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Vermilion Energy Inc T.VET

Alternate Symbol(s):  VET

Vermilion Energy Inc. is a Canada-based international energy producer. The Company seeks to create value through the acquisition, exploration, development, and optimization of producing assets in North America, Europe, and Australia. Its business model emphasizes free cash flow generation and returning capital to investors when economically warranted, augmented by value-adding acquisitions. The Company’s operations are focused on the exploitation of light oil and liquids-rich natural gas conventional and unconventional resource plays in North America and the exploration and development of conventional natural gas and oil opportunities in Europe and Australia. The Company operates through seven geographical segments: Canada, the United States, France, Netherlands, Germany, Ireland, and Australia. In Canada, the Company is a key player in the highly productive Mannville condensate-rich gas play. It holds a 100% working interest in the Wandoo field, offshore Australia.


TSX:VET - Post by User

Bullboard Posts
Post by Claude13on Oct 01, 2019 10:56am
212 Views
Post# 30181905

Shale Production heading Lower

Shale Production heading Lower I strongly recommend taking a look at the chartbook and drawing your own conclusions before reading the column and finding out mine. The charts tell a far more compelling story than I ever could: 

COLUMN-U.S. shale oil boom ends as lower prices take toll: Kemp - Reuters News
01-Oct-2019 13:55:05
John Kemp is a Reuters market analyst. The views expressed are his own
By John Kemp
LONDON, Oct 1 (Reuters) - U.S. oil production growth is decelerating gradually in response to lower prices, which should reduce predicted over-supply in 2020 and force the global oil market back towards balance.
 
Domestic crude production fell 276,000 barrels per day to 11.806 million bpd in July, according to data published by the U.S. Energy Information Administration on Monday.
 
The month-on-month reduction was entirely attributable to the Gulf of Mexico, where output fell 332,000 bpd, because many offshore platforms were shut due to the threat from tropical storm Barry.
 
Onshore production from the Lower 48 states, much of it from shale plays, actually increased by 63,000 bpd to a multi-decade high of 9.778 million bpd ("Petroleum supply monthly", EIA, Sept. 30).
 
Even onshore, however, there were signs the frenzied production growth of 2017 and 2018 has run out of momentum, as shale firms throttle back in response to lower prices (https://tmsnrt.rs/2o8imVk).
 
Onshore output was up by 1.149 million bpd in July compared with the same month a year earlier, but growth has slowed progressively from 1.900 million bpd in August 2018.
 
Of the major oil-producing states, Texas has reported the sharpest and most consistent slowdown, with more gradual decelerations in New Mexico and North Dakota.
 
The second U.S. shale oil boom (2017-2018) is ending for much the same reasons as the first (2012-2014): high prices encouraged over-production and global oil consumption growth cooled.
 
Experience suggests changes in oil prices filter through to drilling with an average delay of around 4 months and to output with a total lag of around 12 months.
 
Production in July, therefore, reflected the relatively high prices that prevailed before oil prices started to slump in October 2018.
 
Since then, as prices have tumbled, the number of rigs drilling for oil has fallen by 175 or 20%, according to oilfield services company Baker Hughes.
 
Lower prices and drilling activity should start to filter through into even slower growth in Lower 48 output towards the end of the year and into 2020.
 
Prices will remain low to enforce a U.S. drilling and production slowdown unless and until there are stronger indications of economic growth next year.
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