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What was that about oil production being down?

8 posts
  1. Melvin Waldron
    Melvin Waldron avatar
    43 posts
    10/23/2012 8:10 PM
    [size=150">US may soon become world's top oil producer[/size">

    NEW YORK (AP) — U.S. oil output is surging so fast that the United States could soon overtake Saudi Arabia as the world's biggest producer.

    Driven by high prices and new drilling methods, U.S. production of crude and other liquid hydrocarbons is on track to rise 7 percent this year to an average of 10.9 million barrels per day. This will be the fourth straight year of crude increases and the biggest single-year gain since 1951.

    The boom has surprised even the experts.

    "Five years ago, if I or anyone had predicted today's production growth, people would have thought we were crazy," says Jim Burkhard, head of oil markets research at IHS CERA, an energy consulting firm.

    The Energy Department forecasts that U.S. production of crude and other liquid hydrocarbons, which includes biofuels, will average 11.4 million barrels per day next year. That would be a record for the U.S. and just below Saudi Arabia's output of 11.6 million barrels. Citibank forecasts U.S. production could reach 13 million to 15 million barrels per day by 2020, helping to make North America "the new Middle East."

    The last year the U.S. was the world's largest producer was 2002, after the Saudis drastically cut production because of low oil prices in the aftermath of 9/11. Since then, the Saudis and the Russians have been the world leaders.

    The United States will still need to import lots of oil in the years ahead. Americans use 18.7 million barrels per day. But thanks to the growth in domestic production and the improving fuel efficiency of the nation's cars and trucks, imports could fall by half by the end of the decade.

    The increase in production hasn't translated to cheaper gasoline at the pump, and prices are expected to stay relatively high for the next few years because of growing demand for oil in developing nations and political instability in the Middle East and North Africa.

    Still, producing more oil domestically, and importing less, gives the economy a significant boost.

    The companies profiting range from independent drillers to large international oil companies such as Royal Dutch Shell, which increasingly see the U.S. as one of the most promising places to drill. ExxonMobil agreed last month to spend $1.6 billion to increase its U.S. oil holdings.

    Increased drilling is driving economic growth in states such as North Dakota, Oklahoma, Wyoming, Montana and Texas, all of which have unemployment rates far below the national average of 7.8 percent. North Dakota is at 3 percent; Oklahoma, 5.2.

    Businesses that serve the oil industry, such as steel companies that supply drilling pipe and railroads that transport oil, aren't the only ones benefiting. Homebuilders, auto dealers and retailers in energy-producing states are also getting a lift.

    IHS says the oil and gas drilling boom, which already supports 1.7 million jobs, will lead to the creation of 1.3 million jobs across the U.S. economy by the end of the decade.

    "It's the most important change to the economy since the advent of personal computers pushed up productivity in the 1990s," says economist Philip Verleger, a visiting fellow at the Peterson Institute of International Economics.

    The major factor driving domestic production higher is a newfound ability to squeeze oil out of rock once thought too difficult and expensive to tap. Drillers have learned to drill horizontally into long, thin seams of shale and other rock that holds oil, instead of searching for rare underground pools of hydrocarbons that have accumulated over millions of years.

    To free the oil and gas from the rock, drillers crack it open by pumping water, sand and chemicals into the ground at high pressure, a process is known as hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking."

    While expanded use of the method has unlocked enormous reserves of oil and gas, it has also raised concerns that contaminated water produced in the process could leak into drinking water.

    The surge in oil production has other roots, as well:

    — A long period of high oil prices has given drillers the cash and the motivation to spend the large sums required to develop new techniques and search new places for oil. Over the past decade, oil has averaged $69 a barrel. During the previous decade, it averaged $21.

    — Production in the Gulf of Mexico, which slowed after BP's 2010 well disaster and oil spill, has begun to climb again. Huge recent finds there are expected to help growth continue.

    — A natural gas glut forced drillers to dramatically slow natural gas exploration beginning about a year ago. Drillers suddenly had plenty of equipment and workers to shift to oil.

    The most prolific of the new shale formations are in North Dakota and Texas. Activity is also rising in Oklahoma, Colorado, Ohio and other states.

    Production from shale formations is expected to grow from 1.6 million barrels per day this year to 4.2 million barrels per day by 2020, according to Wood Mackenzie, an energy consulting firm. That means these new formations will yield more oil by 2020 than major oil suppliers such as Iran and Canada produce today.

    U.S. oil and liquids production reached a peak of 11.2 million barrels per day in 1985, when Alaskan fields were producing enormous amounts of crude, then began a long decline. From 1986 through 2008, crude production fell every year but one, dropping by 44 percent over that period. The United States imported nearly 60 percent of the oil it burned in 2006.

    By the end of this year, U.S. crude output will be at its highest level since 1998 and oil imports will be lower than at any time since 1992, at 41 percent of consumption.

    "It's a stunning turnaround," Burkhard says.

    Whether the U.S. supplants Saudi Arabia as the world's biggest producer will depend on the price of oil and Saudi production in the years ahead. Saudi Arabia sits on the world's largest reserves of oil, and it raises and lowers production to try to keep oil prices steady. Saudi output is expected to remain about flat between now and 2017, according to the International Energy Agency.

    But Saudi oil is cheap to tap, while the methods needed to tap U.S. oil are very expensive. If the price of oil falls below $75 per barrel, drillers in the U.S. will almost certainly begin to cut back.

    The International Energy Agency forecasts that global oil prices, which have averaged $107 per barrel this year, will slip to an average of $89 over the next five years — not a big enough drop to lead companies to cut back on exploration deeply.

    Nor are they expected to fall enough to bring back the days of cheap gasoline. Still, more of the money that Americans spend at filling stations will flow to domestic drillers, which are then more likely to buy equipment here and hire more U.S. workers.

    "Drivers will have to pay high prices, sure, but at least they'll have a job," Verleger says.



    So what was it about the president not allowing enough drilling? According to this article sounds like there has been a lot of bull pucky being spread.

    Mel

    Melvin H. Waldron III, CGCS, Horton Smith Golf Course, City of Springfield/Greene County MO

  2. Melvin Waldron
    Melvin Waldron avatar
    43 posts
    10/24/2012 11:10 AM
    I'm surprised to see no comments yet? Where's D'Mac who's been talking about not enough oil and the administration not allowing drilling?

    Or as I was looking down the thread, I got thinking, "and why are gas prices they way they are again?"

    I do remember reading in the story that this included counting bio fuels and maybe the natural gas as well?

    Mel

    Melvin H. Waldron III, CGCS, Horton Smith Golf Course, City of Springfield/Greene County MO

  3. Jon Gansen
    Jon Gansen avatar
    1 posts
    10/24/2012 12:10 PM
    Melvin Waldron, CGCS said: I'm surprised to see no comments yet? Where's D'Mac who's been talking about not enough oil and the administration not allowing drilling?

    Or as I was looking down the thread, I got thinking, "and why are gas prices they way they are again?"

    I do remember reading in the story that this included counting bio fuels and maybe the natural gas as well?

    Mel


    What I can find is oil permits are down under Obama by 36%. So can it be the permits issued by Bush in his terms are coming online and causing this increase. I am sure there is time planning infrastructure to set up before oil is even pumped.
    Wall Street Journal
    recently reported that Obama's Interior Department just banned drilling on 11.5 million acres of petroleum reserve:



  4. Wahlin Scott B
    Wahlin Scott B avatar
    10/24/2012 1:10 PM
    Jon Gansen said:
    What I can find is oil permits are down under Obama by 36%. So can it be the permits issued by Bush in his terms are coming online and causing this increase. I am sure there is time planning infrastructure to set up before oil is even pumped.
    Wall Street Journal
    recently reported that Obama's Interior Department just banned drilling on 11.5 million acres of petroleum reserve:


    The Obama Administration took permits away from companies who were not using them. This may mean less permits held, but it provided a motivation for other companies to use their permits and drill. I think limited, refinery capacity, increase demand from around the world and speculators are keeping prices up.



  5. James Schmid
    James Schmid avatar
    1 posts
    10/24/2012 1:10 PM
    Jon Gansen said:
    Melvin Waldron, CGCS said: I'm surprised to see no comments yet? Where's D'Mac who's been talking about not enough oil and the administration not allowing drilling?

    Or as I was looking down the thread, I got thinking, "and why are gas prices they way they are again?"

    I do remember reading in the story that this included counting bio fuels and maybe the natural gas as well?

    Mel


    What I can find is oil permits are down under Obama by 36%. So can it be the permits issued by Bush in his terms are coming online and causing this increase. I am sure there is time planning infrastructure to set up before oil is even pumped.
    Wall Street Journal
    recently reported that Obama's Interior Department just banned drilling on 11.5 million acres of petroleum reserve:


    What I can find is that drillers are using alien technologies to extract more oil faster. So can it be that ailen technologies are just coming online and accounting for this increase? I am sure that there is time and planning alien technology set up before oil is even pumped.

    Who cares if the Interior department just banned drilling on 10 billion acres of petroleum reserves? Maybe there is a good reason, maybe it is to protect an alien crash site so that the alien ship can be analyzed as part of a search for a planet made out of oil.

    Youre really stretching man, and posting this supposed wall street journal headline without anything behind it is just gossip.

    Oil production is up, thats a good thing. We don't need to use it as a starting point for divisiveness.



  6. Larry Allan
    Larry Allan avatar
    0 posts
    10/24/2012 2:10 PM
    Here is the real non political reason oil production is increasing. Abiotic oil is not produced by corpses of dinosaurs and palm trees. It is produced endlessly in the mantle of the earth. A resource that will never run out.

    Production at the oil field, deep in the Gulf of Mexico off the coast of Louisiana, was supposed to have declined years ago. And for a while, it behaved like any normal field: Following its 1973 discovery, Eugene Island 330's output peaked at about 15,000 barrels a day. By 1989, production had slowed to about 4,000 barrels a day.

    Then suddenly—some say almost inexplicably—Eugene Island's fortunes reversed. The field, operated by PennzEnergy Co., is now producing 13,000 barrels a day, and probable reserves have rocketed to more than 400 million barrels from 60 million. Stranger still, scientists studying the field say the crude coming out of the pipe is of a geological age quite different from the oil that gushed 10 years ago.

    According to Cooper,

    Thomas Gold, a respected astronomer and professor emeritus at Cornell University in Ithaca, NY, has held for years that oil is actually a renewable, primordial syrup continually manufactured by the Earth under ultrahot conditions and tremendous pressures. As this substance migrates toward the surface, it is attacked by bacteria, making it appear to have an organic origin dating back to the dinosaurs, he says.

    All of which has led some scientists to a radical theory: Eugene Island is rapidly refilling itself, perhaps from some continuous source miles below the Earth's surface. That, they say, raises the tantalizing possibility that oil may not be the limited resource it is assumed to be.



  7. Jon Gansen
    Jon Gansen avatar
    1 posts
    10/25/2012 7:10 AM
    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000087 ... rialPage_h Gossip? Check it out.

    Should have put the article in, my fault. Here is another by Forbes.
    http://www.forbes.com/sites/danielfishe ... il-leases/



  8. Melvin Waldron
    Melvin Waldron avatar
    43 posts
    10/25/2012 10:10 AM
    I guess my next question would be, if enough oil is being found of private land, why worry about what's on federal land?

    Would it really make that much of a difference in price? It sounds like if I'm reading correctly while oil is expensive on the world market the oil companies will spend the extra resources to get the more difficult oil. I guess if the economy (that's world, since our oil isn't only sold in the US if I understand that correctly too) tanks or the Middle East were to over produce, it could drive prices down, then oil companies in the US would stop going after this harder to get oil and then look for easier sources or just start importing more.

    I guess what oil companies need to do maybe is invest more on their exploratory and find out what's there to see if it is smart to hold the lease or not. But I can understand them not investing in that strategy if they might not hold the lease in the future.

    As usual it is not always a black or white issue, lots of shades of gray.

    Mel

    Melvin H. Waldron III, CGCS, Horton Smith Golf Course, City of Springfield/Greene County MO

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