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Weld County oil set to break records

Oil and gas production continues to rise in Weld County. About 82 percent of the oil produced in Colorado comes from Weld.

Although full half-year numbers aren’t entirely in, Weld County’s oil production is about 34 percent higher than it was last year, and it shows all the signs of continuing to grow.

Total crude production across the state – of which Weld County is responsible for about 82 percent and growing - is headed toward last year’s record production, according to numbers from the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission.

But analysts believe crude oil coming out of the Denver-Julesburg Basin will continue to topple historic flows and even double in the next five years.

“I would be utterly shocked if this year’s production was not substantially ahead of last year’s record,” said Pete Stark, vice president of industry relations for IHS in Englewood, a global consulting firm. “That’s just my gut feel. And any of the operators would tell you” the same.

So far, the numbers are showing, at least through May, that Weld’s crude production is about 34 percent higher than it was at the same time last year. Preliminary production shows that through May, Weld produced 25.8 million barriers of oil, compared to 19.29 million last year at the same time.

Last year, the state hit an all-time production record of 64.4 million barrels of oil for the year, shattering the previous high of 58.6 million set in 1956. In 2013, Weld County crude production had swelled about 40 percent from the previous year.

Production numbers for this year continue to trickle into the COGCC for June and July, but each month this year has surpassed last year at the same time in some cases by close to 2 million barrels.

Natural gas production is running about 5 percent behind the same time last year, but analysts say that is likely because of an infrastructure shortage. Companies are working to pipe gas out of Weld as fast as possible, but pipeline capacity isn’t quite there yet. More pipelines are being built to handle the increasing demand, but when the takeaway system is constrained, operators either must slow down production or practice flaring, essentially watching profits go up in smoke.

At present, about 200,000 barrels of oil equivalent a day are coming out of the Wattenberg Field. Some say by 2019, that number will surpass 500,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day, about half of what the Bakken in North Dakota is producing today. The Bakken ramped up just as fast, if not faster, than the DJ, analysts say, where operators are tapping tight shales, and using methods that are taking form here.