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Gold/Mining/Energy : Strictly: Drilling and oil-field services -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: sportsman who wrote (32062)11/23/1998 8:11:00 PM
From: Crimson Ghost  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 95453
 


By SANDY SHORE AP Business Writer

DENVER (AP) -- As world leaders cross swords over a glut oil supplies that has
sent prices down to the lowest level in 11 years and consumers gleefully buy cheap
gas, independent producers in the Rocky Mountains are struggling.

Companies are laying off workers, selling property and eliminating unnecessary
expenses. Many believe the situation mirrors a 1980s oil bust that battered the
region.

"The impact has been devastating," said Kevin Kauffman, who owns KP Kauffman
Co., which has been in the business in Denver for 15 years. "I would say the oil and
gas industry is nearing a depression level."

Craig Creel, who owns Rio Chama Petroleum in Santa Fe, N.M., has put off some
maintenance programs and delayed replacing an employee to save money. "It's a
belt-tightening year," he said.

The boom-bust roller coaster is nothing new for oil producers from Montana to New
Mexico, where 80 percent of the production is generated by small, independent
companies with no more than two dozen workers.

They basked in prices that peaked at $45 a barrel in 1981, only to scrape bottom
when prices sunk to about $10 a barrel in 1986. During that recession, thousands of
jobs were lost as energy companies pulled out of the region.

Earlier this year, the oil cycle spiraled down again amid an increase in the world's oil
supplies and the Asian economic crisis. Prices have seesawed between $12 and $14
a barrel for months, down about 30 percent from a year ago.

The drop in oil prices has been a boon for motorists. Earlier this month, the
nationwide average price of regular-grade gasoline fell below $1 a gallon for the first
time since January 1994.

The downturn has hurt oil companies nationwide. Four of the major oil companies
are laying off workers and cutting capital investments in wake of steep declines in
third-quarter earnings.

Amoco Corp. plans to eliminate 380 jobs in Denver. Texaco's 450 employees and
contractors here could also feel the pain under plans by that company to cut 1,000
jobs worldwide in exploration and production.

In the Rockies, many small companies are pulling out of exploration and production
and several mid- to large-sized companies are selling properties, Marc Smith of the
Independent Petroleum Association of Mountain States.

In Wyoming, the number of producing oil wells dropped to 9,536 in August from
10,270 at the end of 1997. Don Likwartz of the state Oil and Gas Commission staff
said companies will be forced to close if prices do not improve.

New Mexico, Colorado and Utah officials speculated that oil production has fallen
off, but they have not seen it in statistics because the collection of data lags months
behind.

"I know people have been shutting in wells ... operators are generally shutting in
production until the price of oils come back," said Ed Martin of the New Mexico Oil
Conservation Division.



To: sportsman who wrote (32062)11/23/1998 8:30:00 PM
From: shust  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 95453
 
Sportsman,

That I believe comes out to a day rate of approximately $120 000.

I'm not sure if this is much lower than before. I read that Diamond's 4th generation semi gets about $140 000. Doesn't look too bad to me, but I'm no expert.

shust