Is ConocoPhillips Really Selling Delaware Basin Assets?

Recent market chatter suggests ConocoPhillips may be exploring the sale of certain Delaware Basin assets, potentially valued around $2 billion. On the surface, that kind of headline can read like a strategic pullback from one of North America’s most prolific shale plays.

But when you line that speculation up against what ConocoPhillips actually said on its most recent earnings call—and what its 2025 drilling data shows—the picture looks very different.

This isn’t an exit story. It’s a portfolio-shaping story.



What management actually said about the Delaware Basin

The earnings call language around the Delaware Basin was notably confident and operationally specific. Management repeatedly grouped the Delaware with ConocoPhillips’ highest-quality Lower 48 inventory, emphasizing depth, efficiency, and long runway rather than maturity or decline.

Key signals from the call:

  • The Delaware is part of ConocoPhillips’ “two decades-plus of low-cost supply inventory” in the Lower 48.
  • Management highlighted year-over-year productivity gains, not degradation.
  • The focus remains on organic development, not divestment-driven contraction.
  • Operational improvements are coming from spacing optimization, stacking strategies, and longer laterals, not simply higher capital intensity.

One detail stood out in particular:
ConocoPhillips reported ~8% year-over-year improvement in oil productivity per foot in the Delaware Basin, even as average lateral lengths increased ~9%. That combination matters—it implies real efficiency gains, not just longer wells masking declining rock quality.

In short, the Delaware Basin was discussed as a core manufacturing asset, not a non-core legacy position.


So why the sale speculation?

That’s where nuance matters.

Following the Marathon Oil acquisition, ConocoPhillips has been explicit about portfolio streamlining—high-grading acreage, simplifying development patterns, and recycling capital out of assets that don’t meet its long-term efficiency threshold.

That context strongly suggests any Delaware divestment would involve:

  • Non-core or less contiguous acreage
  • Positions that complicate long-lateral development
  • Assets better suited to private equity or smaller operators

Not the core Delaware engine the company continues to invest in and optimize.


Delaware Basin drilling recap: what the data shows

To ground this discussion in facts, here’s what ConocoPhillips actually drilled in the Delaware Basin in 2025.

Total activity (2025)

  • Total wells drilled: 144
  • Total unique rigs: 11

This alone signals scale, discipline, and repeatability—hallmarks of a mature manufacturing program.


Wells drilled by county (2025)

CountyWells DrilledUnique Rigs
Lea, NM495
Loving, TX356
Eddy, NM263
Culberson, TX133
Reeves, TX133
Ward, TX43
Winkler, TX41

What this tells us:
Roughly 60% of all Delaware wells were drilled in Lea and Loving counties, confirming a tight core footprint rather than scattered step-out development.


Top rigs by well count (2025)

RankRigWells Drilled
1Nabors 89116
2Nabors X3916
3Nabors X0515
4Nabors X4815
5Scan Quest14
6Ensign 14513
7Nabors X3113
8Nabors X0412
9Nabors X0912
10H&P 48611

Rig takeaway:
This is a concentrated, repeat-rig program. No churn. No experimentation. Just consistent deployment across a small, trusted rig set—exactly what you’d expect in a core shale asset.


The real takeaway

If ConocoPhillips does sell Delaware Basin assets, the evidence strongly suggests it will be surgical, not strategic retreat.

The earnings call underscores:

  • Improving productivity
  • Longer laterals and falling cost of supply
  • Continued capital allocation to core Delaware development

Meanwhile, the drilling data shows:

  • High concentration in core counties
  • Stable rig utilization
  • Manufacturing-style execution

Put together, this looks less like a company backing away from the Delaware Basin—and more like one tightening its grip on the best parts of it.


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