The Delaware Gazette

US may become world’s top oil producer

JONATHAN FAHEY

AP Energy Writer

NEW YORK — 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.

AP News Posted by on Oct 23 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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