The Permian Basin may still be trending following a surge of A&D activity as production soars. But when it comes to low development costs and financial returns offshore Guyana trumps the Permian’s Delaware Basin.
That’s according to Hess Corp. (NYSE: HES) CEO John Hess, who spoke during a Citi Global Energy & Utilities Conference session May 15.
“The Delaware Basin is a great place to invest your money but Guyana is even better,” Hess said during the event, which was streamed live on the company’s website. He compared the first phase development of Liza offshore Guyana to an illustrative 50,000-net acre development in the Delaware Basin. “An EUR per well here is 56 million barrels where the Delaware Basin is 1.5 million to 2 million barrels.”
The unit development cost is about $7/bbl for Liza compared to about $12/bbl in the Delaware. Development capex is about $3.2 billion for Liza, but it’s more than three times that amount in the Delaware, according to Hess.
With eight production wells and a peak oil production of about 120,000 bbl/d, Liza also tops the Delaware Basin’s 1,400 wells and peak oil production of 86,000 bbl/d. As a result, Guyana has a “higher cash on cash return,” Hess said.
Plus, “you get your money back … in about three years in Guyana,” Hess said. “There is a lot of pre-investment necessary in the Delaware Basin, and you really don’t get your money back for about 10 years.”
The talk was delivered as companies continue to fine-tune their portfolios, seeking assets with the potential to deliver the best returns on investments.
The Permian Basin is the top oil-producing and second largest gas-producing region in the U.S. Production in the basin is set to hit about 3.3 MMbbl/d of oil and 225 MMcf/d of gas in June, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
But offshore Guyana is home to one of the world’s biggest set of oil discoveries in the last 10-20 years with more than 3 billion barrels of discovered resources so far. A study conducted by Calgary-based RS Energy Group showed Liza has the lowest breakeven cost of 50 top offshore developments and shale plays analyzed globally. Liza Phase 1 has a breakeven of about $35/bbl.
Hess, which has no assets in the Permian but does in the Bakken and Utica, has a 30% interest in the Exxon Mobil Corp. (NYSE: XOM)-operated Stabroek Block offshore Guyana where seven oil discoveries have been made. CNOOC Ltd. (25%) is also a partner. The block spans 6.5 million acres—the equivalent of 1,150 U.S. Gulf of Mexico blocks—and boasts low-entry costs when compared to the Permian.
“When you think about people buying 50,000 acres in the Permian for let’s say a billion and a half to $2 billion dollars, we paid $30 million to get running room with 6 million acres here,” Hess said.
Exxon Mobil plans to drill 18 more exploration prospects on the block, according to Hess, giving partners hope for further upside.
Next up is the Longtail prospect, following the production test at Liza-5 that Hess said should be finished within the next few weeks. Results from the test will help partners decide whether a third FPSO is needed on the block. Additional seismic and geological opportunities will also be identified and factored into the decision.
Hess also has plans with partners Chevron Corp. (NYSE: CVX) and Kosmos Energy Ltd. (NYSE: KOS) to drill a “Liza lookalike” on Block 42 in nearby Suriname.
“We have a lot of low-cost options of significant exploration potential in the Guyana space,” Hess said. “I think that’s going to be a differentiating story for us. “As [Hess CFO] John Rielly often talks about, when shale starts to peak say in 2025 Guyana is going to keep growing. We have a lot of runway to go.”
Hess considers its offshore Guyana assets one of the company’s “growth engines.” The company expects to start generating positive cash flow offshore Guyana in 2022.
Velda Addison can be reached at vaddison@hartenergy.com.
Recommended Reading
Report: Devon Energy Targeting Bakken E&P Enerplus for Acquisition
2024-02-08 - The acquisition of Enerplus by Devon would more than double the company’s third-quarter 2023 Williston Basin production.
EIA: E&P Dealmaking Activity Soars to $234 Billion in ‘23
2024-03-19 - Oil and gas E&Ps spent a collective $234 billion on corporate M&A and asset acquisitions in 2023, the most in more than a decade, the U.S. Energy Information Administration reported.
Global Partners Buys Four Liquid Energy Terminals from Gulf Oil
2024-04-10 - Global Partners initially set out to buy five terminals from Gulf Oil but the purchase of a terminal in Portland was abandoned after antitrust concerns were raised by the FTC and the Maine attorney general.
Ohio Oil, Appalachia Gas Plays Ripe for Consolidation
2024-04-09 - With buyers “starved” for top-tier natural gas assets, Appalachia could become a dealmaking hotspot in the coming years. Operators, analysts and investors are also closely watching what comes out of the ground in the Ohio Utica oil fairway.
UAE's ADNOC Recently Eyed BP as Takeover Target, Sources say
2024-04-11 - The Emirati giant, Abu Dhabi National Oil Co., considered all options when looking at BP, including buying a big stake.