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Well Stimulation Materials to 2016

As Quoted In Upstream Pumping Solutions 


 





Study #: 2867
Document Type: Industry Study
Date Published: Mar-2012
Format:
   Full study: PDF
   Section, Pages, Tables and Charts: HTML
Pages: 329
Full Study Price: $5,100.00
       

    

Growth will be driven by continued gains in hydraulic fracturing technology designed to boost well productivity, especially for proppants and the fluids used to deliver them into formation fractures.

US demand to rise 10.2% annually through 2016

US demand for well stimulation materials is projected to increase more than 10 percent annually to nearly $12 billion in 2016. Growth will be sustained by continued advances in hydraulic fracturing technology designed to increase the productivity of both new and existing wells. Ongoing growth in horizontal drilling activity and development of shale resources will boost demand for proppants and the fluids used to deliver them into formation fractures. In the early portion of the forecast period, use in oil well drilling will provide most of the impetus for growth, as oil prices are high by historical standards and natural gas prices are not. However, shale gas development activity was strong in 2009, 2010, and 2011, despite low prices.

Shale gas producers to use more well stimulation

Growth in shale plays has been supported by companies looking to establish a shale gas presence and the desire of existing producers to develop already acquired leases, as well as by hedges on production made when prices were high. Through the forecast period, shale gas producers will continue to embrace innovations such as multiple-well drilling pad systems and advanced hydraulic fracturing materials in order to improve drilling efficiencies and increase per-well output, all of which will benefit well stimulation material demand.

Well stimulation to grow at a decelerating pace

Well stimulation technologies have had a commercial presence for more than 60 years, but for much of that time these techniques were used fairly selectively. A number of factors have combined to transform well stimulation in the US from a niche technology to one of the most common oilfield activities. Technological advances have improved well stimulation techniques to the point that their use -- and cost -- is nearly always justified by increased well productivity. Going forward, gains for well stimulation materials will remain strong, despite some deceleration in growth.

A decade or two ago, most wells drilled in the US were not fractured. That is no longer the case. Moreover, much of the recent growth in demand for well stimulation materials has been attributable to the emergence of horizontal drilling and multistage fracturing. Horizontal drilling allows for greater reservoir contact, and therefore faster and fuller well productivity. Multistage fracturing allows for a larger number of fractures to be created at specific locations within a single wellbore. Where fracturing jobs usually included two or three stages, they can now include up to a few dozen stages. Although it is expected that the number of stages per fracturing job will continue to grow, it is anticipated that this growth will be slower than the pace seen in the past several years.

Study Scope

This study analyzes the $7.4 billion US well stimulation material industry. It presents historical demand data for the years 2001, 2006 and 2011, and forecasts for 2016 and 2021 by product (e.g., proppants, fluid additives, base fluid materials, industrial gases) and regional market (Southern, Midwestern, Eastern, Western).

The study also considers market environment factors, details industry structure, evaluates company market shares and profiles 40 industry players, including CARBO Ceramics, Fairmount Minerals and FTS International.

 










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