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Current Texas Oil And Gas Employment Might Be As Good As It Gets
Current Texas Oil And Gas Employment Might Be As Good As It Gets
Current Texas Oil And Gas Employment Might Be As Good As It Gets

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This article was first published on Rigzone here

Employment in the Texas oil and gas sector has rebounded since its September 2020 nadir, and industry leaders are touting the new jobs as an indication that the industry will continue to create jobs over the long term but still might not hit pre-pandemic levels.

The Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA) said in its latest report that the oil and gas industry, at slightly more than one-fifth the pace of the statewide average, has been a laggard in Texas employment growth over the past 30 years.

Oil and gas businesses added 39,400 jobs, but that’s only a little more than half the number lost during the Covid-19 pandemic. And those figures, the IEEFA believes, may be about as good as it gets as the job additions may have already plateaued.

Between September 2019 and September 2020, Texas employment for oil and gas extraction, support activities for mining, natural gas distribution, petroleum, and coal products manufacturing, pipeline transportation, and gasoline stations industries shed 21 percent of their collective workforce – 76,300 jobs. If April 2022 employment of 333,900 jobs holds as the plateau for this latest cycle, then peak employment could wind up resembling previous oil and gas busts.

While the current environment presents some unique labor challenges, an identifiable long-term employment pattern also exists. In contrast to the overall employment picture – as represented by the Texas Nonfarm Employment, which has steadily risen over the past decade (except for the Covid-19 slump) at a faster clip than the national figure – Texas oil and gas employment has declined over the last two boom-and-bust cycles for oil prices.

“Industrial activities driven by the normal phases of resource extraction have changed since 2014. The industry has moved from the exploratory phase of the unconventional drilling of shale and tight oil formations to the development phase. Accompanying the development phase, oil and gas producers have been keenly focused on deploying technologies that drive down their unit costs for production volumes. Multiple wells drilled on a single pad (instead of just one well per pad) and innovations that include automation have combined to squeeze many days out of the drilling and completion process. The advances help explain how similar levels of production can be achieved with fewer rigs and fewer people in the field than a decade ago. The innovation also explains how the industry’s production continues to grow while the size of the oil and gas workforce is moving in the opposite direction,” the Institute said.