How Operators Decide to Stop Drilling:A Bakken Case Study Using Continental Resources Drilling Data

When oil prices fall, operators don’t stop drilling overnight.

Instead, drilling programs unwind in stages — driven by economics, capital discipline, and inventory management. The recent decision by Continental Resources to pause drilling in North Dakota provides a clear, real-world example of how that process works and how drilling data often reveals the decision long before public statements are made.

Using well-level activity data from the last 12 months, we can see exactly how and when Continental adjusted its drilling strategy as oil prices weakened.



The Economics That Drive the Decision

Every drilling decision starts with one question:

Does a new well generate acceptable returns at today’s price?

In the Bakken, breakeven prices vary widely by location, but typically range from:

  • $50–65 per barrel WTI

As oil prices slid toward the low $60s entering late 2025, margins for new Bakken wells narrowed quickly — especially compared to higher-return inventory in the Permian Basin.

At that point, operators face a choice:

  • Continue drilling marginal wells
  • Or preserve capital and wait for pricing to improve

Most choose the second option.


What the Data Shows: Continental Resources Wells Drilled

Looking at Continental Resources’ North Dakota wells drilled over the last 12 months and grouping activity by quarter reveals a textbook drilling slowdown.

Wells Drilled by Quarter (Activity Date)

QuarterWells Drilled
2025 Q134
2025 Q232
2025 Q321
2025 Q411
2026 Q1 (to date)2

This drilling history tells the story clearly.


Phase 1: Full Development Mode

Q1–Q2 2025

  • ~33 wells drilled per quarter
  • Represents a steady multi-rig development program
  • Oil prices were still supporting full-cycle economics
  • Capital budgets remained intact

At this stage, operators are focused on:

  • Executing approved drilling schedules
  • Holding acreage
  • Maintaining production growth targets

Phase 2: The Decision to Reduce Drilling

Q3 2025

  • Wells drilled dropped from 32 to 21
  • A 34% quarter-over-quarter decline

This is the critical moment.

Operators rarely announce drilling cutbacks immediately, but internally this is when the decision is made:

  • Updated price decks show weaker returns
  • Internal hurdle rates are no longer met
  • Capital efficiency becomes more important than volume growth

Rather than stopping entirely, companies begin:

  • Dropping one rig
  • Stretching pad timing
  • Deferring marginal locations

This marks the shift from growth mode to preservation mode.


Phase 3: Capital Tightening Accelerates

Q4 2025

  • Wells drilled fall again from 21 to 11
  • Nearly a 50% reduction

By this point:

  • Oil prices remain under pressure
  • Global crude markets are oversupplied
  • Service costs may be sticky
  • Cash flow is prioritized over new drilling

Most operators at this stage are drilling only:

  • Lease-hold obligations
  • Top-tier locations
  • Previously committed pads

Everything else is deferred.


Phase 4: Drilling Stops

Q1 2026

  • Only 2 wells drilled
  • Effectively a drilling pause

This aligns directly with Continental Resources’ public comments that it would temporarily operate zero rigs in North Dakota — the first time in 30 years.

Importantly:

  • The company continues producing existing wells
  • No large-scale shut-ins have occurred
  • The pause applies only to new capital drilling

This distinction matters.


Why Operators Stop Drilling — But Keep Producing

Stopping drilling does not mean stopping production.

Once a well is drilled and completed:

  • Operating costs are relatively low
  • Cash margins often remain positive even at lower prices

New drilling, however, requires:

  • High upfront capital
  • Long payout periods
  • Confidence in forward pricing

When prices weaken, operators often conclude:

“There’s no need to drill it when margins are basically gone.”

Preserving inventory becomes more valuable than adding volume.


What This Means for Production

In the short term:

  • Production remains stable
  • Existing wells continue flowing

Over time:

  • Natural decline sets in
  • Output gradually falls if drilling does not resume

This is why drilling activity — not production — is the earliest indicator of future supply changes.


The Bigger Picture

Continental Resources’ Bakken slowdown is not an isolated event.

It reflects a broader shale reality:

  • Capital discipline now outweighs growth
  • Operators respond to price signals faster than ever
  • Higher-cost basins feel the impact first
  • Drilling data reveals strategy months before headlines

In this case, the data shows:

  • Drilling reduction decision: Summer 2025
  • Rigs released: Fall 2025
  • Drilling paused: Early 2026

The announcement simply confirmed what the wells already showed.


Final Thought

When oil prices fall, operators don’t react emotionally — they react mathematically.

Quarter by quarter, well by well, drilling programs are adjusted until economics justify activity again.

For analysts, service companies, and investors, the lesson is simple:

Watch the drilling data. It tells the story long before the press release does.


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