Post by jeffolie on Nov 12, 2012 14:10:14 GMT -6
2020 US: top oil, gas worldwide, prices will fall
" ... US would overtake Russia as the largest gas producer by 2015. ... with less expensive gas and electricity prices giving [US] industry a competitive edge
" ... lead to a fall in US oil imports, which the IEA says will plunge from 10m barrels a day to 4m b/d in ten years’ time. ... According to the IEA, which advises industrialised countries on energy policy, the US will be producing 11.1m b/d in 2020 compared to Saudi output of 10.6m b/d.
" ... The increase in US domestic production comes as new fuel-efficiency measures in transport imposed by the first Obama administration are set to reduce oil demand sharply.
my jeffolie view: prices will fall as demand declines, the economy crashes ... leading to a revival of US manufacturing after the doom recedes giving 30 years of US growth with new tech industrial processes such as 3D printing.
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November 12, 2012
US to be world’s top energy producer
The US will overtake Saudi Arabia and Russia to become the world’s largest global oil producer by the second half of this decade, according to the International Energy Agency, as the shale revolution redraws the global energy landscape.
The agency’s latest World Energy Outlook said the US could be almost self-sufficient in energy by 2035, marking “a dramatic reversal of the trend seen in most other energy-importing countries”. It said the US would overtake Russia as the largest gas producer by 2015.
The resurgence in US oil and gas production, it said, was spurring economic activity “with less expensive gas and electricity prices giving [US] industry a competitive edge”. Last week, a Germany industry lobby group warned that US companies are enjoying a rising advantage in energy costs.
New extraction techniques – most notably hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, and horizontal drilling – have unlocked huge hydrocarbon resources previously thought unrecoverable. The boom, which started in natural gas, has switched to “tight oil” in places such as North Dakota’s Bakken Shale and Eagle Ford in South Texas.
However, other analysts have warned that the US oil boom is still in its infancy and continued growth cannot be guaranteed. Fatih Birol, the IEA’s chief economist, noted that a drop in global oil prices would affect production, since tight oil requires a high market price to be economic. In contrast, Saudi oil is much cheaper to produce.
If realised, the IEA’s prediction could have significant implications for global commodity markets and the broader geopolitics of energy. Some analysts have wondered whether an energy-independent US would still guard the world’s critical sea lanes such as the Strait of Hormuz in two decades’ time – and whether China, whose reliance on Middle East crude imports was growing, would replace it.
The increase in US domestic production comes as new fuel-efficiency measures in transport imposed by the first Obama administration are set to reduce oil demand sharply. That will lead to a fall in US oil imports, which the IEA says will plunge from 10m barrels a day to 4m b/d in ten years’ time.
According to the IEA, which advises industrialised countries on energy policy, the US will be producing 11.1m b/d in 2020 compared to Saudi output of 10.6m b/d.
Despite America’s rise, Saudi Arabia, which boasts the world’s largest conventional oil reserves and substantial undeveloped resources, will still dominate oil markets in the long term. The kingdom will have regained its top spot by 2030, the IEA predicted, pumping 11.4m b/d compared to the US’ 10.2m b/d. It added that US production will continue to fall, to 9.2m b/d in 2035, while Saudi’s will rise to 12.3m b/d.
The IEA also warned that a fall in oil imports would not insulate the US from developments in international markets or end its vulnerability to price spikes. The agency said no country was an “energy island”.
www.ft.com/cms/s/0/8c2bcdf2-2c9f-11e2-9211-00144feabdc0.html#axzz2C2XBREVp
" ... US would overtake Russia as the largest gas producer by 2015. ... with less expensive gas and electricity prices giving [US] industry a competitive edge
" ... lead to a fall in US oil imports, which the IEA says will plunge from 10m barrels a day to 4m b/d in ten years’ time. ... According to the IEA, which advises industrialised countries on energy policy, the US will be producing 11.1m b/d in 2020 compared to Saudi output of 10.6m b/d.
" ... The increase in US domestic production comes as new fuel-efficiency measures in transport imposed by the first Obama administration are set to reduce oil demand sharply.
my jeffolie view: prices will fall as demand declines, the economy crashes ... leading to a revival of US manufacturing after the doom recedes giving 30 years of US growth with new tech industrial processes such as 3D printing.
===============================
November 12, 2012
US to be world’s top energy producer
The US will overtake Saudi Arabia and Russia to become the world’s largest global oil producer by the second half of this decade, according to the International Energy Agency, as the shale revolution redraws the global energy landscape.
The agency’s latest World Energy Outlook said the US could be almost self-sufficient in energy by 2035, marking “a dramatic reversal of the trend seen in most other energy-importing countries”. It said the US would overtake Russia as the largest gas producer by 2015.
The resurgence in US oil and gas production, it said, was spurring economic activity “with less expensive gas and electricity prices giving [US] industry a competitive edge”. Last week, a Germany industry lobby group warned that US companies are enjoying a rising advantage in energy costs.
New extraction techniques – most notably hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, and horizontal drilling – have unlocked huge hydrocarbon resources previously thought unrecoverable. The boom, which started in natural gas, has switched to “tight oil” in places such as North Dakota’s Bakken Shale and Eagle Ford in South Texas.
However, other analysts have warned that the US oil boom is still in its infancy and continued growth cannot be guaranteed. Fatih Birol, the IEA’s chief economist, noted that a drop in global oil prices would affect production, since tight oil requires a high market price to be economic. In contrast, Saudi oil is much cheaper to produce.
If realised, the IEA’s prediction could have significant implications for global commodity markets and the broader geopolitics of energy. Some analysts have wondered whether an energy-independent US would still guard the world’s critical sea lanes such as the Strait of Hormuz in two decades’ time – and whether China, whose reliance on Middle East crude imports was growing, would replace it.
The increase in US domestic production comes as new fuel-efficiency measures in transport imposed by the first Obama administration are set to reduce oil demand sharply. That will lead to a fall in US oil imports, which the IEA says will plunge from 10m barrels a day to 4m b/d in ten years’ time.
According to the IEA, which advises industrialised countries on energy policy, the US will be producing 11.1m b/d in 2020 compared to Saudi output of 10.6m b/d.
Despite America’s rise, Saudi Arabia, which boasts the world’s largest conventional oil reserves and substantial undeveloped resources, will still dominate oil markets in the long term. The kingdom will have regained its top spot by 2030, the IEA predicted, pumping 11.4m b/d compared to the US’ 10.2m b/d. It added that US production will continue to fall, to 9.2m b/d in 2035, while Saudi’s will rise to 12.3m b/d.
The IEA also warned that a fall in oil imports would not insulate the US from developments in international markets or end its vulnerability to price spikes. The agency said no country was an “energy island”.
www.ft.com/cms/s/0/8c2bcdf2-2c9f-11e2-9211-00144feabdc0.html#axzz2C2XBREVp