Register

Peak Oil is You


Donate Bitcoins ;-) or Paypal :-)


Page added on October 2, 2012

Bookmark and Share

Is energy independence a fantasy?

Public Policy

Can America’s vast shale oil and gas reserves – combined with fracking and drilling technlogies – drive the U.S. to complete energy independence? It looks doubtful.

The U.S. has become the world’s second-biggest oil producer – having passed Russia, and trailing only Saudi Arabia.

But can America’s vast shale oil and gas reserves – combined with fracking and drilling technlogies – drive the U.S. to complete energy independence?
According to a report from Credit Suisse, the answer is NO.

But it does suggest that North America in its entirety could one day become energy self-sufficient.

Credit Suisse (CS) bases their findings on these 4 factors:

1. Flow rates from oil wells about 25% higher than now, based on future technology advances
2. More wells that are on average 39% closer together than they are now (what is referred to as  “downspacing” in the oil industry)
3. $95/barrel Brent pricing
4. Increased use of natural gas in the economy?

CS also determined the following constraints to becoming energy self-sufficient:?

1. Fast declining production in shale wells
2. Oil below $75/barrel
3. Enough money to build pipelines and refineries??

CS says US oil production will peak out at 10 million barrels of oil per day (bopd) by around 2022—a double from 2008’s 5 million. 2011 oil production in the US was 5.7 million bopd.

EIA stats show petroleum consumption has fallen steadily for seven years, and in 2011 was 18.8 million bopd—the same as 1997 and 2 million bopd below the peak in 2005.?

Once you include 3 million barrels of US liquids production (natural gas liquids like propane, butane, condensate and biofuels), overall production was still less than 9 million boepd—not even half of the country’s total demand of 19.2 million barrels of oil equivalent per day (boepd).? (RELATED: Will a Melting Arctic Help Postpone Peak Oil?)

Canada and Mexico are comparatively small consumers, using only 4.4 million bopd, with combined overall oil and liquids production of 6.6 million boepd of oil and NGLs.

All these numbers show that overall, the U.S. is falling short by 10.7 million boepd itself, and North America as a whole comes up around 8.8 million boepd shy of total demand.

RELATED: 8 steps to US energy security

That means that in order for American to become energy independent, it would have to be producing and refining 10.7 million boepd more than it does now. That would be extremely difficult to achieve.

CS expects U.S. oil and liquids production to rise from the current 8.7 million boepd to around 15 million boepd by 2022, while demand will slump closer to 18 million boepd. A modest jump in Canadian output paired with continuing low demand will help bridge the shrinking supply gap, moving North America closer to energy independence. And that assumes a steady decline from Mexico.?

The crux of the report’s predictions lies in the Americans’ ability to tap their massive unconventional oil resources.

The first key to this prospective boom is the initial production (IP) rates for the country’s major shale oil fields — the amount produced at each well over the first 30 days. (The industry shows this number in print as the “IP30” rate.)

These numbers are often the most important, since the greatest output comes in the first few months before declining rapidly. CS estimates IP30 rates for each of the major shale plays using production numbers at the end of the fourth quarter of 2011.

Some of these assumptions are set far above what actual production numbers are today. For example, actual output in the Utica shale and Mississipian formation was close to nil—so almost no data on which to guesstimate the future. But CS expects wells to eventually reach around 600 and 400 boepd, respectively, as the plays mature.

Other young plays that lack any production data like the Brown Dense limestone and the Woodford shale are projected to top 300 boepd based on the limited data of those regions.??The biggest producers – the Granite Wash and Eagle Ford shale – are already close to their CS assumptions. (RELATED: What Does the Future Hold for Natural Gas Prices?)

On the whole, CS estimates average a 21%-25% bump over actual output numbers from last year. Only the Granite Wash and Cana Woodford oil plays are projected above the CS exploration and production team’s numbers.

The report backs up its optimistic IP30 rates with strong early numbers in some of the developing unconventional plays. Over three years, IP30 rates in the well-developed Barnett formation more than doubled.

But in the Bakken and Marcellus shale plays, IP rates tripled in 13 months and nine months, respectively. The Eagle Ford is the only exception, and those numbers are skewed somewhat by an early focus on natural gas over liquids.

A large part of rising IP rates is the assumption that oil and gas companies will eventually learn the nuances of each region. But CS also notes the increased use of pad drilling—where four wells can be drilled from one, two-acre pad—should keep more oil rigs online for longer during the first 30 days, as they don’t need to be moved around as much from well to well.

Pad drilling will also play a role in lowering the spacing between unconventional oil wells.??CS projects the U.S. will need to increase its total oil wells by 27% in order to prevent a decline within the next four years. In order to meet the report’s production numbers, the country would have to increase the number of new wells being drilled each year by 39% through 2022.

These estimates are all a bit voodoo—they depend on tight spacing and a lot higher flow rates than now. However, CS says recent experiments in downspacing in the Eagle Ford shale play should help boost production.

The big question when you downsize your wells is—are you just cannibalizing existing production from existing wells or are you able to recover more oil overall (the Recovery Factor) by draining parts of the reservoir that you wouldn’t have gotten otherwise.

If it’s the former, the impacts on the US production outlook would be dramatic.

The biggest question mark for me, however, is what will the decline rates on shale oil be long term? Right now CS suggests average decline rates in the Bakken and Eagle Ford—the two largest shale oil plays right now—are 60% in Year 1, 30% in Year 2 and falling close to 15% in Year 5. CS puts its estimate for the average terminal decline rate – beyond 20 years – of unconventional US oil resources at 8%.??But the Bakken and Eagle Ford shale plays have only been drilled hard for the past 3-4 years. So long term decline rates—which CS thinks will average out at 4% for the Bakken and 6% for Eagle Ford over the life of the well—is an educated guess.

CS estimates expected ultimate recovery per well for the Bakken of nearly 900,000 boepd and 600,000 boepd for the Eagle Ford shale. Less developed projects like the Permian Horizontal, Woodford shale and Granite Wash are all expected to reach near 500,000 boepd, despite a small sample size.
If declines are steeper than they project, then these wells will get shut-in sooner and produce less than CS suggests. Though they didn’t talk about waterflooding, which will likely GREATLY increase overall reserves in US tight oil plays.

CS estimates that the oil industry will need Brent prices of at least $95 per barrel to justify investment through 2014. After that, investment costs will drop low enough that shale fields would eventually draw interest even at benchmark prices of almost $75 per barrel.

The CS analysis is most sensitive to a change in rig counts. A drop to $80 per barrel within the next year would result in 180 fewer rigs operating within the country and $60 billion less in total investments by 2014. Oil production in this scenario would reach only 8 million bopd.

The report says that massive infrastructure spending (pipelines, refineries, etc.) is a key to energy independence—and notes that oil companies have already proven unwilling to invest in new infrastructure at prices as high as $90 per barrel, despite most wells remaining profitable.

A lack of infrastructure spending—specifically pipelines to take crude oil out of the Cushing Oklahoma hub, and to get Bakken and Canadian oil to the east and west coasts—have caused a $15/barrel discount in North American crude prices to the rest of the world.

This is huge lost revenue for US and Canadian oil producers.

Pipelines such as the Seaway pipeline and the proposed Keystone XL should add between 950,000 and 1.25 million bopd of capacity away from Cushing OK, to the Gulf Coast. But Bakken oil will continue to rely on rail and barge transportation, and both the Keystone XL and the Flanagan South pipelines that would service the region are yet to be approved.

CS also gives some consideration to possible regulatory restrictions, primarily in terms of water restrictions. Several states have already considered limiting water use in the energy sector to prevent the decline of local agriculture industries, while concerns about water safety have spurred most of the objections to the use of fracking in the U.S.

US energy independence is a hot topic spurred by the rapid rise in shale oil production—The Shale Revolution.

While it’s hard for anybody to guesstimate what such a dynamic industry will be doing 10 years from now, Credit Suisse data suggests that will remain an elusive goal.

CS Monitor



7 Comments on "Is energy independence a fantasy?"

  1. Beery on Tue, 2nd Oct 2012 1:11 pm 

    The US will become energy independent when people in the US stop consuming more energy than they produce. Hoping for magical new quantities of oil, gas and coal is never going to do the trick.

  2. Arthur on Tue, 2nd Oct 2012 2:46 pm 

    The US government plans to spend 352 billion $ on renewing it’s nuclear arsenal.

    http://www.defensenews.com/article/20120916/DEFREG02/309160004/U-S-Modernize-Nuclear-Arsenal-Report

    Equating 1 million $ = 1 MW wind power, that would mean 352 * 1000 MW = 352 conventional powerstations worth of wind power or ca. 1173 watt per American. That’s not bad at all. This would truly mean energy independence as well as the creation of a viable windenergy industry at home, rather than China for a change.

    It is a matter of priorities, not impossibilities. But hey, dream on, the military industrial complex is more important than you.

  3. Kenz300 on Tue, 2nd Oct 2012 2:54 pm 

    Energy production is increasing. We are producing more now than we have in many years.

    Oil imports now account for 40% of oil use down from 60% a few years ago.

    Oil use is declining. Slowing demand in the US is aided by increasing fuel efficiency standards. Many 40 MPG vehicles are now sold replacing those 12 MPG pick up trucks and SUV’s.

    Biofuels now make up over 10% of the fuel supply and continues to grow. Second generation biofuels made from cellulose, algae, and waste are now being constructed or are coming online.

    Alternative fueled vehicles — electrics, flex-fuel, hybrids, CNG and LNG fueled vehicles are all becoming a bigger part of the market.

    Long haul truckers are converting to LNG to take advantage of the cost savings on fuel. Many companies like Waste Management, Staples, UPS and others are transitioning their fleets to a combinations of electric, CNG and LNG fueled vehicles.

    The transportation fuels market is changing. High oil prices and tight supplies will increase the speed of change. Price is a good motivator.

  4. Solarity on Tue, 2nd Oct 2012 3:16 pm 

    Once again: confusion between ‘energy independence’ and copious oil production. These two concepts are not equivalent. The U.S. currently consumes 19 mbpd of petroleum, mostly on transportation. All trains should run on electricity. All Ships should be nuclear. All trucks should be NG. Buses should be either NG or electric, as can automobiles. These changes alone would eliminate half of the demand for oil.

  5. Lee on Tue, 2nd Oct 2012 6:34 pm 

    Apart from the title, to which the obvious answer is “yes”, this whole thing is quite dubious.
    The IEA figures show Russia producing 10.7mbd in August 2012, Saudia Arabia producing 9.9mbd and the United States producing 8.9mbd, making the opening statement look rather stupid.
    The United States is a large exporter, but of refined products for which it has had to import the crude in the first place.
    And with the economy of the whole world in the dustbin, many of the world’s biggest crude fields maxed out, and the truth about fantasy Saudi reserves slowing coming into the light, those production figures are only going down. And as for fracking, it is only a matter of time before investors realise they’ve been taken for a ride and pull all of their money out.

  6. DC on Wed, 3rd Oct 2012 1:57 am 

    The last time amerika was ‘energy’ independent, was what..the 1940’s? I never ceased to be amazed how amerikans think they ever produce the nearly 20mbpd they waste now running around pointlessly, when they never produced more than about 10mbpd@ peak, decades ago. Now they are @ 5mbpd.

    That math just doesnt add up. And you cant count ‘Canada’ or ‘Mexico’ in ‘your’ production because thats just cheating. Even if you added up all North and South Americas total and combined them, and shipped them soley to keep amerika fatties behind the wheels of there poorly-built SUVs, there STILL wouldnt be enough. And im sure, everyone else in N\S amerika would object mightly to such a plan if it were ever proposed…

  7. BillT on Wed, 3rd Oct 2012 2:29 am 

    “… It looks doubtful.”

    No, it looks impossible…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *