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<text id=90TT2268>
<link 93TG0136>
<link 93TG0086>
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<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>