Soaring Natural Gas
Prices Spur Widespread Drilling
September 05, 2006 — By Daniel Lovering, Associated Press
INDIANA, Pa. — Deep in the wooded hills
of western Pennsylvania, a 50-foot-tall drilling rig rattles and whooshes
as it drives sections of metal pipe into the ground, one after another.
Hard-hatted workers have been operating the machine for less than a day,
but soon they will have bored through 4,000 feet of dirt and rock that
promises a rich reward -- natural gas trapped in layers of prehistoric
sediment.
Their company, Linn Energy LLC, carved out this small patch of earth just
days ago, building a gravel road into a forest of maples and oaks. In
another day or so, they will dismantle the rig, move it to another site
and start drilling again.
Linn is among dozens of companies that have been drilling natural gas
wells at historic rates across much of the Appalachian Basin, an area that
includes swathes of Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Kentucky and Virginia.
Soaring prices and demand, along with modern drilling technology, are
making such wells economically feasible.
The proliferation of drilling is not confined to the region, the
birthplace of the commercial oil industry. Oil and gas firms have stepped
up exploration and production in Texas, Colorado, Oklahoma and other
states in recent years.
But Appalachia is relatively untapped and contains low-volume natural gas
resources previously considered too difficult or expensive to exploit. It
is also a premium market close to major cities such as New York and
Philadelphia and a center for coal-bed methane, a fast-growing segment of
the natural gas industry.
"You can run your economics now," said Michael Linn, Linn Energy's chief
executive and a 26-year industry veteran. "The stabilized price, or at
least the bottom part of the price, makes economic sense. That's what's
kicked off this drilling."
Natural gas prices have held steady at $6 to $8 per thousand cubic feet
for about the past 18 months, Linn notes, while the relatively long life
span of wells in the area make the prospect of drilling more attractive.
Area wells may produce gas for as long as 20 years, unlike those in the
Midwest, which may last 10 years, or along the Gulf of Mexico, where wells
may expire after seven years, he said.
The favorable conditions have enlivened the market. In Pennsylvania, about
3,600 drilling permits were issued in the first six months of 2006. If
that pace continues, the number issued this year could eclipse 2005's
record of 6,042 by 20 percent.
"What's happening is you've got a perfect storm," said Linn, whose company
has acquired or drilled more than 4,000 wells in Pennsylvania, Oklahoma,
California, Virginia, West Virginia and New York since it was founded
three years ago.
The number of natural gas wells nationwide jumped by 34 percent between
1999 and 2004, from 302,421 to 405,048, according to the U.S. Energy
Information Administration. The number in Pennsylvania grew almost
twofold, from 23,822 to 44,227, during the same period.
"That's a very sizable ramp up," said Pavel Molchanov, an analyst with
Raymond James & Associates in Houston. "There are good reasons to believe
this will last for a long time."
But industry representatives say the regional natural gas expansion is no
gold rush. And it has been accompanied by problems such as lawsuits aimed
at restricting drilling and long-standing shortages of equipment and
workers.
"The profitability probably isn't as much as one would think because in
line with the increase in prices is the increase in demand in services and
drilling rigs and personnel," said Louis D. D'Amico, executive director of
the Independent Oil & Gas Association of Pennsylvania. "Everything has
just gone up astronomically, and we're having a tough time finding
people."
The energy sector has endured several boom-and-bust cycles in recent
decades. A prolonged slump that ended only in the past five years
discouraged a generation of would-be petroleum engineers from entering the
industry, leaving companies short-handed.
The cost of drilling also remains prohibitively high for individuals who
may want to extract gas. Linn Energy spends upward of $250,000 to drill a
well and install a well head, a small cluster of pipes and cylinders. Its
return on investment has risen to about 8 to 9 percent.
The process entails scouting land, acquiring leases, securing government
permits, conducting exploratory seismic studies and linking wells to
pipelines.
Some property owners have welcomed offers by companies to lease their land
and drill on it for two to five years. In return, they may get free gas
for their homes and an eighth of the well's gross proceeds.
George Ondo, an 82-year-old retired construction worker, was given a $100
signing bonus earlier this year to lease a patch of his Indiana County
property to Linn Energy. The company has 582 producing wells and 106
drilling sites in Indiana County alone.
"They're producing, but we haven't gotten any (royalties) yet," he said,
adding that he accepted the offer mainly for the free gas. "It doesn't
make an eyesore on our property. ... There's just pipes in the ground and
a meter."
While energy sector heavyweights such as Exxon Mobil Corp. have not
entered Appalachia, recent moves by large independent producers such as
the Oklahoma City-based Chesapeake Energy Corp. have drawn attention to
the area.
Last year, Chesapeake bought Columbia Natural Resources LLC of Charleston,
W.Va., for $2.2 billion, allowing it to develop natural gas reserves
throughout Appalachia and making it the third-largest reserve holder
behind Exxon Mobil and ConocoPhillips.
Richard Mason, editor of the trade publication Land Rig Newsletter, said
"the sector is undergoing a remarkable transformation," partly because of
technology developed for offshore drilling is increasingly being adapted
for use onshore.
The techniques include drilling horizontally, using "fracture stimulation"
-- blasting outward from a drilled hole to reach locked-away gas -- and
pumping water into holes to crack rock formations and free up gas, he
said. Some have been used since the 1980s.
Thomas A. Metarko, a senior geologist for Linn Energy, said local
competition is stiff as "everyone's trying to do the same thing."
"You can drill wells that were marginal in the past," he said. "A lot of
wells weren't drilled because the price wasn't there."
Source: Associated Press