Elsewhere today, I looked at a new rig productivity index
that attempts to quantify how much more efficient our
domestic onshore exploration and production companies have
become.
Anadarko Petroleum (NYSE: APC) is one of the
prime examples of how these companies are
doing more with less.
This week, Anadarko released its third-quarter results,
which saw volumes hit a record 616,000 barrels of oil
equivalent per day. The company is on target for 7% full-year
production growth, while capital spending is down 35% from
2008. A quiet hurricane season is always helpful, but
operating performance is really the key here.
Anadarko's results in Colorado's Wattenberg field continue
to amaze. In 2007, the firm was running five rigs in the
field and drilling around 60 wells per quarter. This quarter,
Anadarko ran just three rigs, but drilled 70 wells. The
production stream there is about 40% liquids, so this
lightning-quick drilling operation is highly economic
today.
That brings up another point. This summer, I wrote about
Apache 's (NYSE: APA)
beautiful balancebetween oil and natural gas production,
contrasting it to the gassy output of Anadarko and
EOG Resources (NYSE: EOG). Anadarko has
achieved a very rapid shift in its production mix, moving
from 36% liquids (i.e. oil and natural gas liquids like
propane and isobutane) in the first quarter to 42% liquids
this quarter.
Aside from the Wattenberg, Anadarko is turning to other
oily onshore plays such as the Eagle Ford shale, which has
also captivated the likes of
Petrohawk Energy (NYSE: HK),
Pioneer Natural Resources (NYSE: PXD), and
Saint Mary Land & Exploration (NYSE:
SM).
Then, of course, there's the offshore, which has drawn a
lot of attention to Anadarko's exploratory expertise this
year. This quarter, the company brought its year-to-date
deepwater discovery count to seven. Vito was drilled with
partners
Royal Dutch Shell and
StatoilHydro (NYSE: STO) in the Gulf of
Mexico, while Venus opened a new frontier in the Sierra
Leone-Liberian Basin.
With the high-impact exploration program that Anadarko
will continue to execute in the future, I can hardly blame
the company for taking a cautious approach to hedging in
2010. The firm has collared 75% of its expected natural gas
production, and about 70% of its crude oil output. With
regard to natural gas in particular, Anadarko said it sees "a
lot of supply and demand fundamentals that make us want to be
hedged in that commodity." Better safe than sorry in this
game.
Anadarko is rated a respectable four stars in
Motley Fool CAPS. Think the firm's got fireworks ahead,
or that it's making a mistake in hedging so much future
production? Sound off right over
here.
This article was originally published as
Everything's Adding Up at Anadarkoon
Fool.com
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