Controversy, Energy, Fracking

Fracking Boom Could Finally Cap Myth of Peak Oil: Peter Orszag

By Peter Orsza The U.S. oil market could be on the verge of its own fracking revolution, similar to what the natural-gas market is already experiencing. As a result, domestic production is now projected to rise significantly over the coming decades, reducing the relative share of imports in U.S. oil consumption.

Advances in horizontal drilling and hydrofracking, in which highly pressurized liquids are injected into underground rock, have been used increasingly over the past few years to extract natural gas. The result has been a substantial increase in recoverable reserves — accompanied by a lot of controversy over fracking’s environmental effects — and an associated decline in the cost of natural gas.

In late 2007, wellhead prices for natural gas were hovering in the range of $6 to $7 per thousand cubic feet; by late 2011, they had declined to $3 to $4, and they have fallen further since. John Deutch, a former director of the Central Intelligence Agency, has written that, given the impact on energy markets and therefore geopolitical dynamics, “it is perhaps a permissible exaggeration to claim a natural-gas revolution.”

The same controversial technologies used to recover natural gas from deep-rock formations are now increasingly being used to extract oil. Oil is already being produced from shale at several locations throughout the U.S., most notably the Bakken shale in North Dakota.

As Jim Mulva, the chief executive officer of ConocoPhillips, recently said, “The revolution has spread to domestic oil production. And it may track the path it followed with natural gas. We just don’t know yet. But it looks promising.”

Rising Domestic Oil

The federal Energy Information Administration certainly thinks so. An early release of its annual energy outlook projects a substantial increase in onshore production of oil from shale formations — what experts call “tight oil.”

In 2010, oil companies produced 5.5 million barrels per day of domestic crude. The Energy Information Administration estimates that figure will rise to 6.7 million barrels per day by 2020, mostly because of “continued development of tight oil, in combination with the ongoing development of offshore resources in the Gulf of Mexico.” The U.S. has not produced as much as 6.7 million barrels per day since 1994.

The mirror image of this projected increase in U.S. production of oil and natural gas is a decline in reliance on imports. In 2005 and 2006, about 60 percent of the liquid fuel used in the U.S. was imported. By 2010, that share fell to 50 percent, and it continues to decline. The Energy Information Agency expects it to drop to 37 percent by 2035.

Other analysts believe that even this projection is too conservative because tight-oil production could rise faster than expected. Every time projections are revised, the numbers seem to move higher.

So, will this push oil prices down overall, as shale gas has done to natural-gas prices? For years, analysts have worried that known oil reserves have peaked, so that prices will keep rising. Tight oil could change that dynamic. As the energy analyst Seth Kleinman, a colleague of mine at Citigroup Inc., argues, the price effects of the shift to tight oil “may be more immediate and subtle than the supply-and-demand balances hint at.”

The year ahead, he says, “could really see the death of the peak-oil hypothesis, something that has been underpinning a lot of the structural bullishness on oil.” (The terminology is thus borderline ironic, since tight oil could make oil markets much less tight.)

Still, significant uncertainty surrounds the entire fracking movement, for both natural gas and oil. The environmental controversies — especially regarding water pollution — are not yet as prominent for oil as for natural gas, but that’s undoubtedly because tight-oil production is only now ramping up. If it grows to be as large as projected, there’s little doubt that environmental concerns will become much more prominent, too.

Expect to hear a lot more about tight oil over the next few years — and not just from the Energy Information Administration.

(Peter Orszag is vice chairman of global banking at Citigroup Inc. and a former director of the Office of Management and Budget in the Obama administration. The opinions expressed are his own.)

Read more opinion online from Bloomberg View.

To contact the writer of this article: Peter Orszag at orszagbloomberg@gmail.com

To contact the editor responsible for this article: Mary Duenwald at mduenwald@bloomberg.net

Read more: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-02-01/fracking-boom-could-finally-cap-myth-of-peak-oil-peter-orszag.html

Discussion

One Response to “Fracking Boom Could Finally Cap Myth of Peak Oil: Peter Orszag”

  1. The world’s conventional oil production is reaching its peak.

    And, in non-OPEC countries, conventional oil production will collapse around 2025.

    Today, the most optimistic estimate suggests that non-OPEC countries have 300 billion barrels of conventional oil and they produce 50 million barrels per day or 180 billions barrels per decade.

    How could non-OPEC countries replace a production of 50 million barrels of conventional oil by a production of 50 million barrels of unconventional oil?

    U.S. and Canada produce only 2 million barrels of unconventional oil.

    There are already a lot of problems with unconventional oil.

    There are currently more than 170 square kilometres of tailings ponds in Alberta’s oil sands regions, the ponds are filled each day with 1.8 billion liters of toxic water.
    At the same time, there are more and more earthquakes in areas where hydraulic fracturation is used.
    A 5.6 magnitude earthquake struck Oklahoma City in 2011, near the planned path of the Keystone XL.
    In Texas, fracking a single Eagle Ford well requires as much as 13 million gallons of water.

    Posted by luc | February 10, 2012, 2:32 pm

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s

Receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 389 other followers

RSS FT Commodities News

RSS Consumer Energy Alliance

  • CEA Warns Against Costly Fuel Program in Oregon
    CEA Warns Against Costly Fuel Program in Oregon  WASHINGTON – At Governor Kitzhaber’s direction, the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality has issued a draft rule for beginning implementation of a state low carbon fuel standard (LCFS) program, calling it a “Clean Fuels Program.” The program closely mirrors other LCFS proposals that have been studi […]
  • CEA Welcomes Inquiry of Five-Year Offshore Development Plan and Future Needs
    CEA Welcomes Inquiry of Five-Year Offshore Development Plan and Future Needs CEA supports congressional efforts to understand future impacts of Obama Administration’s draft five year plan HOUSTON, TX: Consumer Energy Alliance (CEA) strongly supports today’s House Committee on Natural Resources’s hearing highlighting the Obama Administration’s draft fiv […]
  • May 2012 Newsletter
    May 2012 CEA Newsletter Issue 62 Practical Policies and Sensible Solutions Recently, Consumer Energy Alliance has been hard at work, educating consumers and policymakers of the importance of our national energy policy and urging voters and candidates alike to prioritize energy as part of the debate leading up to the elections in November.  And, we’ve been th […]
  • CEA Urges Interior to Not List Dunes Sagebrush Lizard
    CEA Urges Interior to Not List Dunes Sagebrush Lizard: CEA Submits Over 13,000 Comments Highlighting Concern for Energy Development HOUSTON, TX: Consumer Energy Alliance (CEA) submitted over 13,000 public comments on Friday from its U.S. consumer-advocates to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service that urge the agency not to list the dunes sagebrush lizard as ei […]
  • Consumer Energy Alliance Welcomes Keystone XL Permit, Pledges Support
    HOUSTON, TX- Consumer Energy Alliance (CEA) applauds TransCanada’s re-submission of its presidential permit application for the Keystone XL pipeline.  The action is a critical step for a project that is integral in securing reliable energy supplies for the benefit of the U.S. economy, consumers and our nation’s energy security, while providing thousands of j […]
  • Hurdles to Offshore Energy Remain
    As tens of thousands of energy professionals descend upon Houston this week for the 2012 Offshore Technology Conference, we are reminded just how far technology has come in such a short time.  In the two years since the Deepwater Horizon tragedy, both the private sector and federal regulators have advanced new technologies and practices that [...]
  • Consumer Energy Alliance Welcomes Newest Affiliate Member, Mississippi Energy Institute
  • CEA Commends New Hampshire Senate Passage of HB 1487
    CEA Commends New Hampshire Senate Passage of HB 1487 Bill will prohibit funding for costly low carbon fuel standards without legislative due process WASHINGTON – Earlier today, the New Hampshire Senate passed HB 1487, an act that will prohibit the State from funding participation in any national, state or regional low carbon fuel standard (LCFS) withou […]
  • Consumer Energy Alliance Welcomes Newest Affiliate Member, Chemistry Industry Council of Illinois
  • The uncertain state of regulation
    The uncertain state of regulation Last week, we learned about plans for a new set of regulations covering natural gas production from hydraulic fracturing. And this week, the Interior Department has said that those forthcoming rules are still being defined and it’s unclear when they will be released. If it sounds familiar, that’s because it is. The [...]

RSS Free Enterprise

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS ANGA.US

RSS Energy Tomorrow

RSS NYT – El Paso

  • Korean Oil Firm Is Part of Group Buying El Paso Assets
    A South Korean state-run oil company, the Korean National Oil Corporation, is a part of the group that includes Apollo Global Management, Riverstone Holdings and Access Industries.
  • How Wall Street Deals With Conflicts
    There are no options to police conflicts among investment bankers as there are in the law. Indeed, conflicts of interest appear to be almost a cost of doing business on Wall Street these days.
  • DEALBOOK; El Paso Shareholders Approve Kinder Morgan Deal
    Shareholders of the natural gas pipeline operator El Paso Corporation overwhelmingly approve takeover bid by Kinder Morgan, originally valued at $21.1 billion.
  • A Mirror Can Be a Dangerous Tool for Some C.E.O.'s
    Being a visionary leader, or at least thinking you are, can propel corporate chieftains to great heights, but it can also lead to extreme narcissism. And the victims are often shareholders.
  • El Paso Corp. Chief Defends His Actions in Kinder Morgan Deal
    In a letter to employees, Douglas L. Foshee said he acted properly in negotiating the sale of the El Paso Corporation to Kinder Morgan, despite criticism from a Delaware judge.
  • DEALBOOK; As an Adviser, Goldman Sachs Guaranteed Its Payday
    Andrew Ross Sorkin DealBook column discusses recent revelations that Goldman Sachs, in an advisory role in Kinder Morgan's deal for El Paso, was on every conceivable side of the negotiations, and El Paso may have unwittingly sold itself for far too cheap a price; holds Goldman's brazenness in the deal is nothing short of breathtaking, and is just a […]
  • DealBook Online
    DealBook Online; bill in Congress might give companies caught in government investigations a mechanism to recover some payments if a former officer or director is found to have violated the law; Mike Stewart, JPMorgan Chase head of proprietary trading, is leaving to start his own hedge fund; El Paso Corp pushes back shareholders vote on company's planne […]
  • As an Adviser, Goldman Guaranteed Its Payday
    In an advisory role in a deal for the El Paso Corporation, Goldman Sachs was on every conceivable side of the negotiations, and El Paso may have unwittingly sold itself at far too cheap a price.
  • El Paso Delays Vote on Kinder Morgan Deal by a Few Days
    The El Paso Corporation said it pushed back the meeting by a few days, to allow shareholders to weigh a Delaware judge's criticism of the process that led to the company's $21.1 billion sale to Kinder Morgan.
  • The Losers in the El Paso Corp. Opinion
    While its liability exposure is limited, the El Paso Corporation's investment bank, Goldman Sachs, sustains another blow to its reputation, argues the Deal Professor.
Watch videos at Vodpod.

Twitter Updates

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 389 other followers