Those expensive drilling projects are a boon for oil service providers such as Halliburton, Baker Hughes and Superior Energy Services. Schlumberger, which provides offshore fracking gear for markets outside the US Gulf, also stands to get new work. And producers such as Chevron, Royal Dutch Shell and BP may reap billions of dollars in extra revenue over time as fracking helps boost crude output.
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Fracking in the Gulf of Mexico is expected to grow by more than 10 per cent over a two year period ending in 2015, said Douglas Stephens, president of pressure pumping at Baker Hughes, which operates about a third of the world's offshore fracking fleet.
Dumped overboard
That's a reasonable and worthwhile investment, as the industry grapples with the challenge of "how to best fracture and stimulate the rocks" bearing crude oil, said Cindy Yielding, director of appraisal at BP.
At sea, water flowing back from fracked wells is cleaned up on large platforms near the well by filtering out oil and other contaminants. The treated wastewater is then dumped overboard into the vast expanse of the Gulf of Mexico, where dilution renders it harmless, according to companies and regulators.
The treatment process is mandated under Environmental Protection Agency regulations. In California, where producers are fracking offshore in existing fields, critics led by the Environmental Defense Center have asked federal regulators to ban the practice off the West Coast until more is known about its effects.
Offshore fracking in the Gulf of Mexico should also be subject to a detailed environmental review, said Tony Knap, director of the Geochemical and Environmental Research Group at Texas A&M University. The concern is that chemicals used in the fracking fluid that's released in the Gulf could harm sea life or upset the ecosystem, said Miyoko Sakashita, oceans director at the Center for Biological Diversity.
Rock-crushing engines
"One of the key problems is nobody has really looked at the environmental impacts of offshore fracking, and we find that incredibly concerning," she said in an interview. "Nobody knows what they've been discharging and in what amounts."
A spokesperson for the Environmental Protection Agency was not aware of any studies having been done on the impact of offshore fracking as the practice has long been viewed as "a somewhat short-term discharge and often mixed with other discharges."
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To frack some of the world's biggest offshore wells, roughly seven million pounds of people and gear, including rock-crushing engines and tons of sand to prop open cracks in the rock, must be crammed onto a 300-foot-long ship, called a stimulation vessel.
As demand for offshore fracking has grown, oil service companies have increased the global fleet of fracking ships by 31 per cent since 2007, according to a survey by Offshore Magazine, creating a market almost as large as Russia's onshore industry. The pumping horsepower used to frack wells - a measure of supply - is expected to grow another 28 per cent by the end of 2018, to 1.2 million horsepower, estimates Houston-based PacWest Consulting Partners.
The new frontier in the Gulf of Mexico for companies including Chevron and Shell is an underground zone called the Lower Tertiary, an older layer of the earth's crust made of denser and harder-to-crack rock.
Pancaked layers
Deep-water wells cut through multiple pancaked layers of oil-soaked rock, and each layer must be fracked to get the most oil out - a task that can take a full day to get to the bottom of the well. Halliburton and others have figured out a way to save time and money by fracking all those layers in one trip down the well, instead of doing each layer separately.
The more intense fracking means larger volumes of water, sand and equipment are needed to coax more oil out - and bigger boats to carry it all.
"It's getting more sophisticated," James Wicklund, an analyst at Credit Suisse in Dallas, said in a phone interview. "The volumes needed, especially for these lower tertiary fracks, are huge."
- Bloomberg