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The Top 10 Energy Stories Of 2015

General Ideas

Introduction

As I have done for several years now, I like to close out the year by highlighting the top stories in the energy sector.

The 2015 list was challenging, because so many of the stories are interrelated. Commodity prices continued to plummet, but oil, natural gas, and coal prices fell for somewhat different reasons. This of course resulted in the lowest gasoline prices in years, which was itself a big story.

A crude oil export ban that I believed would stick around for years was repealed, yet it’s part of a spending bill that also extended tax credits for renewable energy. So is the story the spending bill, or its particular provisions? These were the challenges I had to sort out.

The rankings are somewhat arbitrary. This year there wasn’t an energy news event as dramatic as the Deepwater Horizon oil spill of 2010, or the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster of 2011. Here is the list I settled on.

1. The oil plunge continues

My top energy story of 2014 was the price collapse that took West Texas Intermediate from more than $100 per barrel at the end of July to just over $50/bbl by the end of the year. This year saw a brief recovery above $60/bbl, but production increases in the Mideast, combined with a slower-than-expected decline in U.S. shale oil output, led to rising crude inventories worldwide. This continued to put downward pressure on the price, which is now closing out 2015 in the $30s.

The reason this is the top story is that it was a major story all year long, with impacts on so many people and countries. It has been said that OPEC’s decision to defend its market share cost members of the oil exporters’ club $500 billion in 2015. That $500 billion ended up in the pockets of consumers by way of lower gasoline prices, cheaper airline tickets, etc.

2. Climate agreement in Paris

This was the other main contender for the top energy story of the year. The 2015 United Nations Climate Change Conference was held in Paris during the first half of December. The summit culminated in a global agreement on combating climate change, reached by consensus among representatives of the 196 parties attending the conference. The agreement is a pretty big deal, but it isn’t yet legally binding. There aren’t any penalties for countries that miss their emissions targets. Further, the agreed-upon emission targets aren’t enough to put the world on a path to meet the long-term temperature goal specified.

The agreement may ultimately have a huge impact on the trajectory of carbon dioxide emissions, but a lot still has to happen to make it so. That’s why this deal — as big as it is potentially — wasn’t the top story of the year.

3. Crude export ban repeal

The U.S. has had a crude oil export ban in place since 1975, one of a number of measures passed at the time to mitigate future oil crises. The ban makes it difficult to export crude oil to countries other than Canada. Over the years, the restriction hasn’t been much of an issue since the U.S. still imports lots of crude oil. But as a result of the shale oil boom, net U.S. imports of crude oil and finished products have been falling since 2006, and are now at around 5 million barrels per day (bpd) — below the rate in 1975 when the crude oil ban was enacted.

Crude oil producers and politicians in major oil-producing states have been lobbying for an end to the export ban to improve market access and pricing for domestic producers. U.S. Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz said at one point that the ban should be revisited. Senate and House bills to do just that were introduced, but the Obama Administration opposed the repeal, citing the potential for higher U.S. gasoline prices.

Congress included the repeal of the ban in a $1.8 trillion year-end appropriations bill that also extended tax breaks for wind and solar power. Both parties walked away with major wins from the legislation, and President Obama — despite his previous opposition — signed the bill into law. Thus, the crude export ban has ended after 40 years.

4. Renewable tax credits extended

The same spending bill that repealed the crude export ban also extended certain credits for renewable power producers. The Production Tax Credit (PTC) saves producers 2.3 cents per kilowatt-hour (¢/kWh) of electricity produced from wind, geothermal and closed-loop biomass systems, and 1.1 ¢/kWh for other eligible technologies (typically through the first 10 years of operation.) The solar Investment Tax Credit (ITC) is a 30% federal tax credit for solar system investments on residential and commercial properties that had been set to expire at the end of 2016.

The new law extends the PTC through 2016 and then phases it out gradually until it fully expires in 2020. The ITC has now been extended through 2023, and will be phased out gradually starting in 2019. This approach — extension of the tax credits combined with a phaseout — is one I have suggested before. It gives renewable power producers a predictable subsidy but puts them on notice that they can’t count on such breaks over the long haul.

5. Crude production continues to expand

Despite the collapse in crude oil prices, the U.S. shale boom continued to bring additional supply into a glutted market. Crude oil production in the U.S. hit a peak of 9.6 million bpd in April, the highest level since 1972. It’s a pretty safe bet that had crude oil prices not collapsed, the U.S. would have eclipsed the previous monthly production record of 10 million bpd set in October 1970. But drilling rigs are being rapidly idled and crude oil producers have slashed budgets. As a result U.S. shale oil production has begun to decline, and will end the year at about 9.1 million bpd. Nevertheless, monthly output has shown year-over-year growth every month this year, so 2015 will likely deliver an increase in U.S. crude oil production for the seventh straight year. Look for that streak to be broken in 2016.

Here are my picks for the rest of the Top 10 in no particular order, with a few extras thrown in for good measure.

6. One of the largest renewable energy companies in the world, Spain’s Abengoa (NASDAQ: ABGB), sought protection from creditors after an investment firm backed out of a plan to inject capital into the company

7. The Environmental Protection Agency finally released its Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) blending rates for various biofuels, covering mandated volumes for 2014, 2015 and 2016

8. Following years of delays, the Obama Administration formally rejected the Keystone XL pipeline on the grounds that it wouldn’t serve U.S. national interests

9. China, by far the world’s largest coal consumer, admitted it has been burning up to 17% more coal than previously reported

10. Gasoline prices fell to a six-year low, providing a windfall of nearly $200 billion for consumers versus what they spent on gas just two years ago

11. Natural gas supplanted coal as the leading fuel source for U.S. power plants for the first time ever

12. Despite billions of dollars in private and government spending — and 58 million gallons of nameplate capacity at POET, Abengoa and INEOS — only 2 million gallons of cellulosic ethanol had been produced through November

13. Natural gas inventories reached the 4 trillion cubic feet mark for the first time, pushing natural gas prices below $2/MMBtu

Feel free to chime in with major stories that I missed. Best wishes to all my readers for the holiday season, and thanks for once again making 2015 a success.

Next week I will grade my 2015 predictions in what turned into a very challenging year in the energy sector.

 

Consumer Energy Report » R-Squared Energy Blog by Robert Rapier



18 Comments on "The Top 10 Energy Stories Of 2015"

  1. makati1 on Thu, 24th Dec 2015 8:45 am 

    If you think this year was fun, wait until next year. Buckle up!

  2. Dredd on Thu, 24th Dec 2015 8:55 am 

    e = mc^2
    e ≠ oil

    Nomeclature is important (The Damaged Global Climate System – 4).

  3. Kenz300 on Thu, 24th Dec 2015 9:32 am 

    Climate Change is real…… it will impact all of us…..

    It Wasn’t Only Exxon That Knew About Global Warming Since the 1970s

    http://ecowatch.com/2015/12/24/exxon-knew-global-warming/?utm_source=EcoWatch+List&utm_campaign=6d322e1a1b-Top_News_12_24_2015&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_49c7d43dc9-6d322e1a1b-86023917

  4. GregT on Thu, 24th Dec 2015 9:40 am 

    Thanks Dredd!

    Another exceptional (albeit somewhat depressing) post.

  5. Dredd on Thu, 24th Dec 2015 9:48 am 

    You are welcome GregT.

  6. Nony on Thu, 24th Dec 2015 9:54 am 

    I would move the natural gas price drop higher up (into the ranked stories at least).

    *filled the storage gap from winter 2014! 😉
    *year end prices sub $2
    **14 year record in nominal dollars
    **record for as long as traded in inflation adjusted dollars
    *It’s not just the current month and the weather glut: the spread has dropped about $1 and we are now looking at natgas below $3.50 real for as far as the eye can see:

    http://www.cmegroup.com/apps/cmegroup/widgets/productLibs/esignal-charts.html?code=NG&title=DEC_2019_Henry_Hub_Natural_Gas_&type=p&venue=1&monthYear=Z9&year=2019&exchangeCode=XNYM&chartMode=dynamic

    From about $4.50 in early DEC14 (itself a low, til then), the contract for dec19 (4 years from now, not current weather) is down to $3.30. You can check other months and it is a similar story (from now until 2025, last traded). The financial markets believe natgas is systemically down. And that in the face of rising volumes!

    The shale gale is strong, strong, strong. So much for the peaker critics.

  7. GregT on Thu, 24th Dec 2015 10:00 am 

    Another year goes by, and Nony still hasn’t grown up.

  8. Nony on Thu, 24th Dec 2015 4:00 pm 

    2015 average daily close front month contracts are at $2.63 (and will finish below that with a few more days of ~2 counted in).

    https://www.eia.gov/dnav/ng/hist/rngc1d.htm

    For reference that is BELOW the average for 2012 of $2.83. That’s with an increase of ~7% per year (war on coal, cold 2014 winter and refilling storage, expanded exports to Mexico, etc.) That’s a systemic demonstration of the shale gale.

    And I could care less if CHK goes BK. Shareholders and bankers take a haircut. Someone else buys the acreage and we continue to enjoy cheap, cheap, cheap shale natural gas.

    And shale gas skeptics like Berman and Hughes look sillier and sillier and wronger and wronger every year. Marcellus is mighty, mighty, mighty.

  9. makati1 on Thu, 24th Dec 2015 8:02 pm 

    Nony, none of it will matter when the SHTF and the economy goes belly up. No customers, no oil companies. No profits. No stocks. I hope you are not invested.

  10. Kenz300 on Thu, 24th Dec 2015 9:01 pm 

    Boom……..Bust………….

    Oil Bankruptcies Reach Highest Quarterly Level Since Recession – Bloomberg Business

    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-12-24/oil-bankruptcies-reach-highest-quarterly-level-since-recession

  11. JuanP on Fri, 25th Dec 2015 6:58 am 

    Russia India oil sale, https://www.rt.com/business/327035-modi-putin-russia-india/

  12. makati1 on Fri, 25th Dec 2015 7:44 pm 

    JuanP But! But! Isn’t Russia supposed to be ‘isolated’ by the ‘great power’ of the US?

    Obviously, as you point out, the US/West is a paper tiger and has less and less power over the other nations of the world, who are beginning to see behind the curtain, and are moving away.

    Zimbabwe recently started using the Yuan as their national currency, after ditching the USD. And Putin has said that Russia will continue bombing /destroying ISIS, even if the UN comes up with a cease fire. The US wants the cease fire to allow ISIS to regroup and rearm, not to stop the war. Russia wants to destroy ISIS or at least weaken it to keep it out of Russia.

    Sorry, started to ramble there…lol.

  13. makati1 on Fri, 25th Dec 2015 7:46 pm 

    BTW: Oil is NOT a necessity of life, Avoiding war and preparing for climate change is.

  14. Keith on Sat, 26th Dec 2015 5:19 am 

    THe FED started a rate raising cycle for the first time since June 2004. That has to be in the top 10 somewhere.

  15. Davy on Sat, 26th Dec 2015 5:24 am 

    Boy, here is the years best “Oil is not a necessity of life”. I don’t “LOL” much but I have to now.

  16. Amvet on Sun, 27th Dec 2015 12:39 pm 

    Clearly we have climate change. The question is why? In the history of the earth before industry the climate changed dramatically enough to dry out oceans and leave salt layers thousands of feet thick. Why did that happen?

  17. Apneaman on Sun, 27th Dec 2015 1:06 pm 

    Amvet, in the worst instances it was the greenhouse effect from massive releases of CO2 from volcanoes, which then triggered many positive self reinforcing feedback loops which led to 14 extinction events. This is what those science people were warning you about. The chemical signatures are all there. Too late now.

    Great Dying 252 million years ago coincided with CO2 build-up

    “MIT researchers suggest the Great Dying lasted only 20,000 years and coincided with increased CO2 in Earth’s atmosphere, comparable to today’s levels.”

    http://earthsky.org/earth/great-dying-252-million-years-ago-concided-with-co2-build-up

    This is what happens on this planet. If not for the extinction event that took out the dinosaurs, we would not have been here. The meteor was only the trigger, most of the damage was caused by the Deccan traps releasing massive quantities of CO2.

    Asteroid impact, volcanism were one-two punch for dinosaurs

    http://news.berkeley.edu/2015/10/01/asteroid-impact-volcanism-were-one-two-punch-for-dinosaurs/

    Now you know. Enjoy the show.

  18. Apneaman on Sun, 27th Dec 2015 1:09 pm 

    Why Engineers Can’t Stop Los Angeles’ Enormous Methane Leak

    “One of the biggest environmental disasters in US history is happening right now, and you’ve probably never heard of it.

    An enormous amount of harmful methane gas is currently erupting from an energy facility in Aliso Canyon, California, at a startling rate of 110,000 pounds per hour. The gas, which carries with it the stench of rotting eggs, has led to the evacuation 1,700 homes so far. Many residents have already filed lawsuits against the company that owns the facility, the Southern California Gas Company.”

    http://motherboard.vice.com/read/why-we-cant-stop-the-enormous-methane-leak-flooding-la

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