
Even though hydraulic fracturing has been in use for more than six decades, it has only recently been used to produce a significant portion of crude oil in the United States. This technique, often used in combination with horizontal drilling, has allowed the United States to increase its oil production faster than at any time in its history. Based on the most recent available data from states, EIA estimates that oil production from hydraulically fractured wells now makes up about half of total U.S. crude oil production.
Hydraulic fracturing involves forcing a liquid (primarily water) under high pressure from a wellbore against a rock formation until it fractures. The fracture lengthens as the high-pressure liquid in the wellbore flows into the formation. This injected liquid contains a proppant, or small, solid particles (usually sand or a manmade granular solid of similar size) that fills the expanding fracture. When the injection is stopped and the high pressure is reduced, the formation attempts to settle back into its original configuration, but the proppant keeps the fracture open. This allows hydrocarbons such as crude oil and natural gas to flow from the rock formation back to the wellbore and then to the surface.
Using well completion and production data from DrillingInfo and IHS Global Insight, EIA created a profile of oil production in the United States. In 2000, approximately 23,000 hydraulically fractured wells produced 102,000 barrels per day (b/d) of oil in the United States, making up less than 2% of the national total. By 2015, the number of hydraulically fractured wells grew to an estimated 300,000, and production from those wells had grown to more than 4.3 million b/d, making up about 50% of the total oil output of the United States. These results may vary from other sources because of the types of wells included in the analysis and update schedules of source databases.
This new oil production has primarily come from shale and other tight rocks in the Eagle Ford formation and Permian Basin of Texas, and the Bakken and Three Forks formation of Montana and North Dakota.

The use of hydraulic fracturing is not limited to certain oil-containing formations such as shales or source rocks, nor is its use limited to only horizontal wells. Hydraulic fracturing has been successfully used in directional and vertical wells, both natural gas and oil wells, in tight formations and reservoirs, and in offshore crude oil production.
More information on U.S. crude oil production from tight formations is available in EIA’s most recent Drilling Productivity Report.

Pennsyguy on Tue, 15th Mar 2016 3:23 pm
300,000 fracked wells for oil, how many for gas? I hope that these wells will be capped correctly and fracking fluid won’t migrate to lakes, rivers or aquifers. Of course I hope that the nuclear plants will be safely decommissioned and the wastes buried too. I wouldn’t bet on any of that happening though. ‘Nothing like a post binge hangover, or so I’ve been told.
rockman on Tue, 15th Mar 2016 5:58 pm
Penn – Very, very rarely has frac fluids ever leaked directly from a well. There’s a well documented history by the regulators that most contamination has come from improperly/illegally dumped frac fluids. I’ll guess you might live in PA which means you have an additional risk from disposal wells: PA has many tens of thousands of improperly plugged old wells unlike Texas and LA where we’ve had much better regs during our drilling boom. Many don’t realize that PA was THE center of US oil drilling long before it caught on in the rest of the country. Long before there were any regs. The state doesn’t even have a record if there exact locations.
Rick Bronson on Tue, 15th Mar 2016 6:47 pm
USA has more than 1/2 of the World’s Oil rigs, but produce only 1/8 of the World’s oil.
This shows how little these shale rigs produce compared to the conventional rigs.
Pennsyguy on Tue, 15th Mar 2016 7:20 pm
Thanks rockman. I do live in Pa. and realize that there may be over one million wells drilled here since 1859. I’ll trust that you are correct about the fracking fluid. With so many wells that will need capping, I wonder what the total cost might be: even at only $1,000/well x 300k = $300M, not including gas wells.
shortonoil on Tue, 15th Mar 2016 7:35 pm
“I wonder what the total cost might be: even at only $1,000/well x 300k = $300M, not including gas wells.”
That would be $1,000 times 1 million, every 20 years. Caps only have a 20 year service life before they need to be replaced, or they start leaking. Most caps are actually in the $20 to $30 thousand range. But, anyone who might have to pay for it is going to tell you that a little methane, ethane and benzene in the air is good for you.
Apneaman on Tue, 15th Mar 2016 7:56 pm
Pennsyguy, since the regulators are captured, I would not believe anything they say or rockman either who has a long history of being an industry apologist. Why wouldn’t he? he is the industry. Bet you can find some heroin and meth dealers who will tell you that their product is non addictive and good for ya too.
rockman on Tue, 15th Mar 2016 10:03 pm
Apeman is really funny. Do us all a favor: scan any of the Rockman’s 7,500+ post and point to one that even hints at an apology. LOL. Or ask Lore who knows all the Rockman’s positions from many spirited debates. Rockman APOLOGISES? Go ahead Lore…laugh your ass off.
As far as shorty’s rediculous statement about cement plug life: go online and research cement yourself and you’ll find the odd fact about cement: it actually gets harder over time…even behind 100 years. So no need to take the Rockman’s word that he’s never seen a properly set cement plug fail due to old age. But he’s seen mucho plugs fail testing immediately after being set. And then reset and test again. In fact once offshore he watched an operator try 23 plug resets and all failed. As a result (and following fed regs) the well was permanently pluged and abandoned. A $48 million loss but those were the regs.
But by all means look for some answers elsewhere. The Rockman never requires anyone to believe anything he posts. A combination of confidence and not really giving a sh*t if anyone trusts anything he says. LOL.
Practicalmaina on Tue, 15th Mar 2016 10:27 pm
Hopefully the drillers knew the secret for long life cement like the Romans, not that shit we built up Haiti with…
Apneaman you are describing the pharmaceutical biz I beleive.
Apneaman on Tue, 15th Mar 2016 10:32 pm
rockman, ha and you went to university? Waste of fucking time that was eh?
a·pol·o·gist
əˈpäləjəst/
noun
a person who offers an argument in defense of something controversial.
“an enthusiastic apologist for fascism in the 1920s”
synonyms: defender, supporter, upholder, advocate, proponent, exponent, propagandist, champion, campaigner; informalcheerleader
“one of Eisenhower’s better-known apologists”
Apneaman on Tue, 15th Mar 2016 10:35 pm
Practicalmaina, don’t be so fucking naive.
Apneaman on Tue, 15th Mar 2016 10:46 pm
rockman you’re a braggart greedy piece of shit and you know it – king of the cancer monkeys. Bragging while you help speed everyone you know to their doom.
Fracking to prompt sharp rise in greenhouse gas emissions, study says
Authoritative research undermines industry and government claims that shale gas is a relatively clean fuel
http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/fracking-to-prompt-sharp-rise-in-greenhouse-gas-emissions-study-says-a6928126.html
Over a Dozen Major Flash Floods in the Last 12 Months in Texas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Arkansas
http://www.wunderground.com/news/flood-fatigue-2015-2016-texas-louisiana-oklahoma
makati1 on Tue, 15th Mar 2016 10:55 pm
“The Rockman never requires anyone to believe anything he posts…” but he expects them to or he wouldn’t post it.
Similar evasions can be said for all of the industry mouthpieces, including government, yes?
Harquebus on Wed, 16th Mar 2016 12:03 am
I can’t say if this applies to concrete well caps. Concrete is decaying all over the place.
https://www.reddit.com/r/collapse/comments/2f3pro/structural_engineer_here_without_continued/
Apneaman on Wed, 16th Mar 2016 12:14 am
For concrete, climate change may mean a shorter lifespan
Two Northeastern engineers warn that a key building material is less solid than we think
https://www.bostonglobe.com/ideas/2014/10/11/for-concrete-climate-change-may-mean-shorter-lifespan/rJ8vWjSp2xRShwFmDS6lQJ/story.html?p1=Article_Recommended_ArticleText
INTERACTIVE: The hidden cost of abandoned oil and gas wells in Alberta
http://globalnews.ca/news/2307275/interactive-the-hidden-cost-of-abandoned-oil-and-gas-wells-in-alberta/
Davy on Wed, 16th Mar 2016 6:10 am
Whiners are crying over spilled milk. Bitching about fracking like it matters. In a way it does matter because without hydrocarbons most of you are dead in a month. You fracking fuck wad complainers are just suicidal. We are toast so get a grip that all your whining, bitching, moaning, and spanking is stupid childish activities. The better activity is to move on to what is next and that is hospices of death. How can we work on a world with less suffering? That is all there is. At least try to save your ass by preparing. You may get lucky and buy yourself a few more years. You are not going to save the climate or modern man. That is a forgone conclusion. Nothing we can do is going to save modern man.
PracticalMaina on Wed, 16th Mar 2016 7:48 am
Apneaman, by simply saying the country Haiti I thought you would have picked up on my implied meaning, the things we make are never as durable as we like to believe. Especially modern concrete and re-bar, cheap as possible type construction
Also does the pharmaceutical biz not sell amphetamine salts and opiate products as cure alls?
PracticalMaina on Wed, 16th Mar 2016 8:16 am
Mr. Peabodys coal train hopefully wont be hauling anymore mountains away.
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-peabody-energy-bankruptcy-idUSKCN0WI19Z
I hope these companys are not let off the hook for their environmental and personnel responsibility, threw mergers or takeovers or whatever bullshit a corporate lawyer on salary can come up with.
Apneaman on Wed, 16th Mar 2016 12:08 pm
Davy, I’m well aware that the climate nor the apes can be saved. I am only preparing the mob with the correct info so they know whom to direct their fury upon when the time comes – towards the guiltiest which would be the 1%ers. Since apes are such great moralizers and bloody punishers, I an only striving for accuracy. Mommy and daddy invested in fracking too?
Davy on Wed, 16th Mar 2016 2:48 pm
Spanky, you just want to be a baptist preacher bitch and make sure people suffer eternal damnation guilt for sins you have determined they have. Everyone is guilty and must be punished and its Spanky’s job to inform people of their damnation. The best thing you could do is spank your monkey. Canadians are per capita near the top of the list of the guilty for earth sins. That means you spank.
Apneaman on Wed, 16th Mar 2016 4:22 pm
Not everyone is guilty, but you are and the lord is going to put you and yours in a lake of fire for eternity. Not sure about the meal and bathroom schedule Yahweh has set up down there in hell, it’s the one thing the bible doesn’t go into painful repetitive detail about, but I’m sure sky daddy’s got it figured out. I imagine part of your punishment will include having to read your own boring assed essays again and again for ever and ever and……….
GregT on Wed, 16th Mar 2016 7:56 pm
Spanky?
Kenz300 on Thu, 17th Mar 2016 9:17 am
Electric cars, bikes and mass transit are the future…..fossil fuel ICE cars are the past…………..
Think teen agers vs your grand father………………….
cell phones vs land lines…….