eog 1q 2017
TRANSCRIPT
NYSE Stock Symbol: EOGCommon Dividend: $0.67Common Shares Outstanding: 577 Million
Internet Address:http://www.eogresources.com
1Q 2017Investor Relations ContactsCedric W. Burgher, SVP Investor & Public Relations
(713) 571-4658, [email protected] M. Ehmer, Director IR/PR
(713) 571-4676, [email protected] J. Streit, Director IR
(713) 571-4902, [email protected]. John Wagner, Engineer IR
(713) 571-4404, [email protected]
Copyright; Assumption of Risk: Copyright 2017. This presentation and the contents of this presentation have been copyrighted by EOG Resources, Inc. (EOG). All rights reserved. Copying of the presentation is forbidden without the prior written consent of EOG. Information in this presentation is provided “as is” without warranty of any kind, either express or implied, including but not limited to the implied warranties of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose and the timeliness of the information. You assume all risk in using the information. In no event shall EOG or its representatives be liable for any special, indirect or consequential damages resulting from the use of the information.
Cautionary Notice Regarding Forward-Looking Statements: This presentation includes forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. All statements, other than statements of historical facts, including, among others, statements and projections regarding EOG's future financial position, operations, performance, business strategy, returns, budgets, reserves, levels of production, costs and asset sales, statements regarding future commodity prices and statements regarding the plans and objectives of EOG's management for future operations, are forward-looking statements. EOG typically uses words such as "expect," "anticipate," "estimate," "project," "strategy," "intend," "plan," "target," "goal," "may," "will," "should" and "believe" or the negative of those terms or other variations or comparable terminology to identify its forward-looking statements. In particular, statements, express or implied, concerning EOG's future operating results and returns or EOG's ability to replace or increase reserves, increase production, reduce or otherwise control operating and capital costs, generate income or cash flows or pay dividends are forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are not guarantees of performance. Although EOG believes the expectations reflected in its forward-looking statements are reasonable and are based on reasonable assumptions, no assurance can be given that these assumptions are accurate or that any of these expectations will be achieved (in full or at all) or will prove to have been correct. Moreover, EOG's forward-looking statements may be affected by known, unknown or currently unforeseen risks, events or circumstances that may be outside EOG's control. Important factors that could cause EOG's actual results to differ materially from the expectations reflected in EOG's forward-looking statements include, among others:
• the timing, extent and duration of changes in prices for, supplies of, and demand for, crude oil and condensate, natural gas liquids, natural gas and related commodities; • the extent to which EOG is successful in its efforts to acquire or discover additional reserves; • the extent to which EOG is successful in its efforts to economically develop its acreage in, produce reserves and achieve anticipated production levels from, and maximize reserve recovery from, its existing and future
crude oil and natural gas exploration and development projects; • the extent to which EOG is successful in its efforts to market its crude oil and condensate, natural gas liquids, natural gas and related commodity production;• the availability, proximity and capacity of, and costs associated with, appropriate gathering, processing, compression, transportation and refining facilities; • the availability, cost, terms and timing of issuance or execution of, and competition for, mineral licenses and leases and governmental and other permits and rights-of-way, and EOG’s ability to retain mineral licenses
and leases;• the impact of, and changes in, government policies, laws and regulations, including tax laws and regulations; environmental, health and safety laws and regulations relating to air emissions, disposal of produced
water, drilling fluids and other wastes, hydraulic fracturing and access to and use of water; laws and regulations imposing conditions or restrictions on drilling and completion operations and on the transportation of crude oil and natural gas; laws and regulations with respect to derivatives and hedging activities; and laws and regulations with respect to the import and export of crude oil, natural gas and related commodities;
• EOG's ability to effectively integrate acquired crude oil and natural gas properties into its operations, fully identify existing and potential problems with respect to such properties and accurately estimate reserves, production and costs with respect to such properties;
• the extent to which EOG's third-party-operated crude oil and natural gas properties are operated successfully and economically;• competition in the oil and gas exploration and production industry for the acquisition of licenses, leases and properties, employees and other personnel, facilities, equipment, materials and services; • the availability and cost of employees and other personnel, facilities, equipment, materials (such as water) and services;• the accuracy of reserve estimates, which by their nature involve the exercise of professional judgment and may therefore be imprecise;• weather, including its impact on crude oil and natural gas demand, and weather-related delays in drilling and in the installation and operation (by EOG or third parties) of production, gathering, processing, refining,
compression and transportation facilities;• the ability of EOG's customers and other contractual counterparties to satisfy their obligations to EOG and, related thereto, to access the credit and capital markets to obtain financing needed to satisfy their
obligations to EOG;• EOG's ability to access the commercial paper market and other credit and capital markets to obtain financing on terms it deems acceptable, if at all, and to otherwise satisfy its capital expenditure requirements;• the extent to which EOG is successful in its completion of planned asset dispositions;• the extent and effect of any hedging activities engaged in by EOG;• the timing and extent of changes in foreign currency exchange rates, interest rates, inflation rates, global and domestic financial market conditions and global and domestic general economic conditions;• political conditions and developments around the world (such as political instability and armed conflict), including in the areas in which EOG operates;• the use of competing energy sources and the development of alternative energy sources;• the extent to which EOG incurs uninsured losses and liabilities or losses and liabilities in excess of its insurance coverage;• acts of war and terrorism and responses to these acts; • physical, electronic and cyber security breaches; and• the other factors described under ITEM 1A, Risk Factors, on pages 13 through 22 of EOG’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2016 and any updates to those factors set forth in EOG's
subsequent Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q or Current Reports on Form 8-K.
In light of these risks, uncertainties and assumptions, the events anticipated by EOG's forward-looking statements may not occur, and, if any of such events do, we may not have anticipated the timing of their occurrence or the duration and extent of their impact on our actual results. Accordingly, you should not place any undue reliance on any of EOG's forward-looking statements. EOG's forward-looking statements speak only as of the date made, and EOG undertakes no obligation, other than as required by applicable law, to update or revise its forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, subsequent events, anticipated or unanticipated circumstances or otherwise.
Oil and Gas Reserves; Non-GAAP Financial Measures: The United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) permits oil and gas companies, in their filings with the SEC, to disclose not only “proved” reserves (i.e., quantities of oil and gas that are estimated to be recoverable with a high degree of confidence), but also “probable” reserves (i.e., quantities of oil and gas that are as likely as not to be recovered) as well as “possible” reserves (i.e., additional quantities of oil and gas that might be recovered, but with a lower probability than probable reserves). Statements of reserves are only estimates and may not correspond to the ultimate quantities of oil and gas recovered. Any reserve estimates provided in this presentation that are not specifically designated as being estimates of proved reserves may include "potential" reserves and/or other estimated reserves not necessarily calculated in accordance with, or contemplated by, the SEC’s latest reserve reporting guidelines. Investors are urged to consider closely the disclosure in EOG’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2016, available from EOG at P.O. Box 4362, Houston, Texas 77210-4362 (Attn: Investor Relations). You can also obtain this report from the SEC by calling 1-800-SEC-0330 or from the SEC's website at www.sec.gov. In addition, reconciliation and calculation schedules for non-GAAP financial measures can be found on the EOG website at www.eogresources.com.
EOG _0517-3
U.S. Leader in Return on Capital Employed
U.S. Oil Growth Leader
Among Lowest Cost Producers in Global Oil Market
Commitment to Safety and the Environment
Create Significant Long-Term Shareholder Value
EOG _0517-4
WTI Oil:HHub Gas:
4%
28%
22%19%
5%
15%
18%
30%
26%
16%
26%
5%
2%
8%
4%
12%14%
1%-4%
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
* ROCE in 2013 and prior years calculated using reported net income (GAAP) and 2014 – 2016 using adjusted net income (Non-GAAP).See Reconciliation Schedules.
$17$2.20
$28$4.10
$61$7.20
$71$4.20
$95$3.70
$46$2.50
$26$3.40
1998-2016Average13.2%
EOG _0517-5
Exploration
Operations
Information Technology
High Return Oil Growth
• Fastest U.S. Horizontal Driller• Industry Leading Completion Technology• Self-Sourcing Materials / Services• Low Infrastructure & Production Cost • Proven Track Record of Execution
• Internal Prospect Generation• First Mover Advantage• Best Rock / Best Plays• Low Cost Acreage• Most Prolific U.S. Horizontal Wells
• Large Proprietary Data Marts• Real-Time Data Capture• Predictive Algorithms• 65+ In-House Desktop / Mobile Apps• Fast / Continuous Tech Advancement
• Rate-of-Return Driven• Decentralized / Non-Bureaucratic• Multi-Disciplined Teamwork• Innovative / Entrepreneurial• Every Employee is a Business
Person
Culture
EOG _0517-6
Increased Premium Inventory by 1,200 Net Locations to ≈ 7,200 Wells- Premium Resource Potential Increased 27% to 6.5 BnBoe*- Increase ≈ 2.5X Forecast 2017 Well Completions- Added 700 Locations in Delaware Basin and 500 in Eagle Ford
Exceeded High End of All U.S. Production Targets
Achieved Record Permian Basin Horizontal Well Results- Whirling Wind 4-Well Package Average IP-30 5,060 Boed Each- EOG Operates 14 of Top 20 Permian Basin Horizontal Wells
Reduced CWC** in Eagle Ford, Delaware Basin and Bakken
Added Three Rigs within Current Capex Forecast- Average 26 Rigs Operating in 2017
Lowered 2017 Cash Operating Cost Forecast***
* Estimated potential reserves net to EOG, not proved reserves.** CWC = Drilling, Completion, Well-Site Facilities and Flowback.*** Based on full-year estimates as of May 8, 2017.
1Q 2017
EOG _0517-7
Deliver Double-Digit High-Return Oil Production Growth- 18% YOY Growth at $47 Flat Oil*Balance Capex + Dividend with Discretionary Cash Flow- Complete ≈ 480 Net Wells- Average 26 Rigs in 2017Expand Premium Strategy- Premium Wells Generate at Least 30% Direct ATROR** at $40 Oil- Total Well Completions ≈80% Premium in 2017 vs. 50% in 2016- Replace Premium Inventory 2X Faster Than DrillingCapture New Premium Plays Through Organic ExplorationReduce Costs Further- Efficiencies and Contract Roll-Offs Offset Price Inflation Utilize Asset Sale Proceeds to Further Strengthen Balance Sheet
* Based on midpoint of 2017 guidance, as of May 8, 2017.** See reconciliation schedule.
Build on EOG’s Premium Foundation
EOG _0517-8
More Oil from Fewer Wells- Higher Returns with Lower Finding and Development Costs - Drives Lower DD&A Rate and Higher ROCE
Adding New Premium Inventory 2X Faster Than Drilling- Convert Existing Locations to Premium- Exploration- Tactical Acquisitions
Robust Growth for Far Less Capital
Premium Well Definition
Minimum 30% Direct ATROR* at $40 Oil
Does Not Change with Oil Prices
* See reconciliation schedules.
EOG _0517-9
$30 $40 $50 $60
* Domestic gross completed wells
14%23%
50%
80%
2014 2015 2016 2017Est
2018+Est
* Estimated potential reserves net to EOG, not proved reserves.
100%+
10%
60%
30%
Oil:
6.5 BnBoe* ≈7,200 Net Undrilled Locations >10 Years of Drilling
* See reconciliation schedules.
Premium Drilling Direct ATROR*(Minimum Return for Premium)
Percent EOG Wells* Meeting Premium Standard
90+%
EOG _0517-10
Direct ATROR*
First Year Oil per Well (Gross, Bbl)
Direct Finding Cost ($/Boe)
Capital Efficiency ($/First Year Boed)
Number of Net Wells Completed
>100%
≈ 200,000
$6.90
$7,600
220
* Calculated using futures strip prices in February 2017. See reconciliation schedule.
≈ 20%
≈ 100,000
$13.25
$17,200
225
Premium Drilling is a Game-Changer for EOG
2016 Wells Non-PremiumPremium
EOG _0517-11
Resource Potential**
* Premium locations are shown on a net basis and are all undrilled.** Estimated potential reserves net to EOG, not proved reserves.
Per Well
Feb 2016 Aug 2016 Yates Sep 2016 May 2017
2.0 BnBoe
625 MBoe
3.5 BnBoe
815 MBoe
1.6 BnBoe
920 MBoe
5.1 BnBoe
850 MBoe
6.5 BnBoe
900 MBoe
≈3,200
≈4,300
1,740
≈6,000
≈7,200
EOG _0517-12
0
50
100
150
200
Bone Spring Delaware BasinWolfcamp
Eagle Ford Bakken SCOOP/STACK
Midland BasinWolfcamp
EOGIndustry
5,000’ LateralMBoe
Cumulative nine-month production, normalized to 5,000’ lateral.Gas production converted at 20:1.Source: IHS Performance Evaluator, supplied by IHS Global Inc.; Copyright (2016).
EOG _0517-13
0
200
400
600
800
1,000
EOG A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W
37 7 7 19 12 14 7 15 24 4 49 18 48 119 7 15 20 22 6 11 31 34 37 24
5,000’ LateralBoed
Delaware Basin Oil
Average daily six-month production, normalized to 5,000’ lateral. All horizontal wells from original operator, January 2016 – April 2017.Gas production converted at 20:1. Wolfcamp formation, Wolfcamp reservoir designation, all counties.Delaware Basin peer companies: APA, APC, BHP, COP, CXO, JAG, MTDR, OXY, RDS, REN and XEC.Midland Basin peer companies: APA, CVX, CXO, ECA, EGN, FANG, OXY, PE, PXD, RSPP, SM and XOM.Source: IHS Performance Evaluator, supplied by IHS Global Inc.; Copyright (2016).
Well Count
Midland Basin Oil
Solid Colors: OilGray Bar: Natural Gas
EOG _0517-14
0
1,000
2,000
3,000
4,000W
hirli
ng W
ind
11 F
ed C
om 7
04H
Whi
rling
Win
d 11
Fed
Com
703
H
Whi
rling
Win
d 11
Fed
Com
702
H
Rat
tlesn
ake
21 F
eder
al C
om 7
02H
Rat
tlesn
ake
21 F
eder
al C
om 7
01H
Whi
rling
Win
d 14
Fed
Com
701
H
Cab
ra N
ino
11 B
3NC
Sta
te C
om 1
H
Orr
tann
a 20
Fed
701
H
Rat
tlesn
ake
28 F
eder
al C
om 7
04H
Thor
21
702H
Lom
as R
ojas
26
Stat
e C
om 7
08H
Dra
inag
e 34
-136
1H
Grid
iron
N00
1WB
Orr
tann
a 20
Fed
702
H
Sale
Ran
ch 2
3F 6
H
Endu
ranc
e 36
Sta
te C
om 7
05H
Thor
21
Fede
ral C
om 7
04H
Bla
ck B
ear 3
6 St
ate
704H
Mas
k H
z U
nit 1
004H
Silv
er C
ity U
nit A
1H
EOG Well
* Horizontal oil wells.Source: IHS, company reports and State of New Mexico Oil Conservation Division regulatory filings.
Industry Well
Bopd
EOG _0517-15
-
50,000
100,000
150,000
200,000
250,000
300,000
3,500 4,500 5,500 6,500 7,500 8,500
EOG Delaware Basin
Delaware Basin Peers
Midland Basin Peers
Lateral Length (Feet)
12-MonthCumulative MBO
2016
20162016
2013
20152014
2015
20152014
20142013
2013
250
200
150
100
50
300
Longer Laterals are Driving Industry Well Productivity
Improvements
Bubble Area Denotes 30-Day IP
Cumulative 12-month oil production. All horizontal wells from original operator. Wolfcamp formation, Wolfcamp reservoir, all counties.Delaware Basin peer companies: APA, APC, BHP, COP, CXO, MTDR, OXY, RDS, REN and XEC.Midland Basin peer companies: APA, CVX, CXO, ECA, EGN, FANG, OXY, PE, PXD, RSPP and XOM.Source: IHS Performance Evaluator, supplied by IHS Global Inc.; Copyright (2016).
EOG Initiates:• Precision Targeting• Advanced Completions
EOG _0517-16
* ATROR and NPV calculated using $50 WTI and $3.00 NYMEX fixed for life of well. Assumes industry capital and operating costs equal to EOG. See reconciliation schedules.All horizontal wells from original operator. Wolfcamp formation, Wolfcamp reservoir, all counties.Delaware Basin peer companies: APA, APC, BHP, COP, CXO, MTDR, OXY, RDS, REN and XEC.Midland Basin peer companies: APA, CVX, CXO, ECA, EGN, FANG, OXY, PE, PXD, RSPP and XOM.Source: IHS
Direct ATROR* Net Present Value per Well*($MM)
151%
104%
29%15%
EOGPremium
Wells
EOGAll
Wells
IndustryDelaware
Basin
IndustryMidlandBasin
$5.9
$4.8
$1.8
$0.5
EOGPremium
Wells
EOG AllWells
IndustryDelaware
Basin
IndustryMidlandBasin
EOG _0517-17
Vertical Integration- Drilling Fluids, Chemicals and Flowback- Self-Sourced Materials and Technology- Sand Costs Declining
Strategic Partnerships with Vendors – EOG Preferred Customer
Large Scale Procurement
Infrastructure Investment- Water Handling and Recycling
Roll-off of Higher-Cost Legacy Contracts and Inventory
Efficiencies- Completion Redesigns – Enhanced Well Productivity at Less Cost- Faster Rig Moves and Drilling Times- Off-Line Cementing- Faster Completion Times
Year, After Year, After Year . . .
EOG _0517-18
7.2
5.1 4.8 4.6
2015 2016 1Q17 Target
5.7
4.7 4.5 4.3
2015 2016 1Q17 Target
* CWC = Drilling, Completion, Well-Site Facilities and Flowback.
9.88.5
7.8 7.6
2015 2016 1Q17 Target
Delaware Basin Wolfcamp Oil Play South Texas Eagle Ford Bakken
* Normalized to 5,300’ lateral. * Normalized to 8,400’ lateral.* Normalized to 7,000’ lateral.
1Q17-8%
1Q17-4%
1Q17-6%
EOG _0517-19
2014 2015 2016 2017E
$13.53$12.09*
$10.55*
G&P
G&A
Transportation
LOE
* Excludes one-time expenses of $19.4 million in 2015 related to early leasehold termination and $47.0 million in 2016 related to voluntary retirements and acquisition costs. Includes stock compensation expense and other non-cash items.
** Based on midpoint of 2017 guidance, as of May 8, 2017. See reconciliation schedules.
$10.40**
EOG _0517-20
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
2016* 2017 2018 2019 2020
$60
* Pro forma for full year of production from Yates in 2016.** Discretionary Cash Flow Capex + Current Dividend.
$50
MBopd
15%-25% CAGR
EOG _0517-21
EOG _0517-22
Giant Data Sets- Real-Time Data Streaming in from Every Asset- Correlate with Library of Logs, Cores, 3-D Seismic and Reservoir Models
Apply Proprietary Algorithms with In-House Software
65+ In-House Desktop and Mobile Software Applications. . . and Counting
Mobile Applications Enable Decentralized Decision Making- A Control Room in Your Pocket
Advanced Completion Designs and Implementation Techniques- Apply Data Science to Optimize Completion to Geologic Setting
Petrophysical Modeling of “Best Target” Enables Precision Lateral Targeting
In-House Geosteering Software Integrated with Petrophysical Models
Sustainable Competitive Advantage
EOG _0517-23
Frac Fleets
Rigs
Wells
Real-Time Data Streams
User and Field Data Inputs
Other Data Sources
EOG Proprietary Data Marts
DesktopMobile
Data Science and Predictive Algorithms
65+ EOG Proprietary Applications
Mobile Applications - A Control Room in Your Pocket
EOG _0517-24
LowerEagleFord
1. Grade Rock Characteristics High to Low Quality2. Overall
Grade
3. Drill
* Sample 1-foot core extracted from
Lower Eagle Ford. Enlarged to show detail of the rock.
EOG _0517-25
Contain Events Closerto Wellbore
Enhance Complexity to Contact More Surface Area
Note: Microseismic dots represent well stimulation events during completions.
EOG _0517-26
PlayNet
Acres Total
Locations*
ResourcePotential**(MMBoe)
Premium Locations***
Eagle Ford 528,000 7,200 3,200 2,425
Bakken/Three Forks - Core- Non-Core
120,000110,000
9751,125
620400
330-
Delaware Basin - Wolfcamp 346,000 2,660 2,900 1,700- Second Bone Spring 289,000 1,870 1,400 1,350- Leonard 160,000 1,800 1,700 1,100
Rockies- DJ Basin- Powder River Basin
81,000400,000 _
460315 _
210190 _
200120 _
≈ 2,100,000 ≈ 16,000 ≈ 10,600 ≈ 7,200
* Number of producing and undrilled remaining net wells as of January 1, 2017. Assumes no further downspacing, acreage additions or enhanced recovery.** Estimated potential reserves (MMBoe) net to EOG, not proved reserves. Includes proved reserves and prior production from existing wells.
*** Premium locations are shown on a net basis and are all undrilled.
Inventory Growing in Quality and Size
EOG _0517-27
Production and Reserve Growth/
ReplacementReturns
A 20%
B 40%
C 10%
D
F 25%
10%
EOG 6%30%
E
G 10%
H 30%
Source: Company Reports. Percentages represent approximate weightings applied in determining 2016 executive officer short-term incentive compensation.Peer companies: APA, APC, COP, DVN, HES, MRO, NBL and PXD.
EOG Employees Are Incentivized to Deliver Returns
20%
25%
10% 30%
EOG _0517-28* Based on full-year estimates as of May 8, 2017.
Exploration and Development
81%
Exploration and Development Facilities
13%
Gathering,Processing and Other
6%
Resume Double-Digit High-Return Oil GrowthBalance Capex + Dividend with Discretionary Cash Flow at $47 Oil≈80% of Well Completions Estimated to be PremiumDiversified Investments – Oil Production Growth From All 5 Major BasinsAsset Sale Proceeds Strengthen Balance Sheet – Not Funding Operations
2017 Estimated Capex ≈ $3.7 to $4.1 Bn*
2017 Outlook
EOG _0517-29
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
EOG A B C D E F PeerAvg
G H I J K L
Source: Company Reports. Natural gas converted at 6:1.Peer Group: APA, APC, CLR, COP, CXO, DVN, HES, MRO, NBL, NFX, PXD and XEC.
EOG _0517-30
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
A B C D E F G H PeerAvg
I J EOG K L M N O
* Source: Company reports as of 3/31/17 (XEC as of 12/31/16). See reconciliation schedule. Peer Companies: APA, APC, CLR, COG, COP, CXO, DVN, HES, MRO, NBL, NFX, OXY, PXD, RRC and XEC.
EOG _0517-31
$0.03 $0.04 $0.04 $0.04 $0.05 $0.06$0.08
$0.12
$0.18
$0.26$0.29
$0.31 $0.32$0.34
$0.38
$0.59
$0.67 $0.67
$0.00
$0.10
$0.20
$0.30
$0.40
$0.50
$0.60
$0.70
1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Note: Dividends adjusted for 2-for-1 stock splits effective March 1, 2005 and March 31, 2014.
Committed to the Dividend – 16 Increases in 17 Years
EOG _0517-32
Middle East
Venezuela
Brazil
Russia
Nigeria
Angola
US L48 Conv
Mexico
GOM
$0$10$20$30$40$50$60$70$80$90
$100
MiddleEast/Russia
Medium CostConventional
USTight Oil
DeepWater
High CostNon-OPEC
Arctic / RussianUnconventional
* Brent equivalent price required to achieve 10% Direct ATROR (see reconciliation schedules).Source: PIRA.
Brent ($/BBL)
49% 28% 5% 13% 5% -% World Supply
US L48 ConvOil Sands
New Marginal Cost of Oil
(≈ $65 - $75)North Sea
U.S. Tight OilFar East
Russia EOG ($30)*
EOG Competitive Globally
EOG _0517-33
21.520.4
19.4
10.5
2015 2016 1Q17 Record
Delaware Basin Wolfcamp Oil Play South Texas Eagle Ford Bakken
* Normalized to 5,300’ lateral. * Normalized to 8,400’ lateral.* Normalized to 7,000’ lateral.
7.8
5.9 6.0
3.4
2015 2016 1Q17 Record
12.4
8.57.8
5.4
2014 2015 2016 Record
1Q17-5%
2016-8%
EOG _0517-34
Brushy Canyon
Leonard A
Leonard B
1st Bone Spring
2nd Bone Spring
3rd Bone Spring
Upper Wolfcamp
Middle Wolfcamp
Lower Wolfcamp
4,80
0’
One WorldTrade Center
1,792’
Battery Park to Wall Street to City Hall 4,800’ Middle Bakken
Lower EagleFord
40’ 150’
Battery Park
Wall Street
City Hall
EOG _0517-35
Net Resource Potential 6.0 BnBoe*
6,330 Net Locations; 7,200’ Laterals
Average 13 Rigs Operating in 2017
Significant Infrastructure Installed- Water Sourcing, Gathering and
Recycling- Sand Rail-Car Unloading Facilities- Oil Gathering and Takeaway- Gas Processing
Test Permian Northwest Shelf in 2017
Eddy
Lea
Loving WinklerCulberson
Ward
Reeves
Chaves
Roosevelt
NorthwestShelf
143,000 Net Acres
DelawareBasin
416,000 Net Acres
EOG 559,000 Net Acres
* Estimated potential reserves net to EOG, not proved reserves. Includes 462 MMBoe of proved reserves booked at December 31, 2016 and prior production from existing wells.
EOG _0517-36
346,000 Net Acres Prospective with Multiple Target Zones- 2,660 Net Wells- Complete ≈110 Net Wells in 2017 vs. 71 in 2016
Estimated Resource Potential 2.9 BnBoe,* Net to EOG
Oil Play- 226,000 Net Acres, 1,585 Net Wells; 660’ Spacing- Upper and Middle Zones- EUR 1,330 MBoe, Gross; 1,050 MBoe, NAR - CWC** Target $7.6 MM for 7,000’ Lateral
Combo Play- 120,000 Net Acres, 1,075 Net Wells; 880’ Spacing- Upper and Middle Zones- EUR 1,550 MBoe, Gross; 1,200 MBoe, NAR- CWC** Target $7.5 MM for 8,300’ Lateral
Testing 500’ Spacing and Additional Targets
Wolfcamp Oil and Combo Plays Bopd Boed Lateral- 1Q 2017 33 Gross Wells 30-Day IP 1,850 2,855 5,600’- Whirling Wind 4-Well Pattern 3,510 5,060 7,100’
* Estimated potential reserves net to EOG, not proved reserves. Includes 330 MMBoe of proved reserves booked at December 31, 2016 and prior production from existing wells.
** CWC = Drilling, Completion, Well-Site Facilities and Flowback
NGLs32%
Typical Wolfcamp Combo Well
Gas42%
Oil26%
Gas27%
NGLs20%
Oil53%
Typical WolfcampOil Well
EOG _0517-37
289,000 Net Acres Prospective in Northern Delaware Basin- 1,870 Net Wells; ≈ 850’ Spacing- Complete ≈25 Net Wells in 2017 vs. 13 in 2016
Estimated Resource Potential 1.4 BnBoe,* Net to EOG
Typical Well- EUR 950 MBoe, Gross; 780 MBoe, NAR- CWC** Target $7.3 MM for 7,000’ Lateral
* Estimated potential reserves net to EOG, not proved reserves. Includes 67 MMBoe of proved reserves in Second Bone Spring and 66 MMBoe in Leonard Shale booked at December 31, 2016 and prior production from existing wells.
** CWC = Drilling, Completion, Well-Site Facilities and Flowback.
NGLs16%
Typical Second Bone Spring Well
Gas22%
Oil62%
160,000 Net Acres Prospective; 1,800 Net Wells- 660’ Spacing in A and B Zones- Complete ≈5 Net Wells in 2017 vs. 8 in 2016
Estimated Resource Potential 1.7 BnBoe,* Net to EOG
Typical Well- EUR 1,175 MBoe, Gross; 940 MBoe, NAR- CWC** Target $6.3 MM for 6,800’ Lateral
NGLs28%
Typical Red HillsLeonard Shale Well
Gas41%
Oil31%
Second Bone Spring
Leonard Shale
EOG _0517-38
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
0 90 180 270 360
Delaware Basin Second Bone Spring WellsAverage Cumulative Production*
Delaware Basin Wolfcamp Oil Wells Average Cumulative Production*
(MBoe)
Producing Days
* Normalized to 4,500-foot lateral.
2015
0
40
80
120
160
200
240
0 90 180 270 360
Producing Days
(MBoe)
2015
2016 2016
* Normalized to 4,500-foot lateral.
EOG _0517-39
WEBB
FRIO
BEE
UVALDE
DIMMIT
BEXAR
KINNEY
ZAVALA
MEDINA
LA SALLE
LAVACA
MAVERICK
LIVE OAK
ATASCOSA
DE WITT
FAYETTE
MCMULLEN
WILSON
GONZALES
KARNES
GUADALUPE
Oil 71%
Gas 15%
NGLs14%
Typical Eagle Ford Well
Largest Oil Producer and Acreage Holder in the Eagle Ford- Average 8 Rigs Operating in 2017- Complete ≈195 Net Wells in 2017 vs. 236 in 2016
Estimated Resource Potential 3.2 BnBoe;* 7,200 Net Wells
Typical Well- 5,300’ Lateral; ≈40-Acre Spacing- EUR 580 MBoe, Gross; 450 MBoe, NAR- CWC** $4.7MM in 2016; Target $4.3MM
Precision Targeting- Lateral Drilling Window 20’ vs. Prior 150’
Bopd Boed Lateral1Q 2017 65 Gross Wells 30-Day IP 1,130 1,390 6,500’
Shifting to Longer Laterals in West
Completion Innovations Lower Well Costs with Same Productivity
Acreage 97% Held by Production
* Estimated potential reserves net to EOG, not proved reserves. Includes 1,003 MMBoe proved reserves booked at December 31, 2016 and prior production from existing wells.
** CWC = Drilling, Completion, Well-Site Facilities and Flowback
Crude OilWindow
Dry GasWindow
Wet GasWindow
0 25 Miles
San Antonio
Corpus Christi
Laredo
EOG 590,000 Net Acres528,000 Net Acres in Oil Window
2017 Operations
EOG _0517-40
0
25
50
75
100
125
150
175
0 90 180 270 360
Eagle Ford East WellsAverage Cumulative Oil Production*
2012
20132014
Eagle Ford West Wells Average Cumulative Oil Production*
(Mbo)
Producing Days
* Normalized to 6,600-foot lateral.
2015
0
25
50
75
100
125
150
175
0 90 180 270 360
Producing Days
* Normalized to 4,600-foot lateral.
(Mbo)
2012
201320142015
2016
2016
EOG _0517-41
Successful 32-Well Pilot in 2016- Incremental Reserves 30%-70%- Well Spacing as Close as 200’
Test Supports Premium Economics - Direct ATROR* >30% and PVI** >2.0 - Capital Investment ≈$1MM per Well
2016 EOR Net Oil Production 300 MBO- 70% Increase YOY
≈ 100 Additional Wells in 2017- Six Areas in Eastern Eagle Ford
* See reconciliation schedules. Assumes oil price $40 per barrel WTI and natural gas price $2.50 per MMBtu Henry Hub.** Net present value divided by capital investment.
Cumulative Oil Production per Well
1.0x
1.3x – 1.7x
Primary Recovery
(Net Mbo)
Enhanced Oil Recovery
Produce 2 - 5 Years Before EOR Injection
Production Response ≈3 Months After Injection
EOG _0517-42
* Estimated potential reserves net to EOG, not proved reserves. Includes 208 MMBoe proved reserves in Bakken/Three Forks booked at December 31, 2016. Includes prior production from existing wells.
** CWC = Drilling, Completion, Well-Site Facilities and Flowback.
Complete ≈35 Net Wells in 2017 vs. 48 in 2016
Estimated Resource Potential 1.0 BnBoe*- 8,400’ Lateral- $5.1 MM CWC** in 2016; Target $4.6 MM- 650’ Spacing
Focus on Premium Locations- Bakken Core and Antelope Extension Areas- 120,000 Net Acres
LOE per BOE Reduced 43% Last Two Years- Installed Water Handling and Other Infrastructure
3 Wells Bakken Lite 1Q 2017 Bopd Boed Lateral- 30-Day IP 795 955 7,700’
Gas 15%
Williston BasinRemaining Wells
Oil70%
NGL15%
Canada
Bakken Core
AntelopeExtension
BakkenLite
State Line
Elm Coulee
EOG Acreage – Bakken/Three ForksBakken Oil Saturated
20 Miles
Stanley, ND
CoreNon-Core
EOG _0517-43
PRB Turner Sand Identified as Premium Play- Testing 4,800’ Column of Stacked Pay
Complete ≈30 Net Wells in 2017 vs. 20 in 2016
CWC* Target $5.0MM for 8,000’ Lateral
5 Gross Wells 1Q 2017 Bopd Boed Lateral- 30-Day IP 950 1,160 4,900’
DJ Basin Codell Identified as Premium Play
Complete ≈15 Net Wells in 2017 vs. 30 in 2016
CWC* Target $4.5MM for 9,000’ Lateral
Installed Water and Gas Infrastructure to Lower Costs
Record Drilling Performance - 18,000’ Well in 3 Days
Powder River Basin
DJ Basin DJ Basin
EOG 81,000 Net Acres
Laramie
WeldCO
WY
Powder River Basin
Campbell
Crook
Weston
NiobraraConverseNatrona
Johnson
Sheridan WY
MT
EOG 400,000 Net Acres
PRB CoreExploration
Area
Average 2 Rigs in Rockies in 2017
* CWC = Drilling, Completion, Well-Site Facilities and Flowback.
EOG _0517-44
East Irish Sea (Conwy)- Production Commenced March 2016- Optimum Production Rate ≈10,000 Bopd- Further Evaluation to Maximize Reservoir
Productivity
Sercan Joint Development Project- Completed 5 Gross / 3 Net Well Program
Drill 4 Additional Gross Wells in 2017
Active Exploration Program- Completed New Seismic Survey
TRINIDAD
ATLANTIC OCEAN
U(a)
VENEZUELA
4(a)
U(b)
SECC
NORTH SEA
EastIrishSea
Trinidad and Tobago
United Kingdom
Trinidad
United Kingdom
Copyright; Assumption of Risk: Copyright 2017. This presentation and the contents of this presentation have been copyrighted by EOG Resources, Inc. (EOG). All rights reserved. Copying of the presentation is forbidden without the prior written consent of EOG. Information in this presentation is provided “as is” without warranty of any kind, either express or implied, including but not limited to the implied warranties of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose and the timeliness of the information. You assume all risk in using the information. In no event shall EOG or its representatives be liable for any special, indirect or consequential damages resulting from the use of the information.
Cautionary Notice Regarding Forward-Looking Statements: This presentation includes forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. All statements, other than statements of historical facts, including, among others, statements and projections regarding EOG's future financial position, operations, performance, business strategy, returns, budgets, reserves, levels of production, costs and asset sales, statements regarding future commodity prices and statements regarding the plans and objectives of EOG's management for future operations, are forward-looking statements. EOG typically uses words such as "expect," "anticipate," "estimate," "project," "strategy," "intend," "plan," "target," "goal," "may," "will," "should" and "believe" or the negative of those terms or other variations or comparable terminology to identify its forward-looking statements. In particular, statements, express or implied, concerning EOG's future operating results and returns or EOG's ability to replace or increase reserves, increase production, reduce or otherwise control operating and capital costs, generate income or cash flows or pay dividends are forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are not guarantees of performance. Although EOG believes the expectations reflected in its forward-looking statements are reasonable and are based on reasonable assumptions, no assurance can be given that these assumptions are accurate or that any of these expectations will be achieved (in full or at all) or will prove to have been correct. Moreover, EOG's forward-looking statements may be affected by known, unknown or currently unforeseen risks, events or circumstances that may be outside EOG's control. Important factors that could cause EOG's actual results to differ materially from the expectations reflected in EOG's forward-looking statements include, among others:
• the timing, extent and duration of changes in prices for, supplies of, and demand for, crude oil and condensate, natural gas liquids, natural gas and related commodities; • the extent to which EOG is successful in its efforts to acquire or discover additional reserves; • the extent to which EOG is successful in its efforts to economically develop its acreage in, produce reserves and achieve anticipated production levels from, and maximize reserve recovery from, its existing and future
crude oil and natural gas exploration and development projects; • the extent to which EOG is successful in its efforts to market its crude oil and condensate, natural gas liquids, natural gas and related commodity production;• the availability, proximity and capacity of, and costs associated with, appropriate gathering, processing, compression, transportation and refining facilities; • the availability, cost, terms and timing of issuance or execution of, and competition for, mineral licenses and leases and governmental and other permits and rights-of-way, and EOG’s ability to retain mineral licenses
and leases;• the impact of, and changes in, government policies, laws and regulations, including tax laws and regulations; environmental, health and safety laws and regulations relating to air emissions, disposal of produced
water, drilling fluids and other wastes, hydraulic fracturing and access to and use of water; laws and regulations imposing conditions or restrictions on drilling and completion operations and on the transportation of crude oil and natural gas; laws and regulations with respect to derivatives and hedging activities; and laws and regulations with respect to the import and export of crude oil, natural gas and related commodities;
• EOG's ability to effectively integrate acquired crude oil and natural gas properties into its operations, fully identify existing and potential problems with respect to such properties and accurately estimate reserves, production and costs with respect to such properties;
• the extent to which EOG's third-party-operated crude oil and natural gas properties are operated successfully and economically;• competition in the oil and gas exploration and production industry for the acquisition of licenses, leases and properties, employees and other personnel, facilities, equipment, materials and services; • the availability and cost of employees and other personnel, facilities, equipment, materials (such as water) and services;• the accuracy of reserve estimates, which by their nature involve the exercise of professional judgment and may therefore be imprecise;• weather, including its impact on crude oil and natural gas demand, and weather-related delays in drilling and in the installation and operation (by EOG or third parties) of production, gathering, processing, refining,
compression and transportation facilities;• the ability of EOG's customers and other contractual counterparties to satisfy their obligations to EOG and, related thereto, to access the credit and capital markets to obtain financing needed to satisfy their
obligations to EOG;• EOG's ability to access the commercial paper market and other credit and capital markets to obtain financing on terms it deems acceptable, if at all, and to otherwise satisfy its capital expenditure requirements;• the extent to which EOG is successful in its completion of planned asset dispositions;• the extent and effect of any hedging activities engaged in by EOG;• the timing and extent of changes in foreign currency exchange rates, interest rates, inflation rates, global and domestic financial market conditions and global and domestic general economic conditions;• political conditions and developments around the world (such as political instability and armed conflict), including in the areas in which EOG operates;• the use of competing energy sources and the development of alternative energy sources;• the extent to which EOG incurs uninsured losses and liabilities or losses and liabilities in excess of its insurance coverage;• acts of war and terrorism and responses to these acts; • physical, electronic and cyber security breaches; and• the other factors described under ITEM 1A, Risk Factors, on pages 13 through 22 of EOG’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2016 and any updates to those factors set forth in EOG's
subsequent Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q or Current Reports on Form 8-K.
In light of these risks, uncertainties and assumptions, the events anticipated by EOG's forward-looking statements may not occur, and, if any of such events do, we may not have anticipated the timing of their occurrence or the duration and extent of their impact on our actual results. Accordingly, you should not place any undue reliance on any of EOG's forward-looking statements. EOG's forward-looking statements speak only as of the date made, and EOG undertakes no obligation, other than as required by applicable law, to update or revise its forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, subsequent events, anticipated or unanticipated circumstances or otherwise.
Oil and Gas Reserves; Non-GAAP Financial Measures: The United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) permits oil and gas companies, in their filings with the SEC, to disclose not only “proved” reserves (i.e., quantities of oil and gas that are estimated to be recoverable with a high degree of confidence), but also “probable” reserves (i.e., quantities of oil and gas that are as likely as not to be recovered) as well as “possible” reserves (i.e., additional quantities of oil and gas that might be recovered, but with a lower probability than probable reserves). Statements of reserves are only estimates and may not correspond to the ultimate quantities of oil and gas recovered. Any reserve estimates provided in this presentation that are not specifically designated as being estimates of proved reserves may include "potential" reserves and/or other estimated reserves not necessarily calculated in accordance with, or contemplated by, the SEC’s latest reserve reporting guidelines. Investors are urged to consider closely the disclosure in EOG’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2016, available from EOG at P.O. Box 4362, Houston, Texas 77210-4362 (Attn: Investor Relations). You can also obtain this report from the SEC by calling 1-800-SEC-0330 or from the SEC's website at www.sec.gov. In addition, reconciliation and calculation schedules for non-GAAP financial measures can be found on the EOG website at www.eogresources.com.