Chevron has confirmed a new oil discovery at the Bandit prospect in Green Canyon Block 680, reinforcing the ongoing strategic importance of the deepwater Gulf of America.
Operated by Occidental, the exploration well encountered high-quality, full-to-base oil-bearing Miocene sands, with partners now evaluating appraisal and development options. With nearby infrastructure in place, the discovery presents a strong candidate for a subsea tie-back, aligning with Chevron’s strategy of capital-efficient, infrastructure-led development.
Chevron holds a 37.125% working interest, alongside Occidental (45.375%) and Woodside Energy (17.5%).
A Discovery in a Changing Offshore Landscape
While discoveries like Bandit highlight the Gulf’s long-term potential, drilling activity tells a more nuanced story.
Based on the latest dataset:
- Total wells drilled: 145
- Activity remains concentrated among a small group of major operators and infrastructure-backed independents.
Top Operators Driving Gulf Activity
Drilling activity is led by a mix of supermajors and established offshore players:
- Shell USA — 40 wells
- Chevron U.S.A. Inc. — 19 wells
- BPX — 13 wells
- Cantium, LLC — 12 wells
- OXY USA Inc. — 10 wells
This concentration highlights a clear trend: scale, balance sheet strength, and infrastructure access are defining offshore competitiveness.
Top Leases by Activity
Drilling is clustered across a handful of highly active leases:
- Lease #1 — 13 wells
- Lease #2 — 5 wells
- Lease #5 — 4 wells
- Lease #4 — 4 wells
- Lease #3 — 4 wells
This suggests operators are focusing on repeatable, lower-risk zones rather than broad frontier expansion.
Leading Rigs in the Gulf
A small group of high-spec rigs dominate offshore drilling:
- TO Deepwater Pontus — 13 wells
- Enterprise 205 — 10 wells
- Enterprise 351 — 9 wells
- TO Deepwater Poseidon — 8 wells
- Stena Evolution — 7 wells
These rigs reflect the continued reliance on modern deepwater drilling units capable of complex, high-pressure environments.
What Bandit Signals for the Market
The Bandit discovery fits squarely into a broader trend:
- Infrastructure-led exploration is winning — tie-backs reduce cost and cycle time
- Capital discipline remains critical — fewer wells, higher quality targets
- The Gulf remains a core basin — especially for operators like Chevron, Shell, and Oxy
Despite lower overall drilling intensity compared to historical levels, discoveries like Bandit show that high-impact opportunities still exist — particularly where geology meets infrastructure.
Bottom Line
Chevron’s Bandit discovery is not just another offshore find—it’s a reflection of how the Gulf of America is evolving:
- Fewer wells, but more strategic drilling
- Greater reliance on existing infrastructure
- Continued dominance by top-tier operators
For service companies and suppliers, the takeaway is clear:
opportunities are increasingly tied to active operators, core leases, and high-spec rig programs—not broad market expansion.





