Crushing The U.S. Energy Export Dream

Facts versus fantasy storyline.

Submitted by Arthur Berman via OilPrice.com,

Exporting crude oil and natural gas from the United States are among the dumbest energy ideas of all time.

Exporting gas is dumb.

Exporting oil is dumber.

The U.S. imports almost half of the crude oil that we use. We import 7.5 million barrels per day. The chart below shows the EIA prediction that production will slowly fall and imports will rise (AEO 2014) after 2016.

USProductionAndNetImportsOfCrudeOil

This means that the U.S. will never be self-sufficient in oil. Not even close.

What about the tight oil that is produced from shale? That’s included in the chart and is the whole reason that U.S. production has been growing. But there’s not enough of it to keep production growing for long.

Here is a chart showing the proven tight oil reserves just published last month by the EIA.

USProvenReservesOfTightOil

Total tight oil reserves are 10 billion barrels (including condensate). The U.S. consumes about 5.5 billion barrels per year, so that’s less than 2 years of supply. Almost all of it is from two plays–the Bakken and Eagle Ford shales. We hear a lot of hype from companies and analysts about the Permian basin but its reserves are only 7% of the Bakken and 8% of the Eagle Ford.

Tight oil comprises about one-third of total U.S. crude oil and condensate reserves. The U.S. is only the 11th largest holder of crude oil reserves (33.4 billion barrels) in the world with only 19% of Canada’s reserves and 12% of Saudi Arabia’s reserves.

ProvenOilReserves

In other words, the U.S. is a fairly minor player among the family of major oil-producing nations. For all the fanfare about the U.S. surpassing Saudi Arabia in production of crude oil, we are not even players in reserves. What that means is that we may temporarily pass Saudi Arabia in production because it chooses to restrict full capacity, and U.S. production will fade decades before Saudi Arabia’s production begins to decline.

Let’s put all of this together.

  • The U.S. will never be oil self-sufficient and will never import less than about 6 million barrels of oil per day.
  • U.S. total production will peak in a few years and imports will increase.
  • The U.S. is a relatively minor reserve holder in the world.

How does this picture fit with calls for the U.S. to become an exporter of oil? Very badly. For tight oil producers to become the swing producers of the world? Give me a break.

Perhaps we should send congressional proponents of oil export like Joe Barton (R-TX), Ted Cruz (R-TX) and Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) to “The Shark Tank” TV show to try to sell their great idea to the investors and judges.

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4 Comments
card802
card802
January 20, 2015 4:28 pm

USA Today, today:

“As crude oil prices continue slipping, pink slips are mounting in the oil patch.

The latest: oilfield services provider Baker Hughes (BHI), which said Tuesday it plans to lay off about 7,000 employees – or about 11% of its workforce – in the wake of a nearly 60% drop in the price of crude oil.
Last week, Schlumberger announced plans to cut 9,000 employees, about 8% of its global workforce. Suncor Energy earlier announced plans to cut 1,000 workers from its Canadian tar sands projects. In December, Halliburton announced it would cut 1,000 workers, about 1% of its workforce. Apache Oil has terminated 250 employees, or about 5% of its employees. “

Stucky
Stucky
January 20, 2015 4:34 pm

[img]http://peakwatch.typepad.com/.a/6a00d83452403c69e201b7c7314dd1970b-800wi[/img]

yahsure
yahsure
January 20, 2015 5:02 pm

How much we spend on the military to keep the black gold flowing is never even mentioned when it comes to the price of oil.
I saw on the tube that Target was closing a bunch of stores in Canada. But things are going great!

Simon Jester
Simon Jester
January 20, 2015 5:50 pm

Stucky, we will not be needing as much energy by 2035 because when the crash comes it will take most of the world’s population with it… The explosive growth in human population since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution is all about the utilization of fossil fuels to multiply productivity of the average worker; energy slaves, if you will. When this goes away there will be no way that 7+ billion people can be fed using traditional agriculture methods. No more fertilizer from natural gas, no more deep aquifer irrigation, no more oil powered tracors and harvesting machines or trucks to take the food to the supermarkets or diesel powered ships to take food halfway around the world… And we do not even begin to approach the amount of arable land needed for less efficient hand production growing methods or the numbers of draft animals and the associated equipment that would be required to harness their energy, let alone the knowledge base of long forgotten skills and manual production methods. IOW, once the production crashes we are truly and totally fucked as a modern, industrial society…