BP’s Q1 2026 earnings call offered a clear signal to the market: onshore shale—specifically BPX—is no longer just a supporting asset. It’s central to BP’s future.
For oil & gas service companies, this matters. A lot.
Let’s break down what BP said—and what it really means.
BPX Driving Performance in a Volatile Quarter
Despite global disruptions, BP delivered a strong quarter—and BPX played a key role.
The company highlighted “strong performance in BPX” as a major contributor to its 2.3 million boe/d production, helping offset:
- Disruptions in the Middle East
- Portfolio divestments
This is important:
When international operations face instability, BPX provides dependable, controllable production.
A Core Piece of BP’s U.S. Growth Engine
BP made it explicit—the United States is a priority growth region.
And within that:
“A lot of our future growth is coming from the U.S. between the Paleogene and BPX.”
That puts BPX alongside deepwater Gulf developments as a top-tier strategic asset.
But unlike offshore…
BPX Drilling Activity YTD: What the Data Shows
Using BPX well data and grouping activity by county (mapped to play), here’s the current Year-to-Date drilling snapshot:
🛢️ Wells Drilled by Play (YTD)
- Other U.S. Onshore (Permian / Eagle Ford / misc.): 37 wells
- Gulf of Mexico (Green Canyon / Keathley Canyon): 3 wells
- Haynesville (Bossier Parish, LA): 2 wells
👉 Key takeaway:
BPX activity is overwhelmingly concentrated in onshore shale plays, with offshore activity being minimal in comparison.
🏗️ Top Contractors & Rigs by Play
Gulf of Mexico
- Top Rig: Ocean BlackHornet
- Activity is limited and offshore-focused
Haynesville
- Top Contractor/Rig: H&P 424
- Consistent but relatively small program
Other Onshore Plays (Primary BPX Focus)
- Top Contractor/Rig: Nabors X50 (7 wells)
- Indicates:
- Repeat utilization
- Operational consistency
- Likely pad drilling programs
What This Confirms About BPX Strategy
The earnings call told us BPX is:
- A core growth driver
- A short-cycle asset
- A capital-efficient platform
The data validates all of that.
1. BPX = Onshore-First Strategy
With ~90%+ of wells in onshore “Other” plays, BP is clearly:
- Prioritizing shale over offshore for near-term growth
- Leaning into fast-cycle development
2. Contractor Concentration Signals Efficiency
Seeing rigs like Nabors X50 repeatedly used suggests:
- Standardized drilling programs
- Cost optimization
- Long-term contractor relationships
👉 This is classic Permian-style operational discipline
3. Limited Haynesville Exposure (For Now)
Only 2 wells in Haynesville:
- Suggests measured gas exposure
- Likely tied to:
- LNG strategy alignment
- Price sensitivity
4. Offshore Activity Is Not BPX’s Focus
The small Gulf of Mexico count reinforces:
- Offshore is handled separately from BPX strategy
- BPX remains purely a shale-driven growth engine
Connecting This Back to BP’s Earnings Call
BP said:
- BPX delivered strong performance
- Future growth is coming from U.S. assets, including BPX
- The company is prioritizing short-cycle, fast-return investments
👉 The drilling data aligns perfectly with that narrative.
What This Means for Oilfield Service Companies
If you’re selling into BPX or competing accounts, this matters:
📈 Where the Opportunity Is
- Onshore shale (especially Permian/Eagle Ford-type plays)
- High-efficiency drilling programs
- Repeatable pad operations
🔧 What BPX Likely Values
- Cost reduction
- Speed & cycle time
- Operational reliability
- Scalable services
🎯 Targeting Insight
Focus on:
- Active rigs (like Nabors X50 programs)
- Repeat contractors (Nabors, H&P)
- Counties with dense well activity clusters
Final Takeaway
BPX is not just a strategic talking point—it’s an execution engine.
- The earnings call shows intent
- The drilling data shows action
And that action is clear:
👉 BP is doubling down on U.S. shale, with BPX at the center of its capital-efficient growth model.





