Page added on November 13, 2013
There are many zigs and zags, twists and turns, and unintended consequences along the path to higher priced and scarce oil. Only three months ago it seemed we were headed towards an aerial bombardment of Syria’s armed forces which would likely send oil and gas prices towards the sky in anticipation of a response. Well, the AAA reports that the current average price of regular gasoline is $3.18 and its spokesperson is saying we should be seeing $3.10 a gallon by Christmas and maybe even $3. What’s happening?
First let me disabuse you of the idea that we are seeing more than a temporary blip and that sub-$3 gasoline will become a permanent feature of life in America. The underlying forces that will cause oil production to peak – i.e. oil fields depleting faster than new ones are being found and developed at affordable prices – is still with us as will become apparent one of these days.
This fall, however, there are several factors that have come together to force oil prices down. One major factor, higher U.S. production, is unlikely to last more than a few years, while others such as steadily weakening demand may be with us for a while.
When oil prices got high enough five or six years ago, it became profitable to drill and hydraulically fracture tight oil formations in North Dakota and Texas. What made fracking feasible was that oil prices in the last decade rose from $20 a barrel to circa $100 making the drilling of very expensive fracked wells with a very short productive lifetime feasible.
From about 5 million b/d in 2007, U.S. domestic production has climbed by 2.5 million barrels a day (b/d) to 7.5 million this summer. For a time the oil industry had difficulties moving this oil to market as it was coming from regions without sufficient pipeline capacity so that a big glut of crude built up in the mid-West where the fracked oil came from. This glut drove down the value of domestic crude until at one point it was selling at $25 a barrel below world prices.
While this oil was making its way to refineries in the mid-West, it was not getting to the Gulf or East Coast. We in the East were buying our crude at world prices which have been hanging around $100 a barrel for the last four or five years. Thus while the great fracked oil boom was helping consumers in the middle section of the country it was not doing much for the coasts where most of the people live.
North Dakota where nearly a million of our 2.5 million b/d of fracked oil is coming from was, and still is, not deemed worthy of building expensive pipeline collection systems because of the rapid depletion of its wells.
The solution to this dilemma turned out to be railways which America has in abundance. It took some time to build the terminals along rail lines, but once on board trains the oil could be directed to the highest bidder anywhere in the country. Movement of oil by rail costs some $5 a barrel than that moved by pipeline, but when it still costs less than imported oil it is going to be used.
The next factor behind our cheaper gasoline prices is lower demand. Since the U.S. economy went south in 2008, demand for oil has been weak. While the average consumption of oil products in 2007 was 20.7 million b/d, by 2012 it was down to 18.5 million with an increasing share being exported. While some of this decline was due to more efficient cars and trucks, the bulk of it was simply less driving due to hard economic times.
Our next factor is a little more complicated and has to do with what happens when oil is refined. To make the story short, when you refine crude, among other products, you end up with roughly two barrels gasoline for every barrel of distillates (diesel, heating oil, kerosene, etc.) that you produce. Now this is very nice when your demand for these products is equal to your consumption, but when they get out of balance you have to import or export to avoid shortages or gluts. Now Europe taxed itself into a lot of more efficient diesel cars years ago so European refiners had been ending up with large surpluses of gasoline which they were happy to sell to America where we really love the stuff.
Currently Europe has a lot more energy problems than we do here in America. North Sea production has been dropping for decades; the economy is really bad so that oil consumption is down; refineries are closing; and to top it off Libyan oil production of 1.3 million b/d, most of which went to Europe, went down the tubes this summer amidst political chaos.
The solution to this was for Europe and other Libyan customers to import diesel and other distillates from the U.S. which led to a rapid growth in U.S. exports of finished oil products. The U.S. of course was set up to refine more oil than we currently are using, but this summer our refineries hummed at record rates cranking out distillates for export.
The problem was that for every barrel of diesel that we shipped out of the U.S., there were two barrels of gasoline left behind. The export statistics tell the story. In 2007 the U.S. exported 120,000 b/d of gasoline and 260,000 b/d of distillates. By the summer of 2013 gasoline exports had climbed to 380,000 b/d, but distillate exports were up to 1.4 million b/d.
So there is the story of our “cheap” gasoline in a nutshell. We are refining some 1.4 million b/d of distillates for export and are ending up with 2.8 million b/d of extra gasoline as a result of which we can only export 380,000. Welcome to lower gasoline prices for as long as this imbalance lasts.
12 Comments on "The Peak Oil Crisis: So, Why is Gasoline So Cheap?"
TIKIMAN on Wed, 13th Nov 2013 1:15 pm
Yeah… $3.00 gas sure is cheap!
Sad when everyone thinks that.
Satori on Wed, 13th Nov 2013 2:13 pm
hey
just redefine your terms
catchup is a vegetable
and a tax increase isn’t an increase
its merely “revenue enhancement”
and water boarding is no longer torture
its enhanced interrogation
right ???
Satori on Wed, 13th Nov 2013 2:15 pm
yes I know
ketchup
my bad !
stilgar wilcox on Wed, 13th Nov 2013 2:16 pm
3? I wish it was so in CA. Unfortunately we do not benefit from the average, its about 4. However as much as is written about less consumption, you wouldn’t know it in CA where there are just as many on the road as ever. For now the economy here seems to be back to its usual fever pitch.
eugene on Wed, 13th Nov 2013 3:17 pm
Bakken and Eagle Ford production figures show Bakken with 912K per day and Eagle Ford with 636 or a total of just over 1.5 million barrels per day. I understand there are other fields but they produce little. So rather than 2.5 million a day it’s more in the vicinity of 1.5.
Since we are doing everything except lying, which of course we are, instead of just oil we now include ethanol, biofuels, natural gas, etc into our “oil production” figures. The gas/diesel/coal fuel to produce ethanol are taken away from the ethanol results which, of course, makes for a somewhat false picture. And there are other distortions in the 2.5 depending on how things are calculated.
My point is we went from talking about apples (oil production) to adding in oranges and grapes. In other words, we have taken a simple thing and made it as complicated as we possibly can so no one really knows what the hell they are talking about. Bottom line little has changed but we feel better about it all.
keith on Wed, 13th Nov 2013 4:20 pm
Isn’t QE program, in fact, subsidizing the price of gas at the pump. Remove QE or have Globe reject U.S. petrodollar. What then? Either one or the other will happen some time in the future.
Kenz300 on Wed, 13th Nov 2013 5:09 pm
Buy a bicycle, walk or take mass transit……. those are three option to save money on transportation costs.
If you need a car for longer distance travel get one that is energy efficient or one that does not use oil for fuel.
Electric, flex fuel, biofuel, hybrid, CNG, LNG and hydrogen fueled vehicles are all available.
End the oil monopoly on transportation fuels.
rollin on Wed, 13th Nov 2013 5:53 pm
In all the blurbs, comments, articles and books I have read about transistion, the horse is never mentioned as an alternative means of transportation. Worked for thousands of years and you don’t need a license or registration (not yet at least).
ghung on Wed, 13th Nov 2013 6:22 pm
hat a 300+% increase in price resulted in <50% increase in production speaks volumes. This is the inconvenient truth we blame on regulation and speculators.
ghung on Wed, 13th Nov 2013 6:23 pm
… and I hate not being able to edit posts here.
J-Gav on Wed, 13th Nov 2013 10:31 pm
Where I live it’s near double that! Sure glad I don’t have a car.
mike on Wed, 13th Nov 2013 10:31 pm
@rolling That’s because the horse is associated with going backwards rather than progress. The “transition” and “green” new-agers are in just as much denial as the business men who think oil will continue to be pumped because there is a demand for it. The amount of people that genuinely have a thorough grasp on the situation and all its implications probably number less than 1000 globally.