
ConocoPhillips’ capex in the first quarter was a little more than $2.9 billion, of which $1.5 billion went to activity in the Lower 48 and $949 million was allocated to Alaska, where teams are working on the Western North Slope and in the Greater Kuparuk Area. Spending last year was $12.6 billion.
Lance called the incremental investments now on the books “no-brainers” that are “going to keep our efficient machine running.” Looking longer term, he added, the ConocoPhillips team thinks the Iran war will move the price of oil “up a little bit, at least relative to where we were before the conflict started.” That will inform executives’ 2027 planning process but is not a driver of this latest capex increase.
“Recall, we were pretty constructive over the last few years before this got started with some uncertainty around how the physical and paper markets were acting […] and this has just accelerated a lot of that,” Lance said. “The floor probably has to come up to account for the changes that have occurred over the last couple of months.”
Shares of ConocoPhillips (Ticker: COP) slipped 2% to about $126 after the earnings report and conference call. Over the past 6 months, shares are still up more than 40%, a rise that has grown the operator’s market capitalization to more than $153 billion.




















