Page added on February 5, 2018

The Energy Information Administration (EIA) of the U.S. Department of Energy is about to release its Annual Energy Outlook (AEO) 2018, with forecasts for American oil, gas, and other forms of energy production through mid-century. As usual, energy journalists and policy makers will probably take the document as gospel.
That’s despite the fact that past AEO reports have regularly delivered forecasts that were seriously flawed, as the EIA itself has acknowledged. Further, there are analysts inside and outside the oil and gas industry who crunch the same data the EIA does, but arrive at very different conclusions.
The last few EIA reports have displayed stunning optimism regarding future U.S. shale gas and tight oil production, helping stoke the notion of U.S. “energy dominance.” No one doubts that fracking has unleashed a gusher of North American oil and gas on world markets in the past decade. But where we go from here is both crucial and controversial.
The most comprehensive critiques of past AEO forecasts have come from earth scientist David Hughes, a Fellow of Post Carbon Institute (note: I, too, am a Post Carbon Institute Fellow). Since 2013, Hughes and PCI have produced annual studies questioning EIA forecasts, based on an analysis of comprehensive play-level well production data. Their latest report, a critical look at AEO2017, is just out.
“Shale Reality Check: Drilling Into the U.S. Government’s Rosy Projections for Shale Gas & Tight Oil Production Through 2050” explores four big questions crucial to the realization of the EIA’s forecasts:

Let’s approach this subject another way. If you were an EIA analyst and you wanted to produce the most optimistic estimate possible of future U.S. oil and gas production, how might you go about it? You might do the following:
Check, check, check, and check.
Hughes figures, using EIA assumptions, that meeting the agency’s projections for shale gas and tight oil through 2050 for the 88 percent of production that would come from major plays would require drilling and fracking over 1 million wells at a cost of $5.7 trillion (the remaining 12 percent would require .68 million wells at a cost of $4.1 trillion). The EIA’s own estimate for all oil and gas (conventional, shale and offshore) is 1.3 million wells at a cost of $7.7 trillion. It would also consume countless billions of gallons of water and millions of tons of sand and chemicals. One might question the plausibility of this scale of expenditure of capital and physical resources. But even if the project were practically feasible, would it represent the best use of money in securing our energy future? And would the inevitable near- and long-term health and environmental impacts be somehow justified?
The EIA seems to assume that its audience consists of potential investors in struggling tight oil and shale gas companies, and that it speaks on behalf of those companies. That’s not the proper role of a government agency. Taxpayers who fund AEO reports deserve realistic estimates of future production, costs of production, and prices needed for profitable production. Otherwise, the agency’s pronouncements will continue to resemble those of the Wizard of Oz: Be amazed! Be awed! But pay no attention to the man behind the curtain.
62 Comments on "Heinberg: U.S. Energy Abundance for Now— But Don’t Peek Behind That Curtain!"
Cloggie on Tue, 6th Feb 2018 3:11 pm
@boat – there is good wind in Wyoming:
https://www.nrel.gov/gis/images/80m_wind/USwind300dpe4-11.jpg
Not as good as the North Sea, but it comes close. I hope mr Anschutz succeeds.
Davy on Tue, 6th Feb 2018 3:14 pm
Big deal nedernazi targets are like assholes numerous and generally ugly. Europe has barely gotten started and you are crowing victory. PATHETIC
MASTERMIND on Tue, 6th Feb 2018 3:16 pm
Boat
Cheer leading for billionaires now! lol
Boat on Tue, 6th Feb 2018 3:40 pm
MM
What do I have against billionaires? Nothing. I put most of our problems on the poor not working smart enough. They drag systems down. Going greener takes money. Getting more efficient takes money. Cutting our dependence on FF will take money. How well do the poor stack up going greener. Not well. Who causes the staggering overpopulation problem? You guessed it, the poor.
MASTERMIND on Tue, 6th Feb 2018 3:43 pm
Boat
They brainwashed you great! There is no breaking our addition. We are like lifetime alcoholics..If we keep drinking we die, if we stop drinking we die….I showed you two peer reviewed studies proving its never going to happen!
MASTERMIND on Tue, 6th Feb 2018 3:45 pm
Boat
You so desperately want the system to work you will believe in it till the bitter end!
Boat on Tue, 6th Feb 2018 3:58 pm
I see no end. No excuse not to to work. You have the poor mans brain. Blame everyone but excuse the lazy. I bet you blame the system for the uneducated. The child and the parents had no part in the failure.
fmr-paultard on Tue, 6th Feb 2018 4:28 pm
((mm)) why do you care about the poor and covet supertards’ daughters? shouldn’t you be breeding poor women because there are so many of them? do you have any economic plan for the poor? Islam urges then to kill and this is similar to my quest to have women to kill their way to equality. Since my approach doesn’t involve brainwashing, or does it? I think it is just and good.
yes, supertard boat is right about work. there’s only work because the alternative is jihad to steal the product of labor from others.
education is just a way to stay out of trouble and preparing one for more efficient labor and hopefully be part of the productive society. To be sure education can be a quest to kill more efficiently. Al-Baghdadi used his training PhD in Islamic study to create a state based on killing.
Boat on Tue, 6th Feb 2018 4:42 pm
Clog,
When the UK leaves the EU your renewables numbers will take a hit.
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2018/feb/06/uk-built-half-of-europes-offshore-wind-power-in-2017
fmr-paultard on Tue, 6th Feb 2018 4:48 pm
Oh yes i’m a tard and I do basic research into UFO and cattle mutilation. It’s worth mentioning that educated supertards just don’t do research on these things.
That’s another benefit of education!
Without education there’s cattle mutilation everywhere as a product of the folksy brains.
JuanP on Tue, 6th Feb 2018 5:03 pm
Boat “No excuse not to to work.”
I think doing useful work is OK up to a point, but leisure is important, too. I spend time every day working, but I also spend time contemplating, meditating, and thinking. I am very particular about the distinction between useful work and useless toil. I don’t like engaging in the latter. I believe that most people can’t tell the difference and they believe they are doing useful work when they are actually toiling uselessly. Useless toil consumes energy and resources which should be saved for better purposes. It is better to do nothing than engage in useless toil.
Cloggie on Wed, 7th Feb 2018 10:34 pm
“When the UK leaves the EU your renewables numbers will take a hit.”
Yep, Britain is moving fast lately. But it is unclear how Brexit will play out. I think it probably will be Brexit-lite, with Britain remaining in the common market as a paying member. But regardless, Britain will continue to buy renewable equipment from continental European companies and help them to become big.