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Property and Equipment
3 Months Ended
Mar. 31, 2018
Property Plant And Equipment [Abstract]  
Property and Equipment

5. Property and Equipment

Property and equipment consisted of the following at March 31, 2018 and December 31, 2017 (in thousands):

 

March 31,

 

 

December 31,

 

 

2018

 

 

2017

 

Equipment

$

8,155,843

 

 

$

8,066,404

 

Oil and natural gas properties

 

215,488

 

 

 

211,566

 

Buildings

 

184,897

 

 

 

185,475

 

Land

 

26,015

 

 

 

26,593

 

Total property and equipment

 

8,582,243

 

 

 

8,490,038

 

Less accumulated depreciation, depletion and impairment

 

(4,365,194

)

 

 

(4,235,308

)

Property and equipment, net

$

4,217,049

 

 

$

4,254,730

 

 

On a periodic basis, the Company evaluates its fleet of drilling rigs for marketability based on the condition of inactive rigs, expenditures that would be necessary to bring them to working condition and the expected demand for drilling services by rig type (such as drilling conventional, vertical wells versus drilling longer, horizontal wells using higher specification rigs).  The components comprising rigs that will no longer be marketed are evaluated, and those components with continuing utility to the Company’s other marketed rigs are transferred to other rigs or to the Company’s yards to be used as spare equipment.  The remaining components of these rigs are retired.  

In addition, the Company evaluates the recoverability of its long-lived assets whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate that their carrying amounts may not be recoverable (a “triggering event”).  Based on recent commodity prices, the Company’s results of operations for the three-month period ended March 31, 2018 and management’s expectations of operating results in future periods, the Company concluded that no triggering event occurred during the three months ended March 31, 2018 with respect to its contract drilling segment, its pressure pumping segment, its directional drilling segment or its other operations, except for oil and natural gas properties, which are discussed in the following paragraph.  Management’s expectations of future operating results were based on the assumption that activity levels in all segments and its other operations will remain relatively stable or improve in response to relatively stable or increasing oil prices.  

The Company reviews its proved oil and natural gas properties for impairment whenever a triggering event occurs, such as downward revisions in reserve estimates or decreases in expected future oil and natural gas prices.  Proved properties are grouped by field, and undiscounted cash flow estimates are prepared based on the Company’s expectation of future pricing over the lives of the respective fields.  These cash flow estimates are reviewed by an independent petroleum engineer.  If the net book value of a field exceeds its undiscounted cash flow estimate, impairment expense is measured and recognized as the difference between net book value and fair value.  Impairment expense related to proved and unproved oil and natural gas properties totaled approximately $2,000 in the three months ended March 31, 2018 and $503,000 in the three months ended March 31, 2017 and is included in depreciation, depletion, amortization and impairment in the condensed consolidated statements of operations.