data to the oil and gas markets. To improve reader comprehension of the JAS data, it is important to point out that the JAS contains most, but not all, of the wells completed in the U.S. durin
5、g the survey year. This is due to the often significant time lag from months to years between when a well is completed and when it is reported to API and added to the DWDS. Because of this delay, a fraction of the wells completed during a survey year are inevitably reported to us after the JAS is pu
6、blished. In order to capture this fraction of as-of-yet unreported wells completed in the survey year, API publishes estimates of wells completed and corresponding footage drilled four times a year in the Quarterly Well Completion Report (QWCR). According to the most recent QWCR, Fourth Quarter 2014
7、, the estimated number of wells drilled in 2013 is 45,039. The reported number of wells contained in the 2013 JAS is 42,200, a difference of 2,839 wells. Thus, to provide data users with the most accurate measure of 2013s complete drilling activity, the 2,839 estimated wells, along with their footag
8、e 9.8 million feet and expenditures $9.3 billion are incorporated into the Executive Summary and its two corresponding tables. The rest of the JAS publication refers solely to the 39,707 Total US Wells, omitting sidetrack wells and Quarterly Well Completion Report estimates. This use of both data se
9、ts provides a full description of the industrys drilling operations in a given year. Additionally, it is important to note that while the costs reported to API reflect the drilling and completion costs for each well, the wells included in the report are only ones that have been completed to the Chri
10、stmas tree stage in the current survey year. This prevents a well drilled over more than one year from appearing in multiple JAS reports. Copyright 2015 The American Petroleum Institute xi EXECUTIVE SUMMARYDrilling expenditures decreased slightly as the oil and gas industry spent less annually drill
11、ing and equipping wells in the U.S. in 2013 than it did in 2012. According to the 2013 Joint Association Survey on Drilling Costs (JAS), the industry spent 0.76 percent less in 2013 to drill and equip wells in the U.S. than it did in 2012. Total drilling expenditures were estimated to be $147.7 bill
12、ion in 2013, compared to $148.9 billion during the previous year. In addition, the number of wells decreased by 3.24 percent and total footage increased slightly by 0.6 percent. Exploratory well expenditures in 2013 amounted to approximately $7.94 billion, a slight increase of 0.61 percent from the
13、previous years $7.88 billion. Exploratory oil spending decreased 37.4 percent from $4.9 billion in 2012 to an estimated $3.1 billion in 2013, while exploratory gas expenditures were estimated at $2.1 billion in 2013, up 113.8 percent from 2012s $1.0 billion. Development well expenditures were estima
14、ted to be $139.6 billion in 2013 compared with 2012s $140.5 billion, a 0.65 percent decrease. Spending increased 6.8 percent to $93.0 billion in 2013 for development oil wells, compared to $87.0 billion in 2012. Development gas spending at $40.8 billion was down 13.4 percent compared to last years $
15、47.2 billion. In 2013, the industry spent more drilling for oil than for natural gas. In 2013, oil expenditures accounted for 65.1 percent of the total drilling expenditures up from last years 62.0 percent; gas expenditures accounted for 29.1 percent down from 2012s 32.4 percent; and dry hole expend
16、itures reached 5.8 percent of total drilling expenditures up slightly from the past years 5.6 percent. Total Wells, Footage Drilled in 2012, 14,404 shale wells were drilled, totaling an estimated 188.8 million feet and $84.3 billion in expenditures. The decrease in number of wells from 2012 to 2013
17、is mainly due to a decrease in shale-gas wells. 2009-2013 Trend of Estimated Shale-Oil & Shale-Gas Well Costs Table 1 (Footage in feet. Costs in thousand dollars.) Year Number of Wells Total Footage Total Cost Average Depth/Well Average Cost/Well 2009 7,727 77,834,046 $53,124,400 10,073 $6,875 2010
18、10,204 115,047,714 $38,751,979 11,275 $3,798 2011 14,403 176,977,851 $70,949,778 12,288 $4,926 2012 14,404 188,844,670 $84,322,420 13,111 $5,854 2013 13,506 190,853,778 $73,685,784 14,131 $5,456 Total 60,244 749,558,059 $320,834,361 12,442 $5,326 * Does not include sidetrack wells or QWCR estimates.
19、 Copyright 2015 The American Petroleum Institute 6 2009-2013 Shale & NonShale Well Expenditures Figure 5 2009-2013 Shale-Oil & Shale-Gas Expenditures Figure 6 $20 $40 $60 $80 $100 $120 $140 $160 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 (inBillions)Non-Shale Shale $10 $20 $30 $40 $50 $60 $70 $80 $90 2009 2010 2011 2
20、012 2013 (inBillions)Shale-Oil Shale-Gas Copyright 2015 The American Petroleum Institute 7 2013 Estimated Shale-Oil & Shale-Gas Well Costs, by State Table 2 (Footage in feet. Costs in thousand dollars.) State Number of Wells Total Footage Total Cost Average Depth/Well Average Cost/Well Arkansas W W
21、W 9,156 $2,570 Colorado W W W 11,134 $4,417 Illinois W W W 2,769 $155 Kansas W W W 4,074 $1,126 Kentucky W W W 4,886 $1,813 Louisiana W W W 16,987 $7,850 Michigan W W W W W Mississippi W W W 18,687 $3,115 Montana W W W 16,842 $5,395 New Mexico 514 6,414,543 $2,568,950 12,480 $4,998 North Dakota 1,99
22、8 37,917,818 $12,768,987 18,978 $6,391 Ohio W W W 13,746 $6,246 Oklahoma 622 9,017,888 $3,104,328 14,498 $4,991 Pennsylvania 1,340 15,836,586 $8,497,855 11,818 $6,342 South Dakota W W W 13,887 $4,368 Texas 6,517 92,362,059 $35,042,103 14,172 $5,377 Utah 130 1,235,378 $302,360 9,503 $2,326 Virginia W
23、 W W 8,648 $4,078 West Virginia 380 4,714,081 $2,442,464 12,405 $6,428 Wyoming W W W 11,848 $7,041 Total 13,506 190,853,778 $73,685,784 14,131 $5,456 W-Data is withheld to avoid disclosure of individual company data. * Does not include sidetrack wells or QWCR estimates. 2013 Estimated Shale-Oil & Sh
24、ale-Gas Well Costs, by Basin Table 3 (Footage in feet. Costs in thousand dollars.) Basin Number of Wells Total Footage Total Cost Average Depth/Well Average Cost/Well Anadarko Basin 546 7,928,952 $2,950,811 14,522 $5,404 Appalachian Basin 2,012 24,257,346 $12,615,033 12,056 $6,270 Arkla Basin W W W
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