During the oil market’s downturn from mid-2014 through 2016, the Bakken Shale, primarily located in North Dakota, was at the forefront of the collapse. The Bakken rig count dropped from a high of 219 to a low of 24 as production fell by 300 Mb/d, or 24%. For many, it was time to write off the Bakken as a one-hit wonder. But as drilling productivity increased and prices rebounded, so did production. Crude oil output is again above 1.1 MMb/d and the rig count has doubled from its low point. Today, we begin a blog series on recent developments in Bakken production, well productivity and market pricing, and discuss RBN’s latest production forecast for the play.
Production
The history of Bakken crude oil production goes way back to 1953, when the formation’s first well came online, according to the North Dakota Department of Mineral Resources. Meridian Oil in 1987 was the first company to attempt horizontal drilling in the Bakken, and in 2005 EOG Resources was a pioneer in combining horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing in Mountrail County, ND, unlocking a new era for the play. Over the following 10 years, Bakken production (blue-shaded area and left axis in Figure 1) grew at a substantial rate, reaching its peak production (so far) in late 2014 at 1.26 MMb/d. Like almost everywhere else, though, the collapse in oil prices that started in the latter half of 2014 took its toll on Bakken drilling and production through 2016. Finally, over the course of 2017, higher prices resulted in more rigs, more completed wells and the start of a Bakken rebound.
As producers in the Bakken reduced their capital expenditures in 2015-16, the Bakken’s oil rig count dropped from the low 200s to a low of 24 (orange line and right axis in Figure 1) in June 2016, with most of the decline occurring in 2015. Shortly thereafter, production fell too, dropping from 1.26 MMb/d at the end of 2014 to below 1 MMb/d by the summer of 2016, bottoming out at just under 960 Mb/d in December 2016 (see What Goes Up). Since then, crude oil prices have recovered to well above $55/bbl and we’ve seen the rig count steadily rise, averaging almost 50 rigs in the latter half of 2017. Bakken production climbed back over the 1 MMb/d mark in February 2017 and rose another 100 Mb/d or so over the next 10 months — putting the play’s output close to its peak level three-plus years ago.
About the song
“Sweet Caroline” was a 1969 hit single for singer/songwriter Neil Diamond, rising to #4 on the Billboard Hot 100, with record sales quickly topping one million. Diamond has said the inspiration for the song came from a magazine cover that featured Caroline Kennedy as a young child on a horse. That image stuck in his mind, and he wrote a song about it a few years later. He got to sing it to Caroline at her 50th birthday celebration in 2007.
The song is played regularly at many sporting events around the world. It is one of the songs featured at Boston Red Sox games, and has been showcased at Fenway Park in the middle of the eighth inning since 2002. Since the tragic Boston Marathon bombing in 2013, Diamond has donated royalties from the song to an organization that assists victims.
Diamond started writing songs in high school because he could get an immediate audience with girls playing guitar and singing his own songs. Just 10 credits shy of receiving his degree at New York University, he got an offer to work at Sunbeam Music Publishing in New York City for four months — the pay was $50 a week. Neil jumped at the opportunity; NYU would give him an honorary degree decades later. After a couple of unsuccessful single releases with the duo Neil & Jack for Columbia Records in 1962, he would toil writing songs in the Brill Building in New York for a few more years until he had his first Top 20 hit in 1965 with Jay & The Americans single of his song "Sunday and Me." In 1966, his career shifted into high gear when The Monkees released the Diamond-penned "I'm A Believer," which went to #1 on the charts. Neil’s first release as a solo artist was 1966's "Solitary Man," which rose to #55.
Neil Diamond was inducted into the Long Island Music Hall Of Fame in 2007, received the MusiCares Person of the Year Award in 2009, became a Kennedy Center Honoree in 2010, and was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2011. He has had 38 songs in the Top 10 so far in his career, and continues to perform to this day.