by AdamB » Wed 17 Jan 2018, 11:54:55
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Tanada', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('AdamB', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Tanada', '
')While the USA has made remarkable gains in supply from tight oil it still has a long way to go to get back up to 10 M bbl/d of the 1970 peak, and even though demand is lower than it was five years ago the USA is still importing lots of oil from OPEC as well as Canada and Mexico.
Apparently, less than 5 years is now a "long way" at po.com!!
And if what the US had done by 2013 was remarkable, would you characterize what is happening right now as we speak (possibly more than 10 million a day...any time now?) as flat out......
Let us review the above statement in context shall we? It was made in February 2013 and the newest numbers even theoretically available at that time would be the January 2013 numbers. So lets look at January 2013 in context of the number, right? Right;
January 2013 7,073,000 bbl/d average,
January 2012 6,141,000 bbl/d average,
January 2011 5,484,000 bbl/d average,
January 2010 5,391,000 bbl/d average,
January 2005 5,446,000 bbl/d average,
January 2000 5,784,000 bbl/d average,
January 1995 6,682,000 bbl/d average,
January 1994 6,817,000 bbl/d average,
January 1993 6,961,000 bbl/d average,
January 1992 7,361,000 bbl/d average.
Now one thing I can confidently say about my online persona is I like hard numbers and another is I am a historian by inclination and training so I tend to look at trends in historical context.
So putting myself in the 2013 mindset what do I see? Well January 2013 is the first time the USA had produced over 7 MM/bbl/d since at least 1992 is the first thing that leaps out. (In actually the latest numbers I would have had available at time of the quoted post was November 2012 with 7,029,000 bbl/d average)
The second thing is the drop from January 1992 to January 1994 was 544,000 bbl/d when oil was relatively cheap after the Gulf War I concluded and Iraq was under sanctions and paying reparations in the form of 'free' crude oil.
The third thing is that relatively rapid drop in production continued from January 1992 all the way through 2010 in this number set so I go back and look for the lowest year between 2005 and 2010, turns out it was;
January 2006 5,048,000 bbl/d average,
Why so low? The oil prices in 2005 had started to cause a small boom in USA drilling that year and things were going great right up until June when one Hurricane after another started battering the Gulf of Mexico driving things to a relative low of 4,214,000 bbl/d in September 2005. Things in the Gulf of Mexico were so cruddy in point of fact that it was not until
January 2011 5,484,000 bbl/d average, that the USA oil supply exceeded the January 2005 5,446,000 bbl/d average, and only by 18,000 bbl/d at that.
January 2013 7,073,000 bbl/d average, was 1,589,000 bbl/d increase in two years as the "Shale Revolution" was kicked into high gear and the boom was in full swing and growing rapidly. However in the context of my February 2013 statement you quoted 7,073,000 bbl/d is great improvement over the 20 years the USA had spent pumping oil since the last time it produced over 7 MM/bbl/d however it is still a considerable distance from
January 1971 9,655,000 bbl/d average, the previous record January high. Which is after all what I said, in context.
For those wondering about post 2013 I include those numbers below;
January 2014 8,023,000 bbl/d average,
January 2015 9,358,000 bbl/d average,
January 2016 9,186,000 bbl/d average,
January 2017 8,825,000 bbl/d average.
And some added context for the peak month stuff you keep posting about,
October 2017 9,637,000 bbl/d average, latest official number.
October 1970 10,013,000 bbl/d average,
November 1970 10,044,000 bbl/d average, single month peak so far in the official record. I suggest that until the EIA posts a single month average over November 1970 we do not yet have a new official peak month. That will probably happen in 2018. In the American Business Parlance where everything is based on the quarterly report those 5 years between 2013 and 2018 are an eternity. Just saying.
You can verify all my numbers @
EIA Monthly USA Crude Production A BUNCH of words Tanada, and very number intensive, when none were required. You see, I was more wondering what you meant when you said "long way to go"?
From 2013, did you perceive that this would be more than the 2 years it required to get back to the 1972 peak or so, or the 5 years to where we were producing more in December on a weekly basis than the average from 1972?
Back with your 2013 hat on, what were you thinking, both in terms of time, and effort? Did you think it could happen within a few years, or were you thinking more like a decade, and maybe even, never? How about the effort side, assuming the US did make it back to the 10 million barrel a day levels, what kind of effort did you think that might have involved? Oil shale (as opposed to resource play development), hydrates, GTLs, or could you have imagined back then that the resource plays themselves would be able to do it? Under a lower price environment no less?
I would say that my biggest surprise was the surge in the Permian. Once the price cratered, I just figured that natural decline would be the story and that would nicely balance against additional demand until the market clearing price increased again, and then drilling would begin again in earnest and THEN production would begin to increase again. I completely underestimated the Permian and Wolfcamp and Spraberry development using what was learned in the Marcellus, Eagle Ford and Bakken plays.