API sees US drilling activity picking up with recovery
by Cathy Landry, American Petroleum Institute
The estimated number of US oil and natural gas wells and dry holes completed in 2009 -- 39,068 -- was 37 % lower than
2008, but fourth-quarter totals of 10,609 completions were 19 % higher than the third quarter, which in turn had been
up 6 % from the second quarter, API's fourth-quarter drilling estimates indicate.
"We are certainly seeing US drilling activity picking up with the economic recovery, but there is still a long way to
go before activity begins to near the pace of 2008, which was helped by strong commodity prices," said Hazem Arafa,
director of API's statistics department.
For the year, the estimated number of exploratory oil and gas wells fell by half, to 1,887 wells, while the number of
full-year development oil and gas wells dove 38 % to 32,490 wells.
For the quarter, exploratory oil and gas wells plunged 58 % from the same quarter of 2008, to 411 wells, while the
number of fourth-quarter development oil and gas wells dropped 35 %, to 8,911 wells, compared with the fourth-quarter
of 2008, the report found.
Natural gas was the primary target for domestic drilling in 2009, with an estimated 18,269 natural gas wells
completed. The gap between the number of oil wells and gas wells completed narrowed somewhat. While the number of gas
well completions dove 42 % from 2008 to 2009, the number of oil well completions fell 35 % for the year, to 16,108
wells, compared with 24,646 well completions in 2008, the report estimated.
API also reported total estimated footage of 234,982,000 feet drilled for 2009, a 44 % drop from 2008. For the fourth
quarter, estimated footage drilled stood at 57,566 feet, 51 % lower than the fourth quarter of 2008.
