ExxonMobil announced plans to triple their total daily production to more than 600,000 oil-equivalent barrels by 2025 from its operations in the Permian Basin in West Texas and New Mexico. Additionally, tight oil production from the Delaware and Midland basins will increase five-fold in the same period.
This new announcement follows recent changes in the U.S. corporate tax rate which has created an environment conducive for increased future capital investments, including ExxonMobil’s plan to spend more than $2 billion on their recently acquired crude oil terminal in Wink, Texas, which is strategically positioned to handle Permian crude oil and condensate from the Delaware basin. The project will support short-term construction jobs and long-term positions.
The company plans to expand the Wink terminal and add key infrastructure upgrades that will efficiently move ExxonMobil and third-party production from the Delaware, Central and Midland basins in the Permian to ExxonMobil’s operations and other market destinations in the Gulf Coast region.
To date, ExxonMobil is one of the most active operators in the Permian Basin, a close neighbor to our own Eagle Ford Shale play. It seems, with this new announcement, that is unlikely to change in the near future.
“ExxonMobil’s Permian production growth and continued investment puts the U.S. one step closer to becoming the world’s largest oil producer,” says Omar Garcia, President of STEER. “The investments made in the Permian along with the $9.3 billion ethane plant currently under construction in the Gulf Coast are major projects that will benefit Texas and our nation as a whole.”
ExxonMobil has doubled its footage drilled per day on horizontal wells in the Permian since early 2014 and reduced per-foot drilling costs by about 70 percent. Through production growth that is capital efficient, the increased volumes in production will be driven by reduced drilling costs, technology improvements and expanded acreage.
ExxonMobil has amassed a large, highly contiguous acreage position, located in the prolific, multi-layered oil zones of the Delaware and Midland basins. Through its $6 billion Bass companies acquisition in 2017, ExxonMobil added an estimated resource of 3.4 billion barrels of oil equivalent, with upside potential in multiple additional prospective horizons. A large majority of the development drill wells from the purchase are projected to have attractive returns at oil prices below current levels.
Combined with the operating experience it’s gained from drilling over 5,000 horizontal unconventional wells and the use of cutting-edge technology, ExxonMobil has the ability to efficiently and profitably develop this region.
“Our geographic and competitive advantages in the Permian position the company for strong growth and long-term value creation,” said Sara Ortwein, president of ExxonMobil’s XTO Energy subsidiary. “We can deliver profitable production at a range of prices, and we have logistics and technology advantages over our competitors.”
The increased production will provide low-cost supply and feedstocks to ExxonMobil downstream and chemical operations in Baytown, Beaumont and Mt. Belvieu, Texas, and Baton Rouge, Louisiana. These facilities manufacture high-value products, including polyethylene to meet growing demand for high-performance plastics and advanced synthetic lubricant base stock products.
ExxonMobil previously announced plans to build and expand manufacturing facilities in the U.S. Gulf region as part of its Growing the Gulf initiative.
Growing the Gulf projects include a new ethane steam cracker at the company’s integrated Baytown facility that will provide ethylene feedstock for two new high-performance polyethylene units at the nearby Mont Belvieu facility. A new production unit at the company’s polyethylene plant in Beaumont will increase the plant’s capacity by 65 percent, and expansions at Baytown and Beaumont refineries will add more than 300,000 barrels per day of light crude processing capacity.