Wednesday, January 14, 2015

THE OIL PRICE COLLAPSE DOMINO EFFECT: PRICE BUBBLE FOR DRILLING SAND IS ABOUT TO BURST



THE OIL PRICE COLLAPSE DOMINO EFFECT: PRICE BUBBLE FOR DRILLING SAND IS ABOUT TO BURST



January 13, 2015 

The booming drilling sand industry could be facing a slowdown as explorers and producers cut back on spending to combat weak oil prices, a new report by Moody’s said.

Moody’s said Tuesday that upstreams are likely to cut capital expenditures by 30 to 40 percent if oil fails to trade above $60 per barrel.

With crude falling by over 55 percent since July proppant producers are concerned that a drop off in investments could severely reduce demand for sand.

Drilling sand, or proppant, is often made with sand or man-made ceramic material and is used to hold fissures open during the hydraulic fracturing process.

Upstreams could either shelve new drilling plans all together or push for lower proppant prices to cut costs.


According to Houston-based services player Baker Hughes, the number of active drill rigs in the United States fell to 1,750 last week from 1,900 in November.

Moody’s said newer proppant intensive wells that use up to six times as much sand could help offset losses tied to curbed drilling activity.

“If you think about demand, you have a baseline demand from drilling and then demand from proppant intensity. It’s still too early for us to determine how much demand is being driven by added sand per well,” Moody’s analyst Karen Nickerson told Fuel Fix.