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Page added on December 12, 2013

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The Peak Oil Crisis: California’s Bubble Pops

Production

There was an important study released by the Post Carbon Institute last week that gives us an insight into how long our great shale oil bonanza or more likely bubble is going to last. As you might suspect, the thrust of the new report is bad news so we are unlikely to ever read much about it in the mainstream media which continues to tell us about the bright energy-rich future ahead.

By now we should all know about the technological wonder of “fracking” that has raised America’s oil production by over 2 million barrels a day (b/d) in the last few years and has reversed the decline of our conventional natural gas production. The speed with which this has happened has been amazing and shows that if oil prices get high enough (oil has risen from $20 to $100+ a barrel in the last decade), then we can have all the oil we will ever want.

Rapid increases in production, however, mean that the faster we use up something the sooner will come the day when production starts to decline and that may not be very far away. In the case of North Dakota, new drilling seems to be concentrating in four counties, known as sweet spots, which may be the only places where it is profitable to drill at today’s prices. With new drilling concentrated in a small geographical area it may soon be the case that there are no new places to drill – but since this is probably at least a couple of years off, there is no sense in worrying about it.

While areas in Texas and North Dakota are where spectacular increases in oil production have taken place, less well known is that our energy future really is supposed to rest in California, where the government says some two-thirds of America’s shale oil will be found. Should North Dakota and south Texas ever start running dry, all we will need to do is move the drilling rigs to California and there will be enough new oil to last for many years. Energy independence, millions of jobs and a bonanza of tax revenue will come when California’s oil production revives.

To make sure there was no mistake about the good times ahead, the U.S. Department of Energy hired a contractor to examine America’s shale oil reserves to make sure there really was a bonanza of oil and gas out there that could be accessed by horizontal drilling and fracking. To no one’s surprise, the contractor came back and said “Yes America” there are 24 billion barrels of oil there for the taking.

As the U.S. burns about 7 billion barrels of oil a year we have at least a three-year supply of shale oil – if we can get it out of the ground. Interestingly, the government’s contractor reported that some 15.4 billion barrels of this shale oil were buried under California while only 3.6 billion was in North Dakota and 3.4 billion in south Texas. The rest was sort of scattered around. The report also talked about 750 trillion cubic feet of natural gas buried in the shale, but that is a story for another day.

As we are already extracting roughly a million barrels of shale oil a day from both North Dakota and Texas, the future of the industry was thought to be in California where two-thirds of our shale oil reserves lie.

Of course, anybody with the most rudimentary knowledge of geology should know that the earth under California and under the American Midwest are very different places. Remember the San Francisco earthquake, the San Andreas Fault, and that giant tectonic plate that disappears under California.

To the U.S. Energy Information Administration’s credit it did caveat the introduction to the report noting that: “Because most shale gas and oil wells are only a few years old, their long-term productivity is untested. Consequently, the long-term production profiles of shale wells and their estimated ultimate recovery of oil and natural gas are uncertain.” But, of course, nobody reads caveats. For most, California has 15 billion barrels of oil just waiting to be extracted after North Dakota and Texas start running short so the great shale bonanza can go right on into the future.

We now have a second look at the Monterey shale and things don’t look so rosy. First, the geology of California is similar to a bowl of spaghetti with the earth squeezed into folds and steep inclines, not the 20,000 sq. miles of flat-laying shale deposits found in North Dakota. The Monterey shales are thick and complex, and do not lend themselves to drilling the long horizontal wells that can be fracked so productively in other places. Much of the shale oil in California appears to have drained over the years into conventional oil reservoirs and has already been extracted by many of the 238,000 oil wells that have been drilled in the state during the last century.

Our new study by an experienced Canadian geologist, who has already examined the productivity of other shale oil formations in the US, concludes that the government and its contractor’s study is absurdly optimistic about the prospects for shale oil production in California. Despite the use of all the latest drilling and production techniques, oil production in California has fallen from 1.1 million b/d 30 years ago to 500,000 b/d today. It is highly unlikely that this will be turned around given the geology of the region.

The Department of Energy’s report starts with the assumption that California’s shale is much like that in Texas and North Dakota. It posits that the oil industry will only have to drill 28,000 new wells, each yielding ridiculously large 550,000 barrels of oil, to extract California’s shale oil. This is simply not supported by the recent history of drilling in the state and is unlikely to happen. We will be lucky if California’s oil production does not continue to decline, for its geology is simply not the same.

FCNP



5 Comments on "The Peak Oil Crisis: California’s Bubble Pops"

  1. BillT on Thu, 12th Dec 2013 5:35 am 

    What goes up, must come down…

  2. Stilgar on Thu, 12th Dec 2013 6:52 am 

    This report got me wondering if the shale oil revolution (occurring due to a revolution in technology/ sarc), is in danger of peaking much sooner than expected due to very high depletion rates. Next they’ll be telling us the trillion barrels of kerogen in the Midwest is uneconomical to extract. Oops, they already did. Hey, I need some cornucopian happy-time talk to lull me into a restful slumber. MSM!

  3. J-Gav on Thu, 12th Dec 2013 9:27 am 

    RIP energy independence.

  4. rockman on Thu, 12th Dec 2013 1:05 pm 

    Once again let’s not believe something just because someone
    was able to get their foolishness published. First, as most here
    understand, frac’ng horizontal wells is not technology
    developed in the last 5 years or so. The hottest oil play on the
    planet (the Austin Chalk in Texas) was being drilled horizontally
    and frac’d more than 20 years ago. Second: “…years and has
    reversed the decline of our conventional natural
    gas production.” Actually US NG production reached its most
    recent low in 1986 and has been steadily increasing since then.
    NG prices did increase activity in 2008 when prices exceeded
    $10/mcf which led to a frenzy of horizontal drilling. Which
    came to a very abrupt halt when prices crashed and the rig
    count fell more than 70%. The US has experienced a nice steady
    increase in NG production for the last 27 years.

    Third: “…if oil prices get high…then we can have all the oil we
    will ever want.” Such childlike hyperbole. At any level of oil
    price reserves will be developed that are justified at that price.
    But all reserves that are viable at any one price will be depleted
    eventually. There will come a day in the future where oil
    production from US shales will decrease as the viable locations
    are all developed. This is how the dynamics have worked since
    the beginning of the oil age: a trend is drilled as economics
    allow it to be until it’s been fully developed. So no…we can
    never have “all the oil we ever want”. But I doubt they really
    believe that which makes tossing that statement in for dramatic
    effect all the more amateurish.

    Forth: “The Monterey shales are thick and complex, and do not
    lend themselves to drilling the long horizontal wells…”. Again,
    utter BS. I did my master thesis on a field study in the San
    Joaquin Basin. The MS is just as monotonous as the Eagle Ford
    Shale and every other shale in the US. Of course, that doesn’t
    imply the MS will ever be proven as productive at the EFS and
    Bakken. And then there’s: “Much of the shale oil in California
    appears to have drained over the years into conventional oil
    reservoirs”. Right, unlike Texas where the shale source rocks
    have not feed billions of bbls of oil into other formations.
    Opps…now that I think about it our shales have feed billions of
    bbls of oil into other formations.

    And lastly: “This is simply not supported by the recent history of
    drilling in the state and is unlikely to happen.” Finally
    something I can agree with. But only time and a lot of drill pipe
    turning to the right will determine how accurate this prediction
    may be. I don’t fault them for trying to let some of the steam
    out of the Monterey Shale hype. But using a series of
    misleading statements isn’t necessary.

  5. rockman on Thu, 12th Dec 2013 1:29 pm 

    Stilgar – Don’t let them confuse you. There are two “depletion rates” per say. First, there is the DR of an individual wells. By now we all understand how quickly individual wells deplete: 30% to 60% just the first 12 months. Second, there is the depletion of viable locations to drill. Pick any trend like the Eagle Ford Shale. At current oil prices there are X locations operators will drill. That is a finite number. There will come a day when that number of wells has been drilled and there will be very little new EFS production in the future. Unless, of course, prices increase. Conversely, if oil prices suddenly plunge far fewer than those X locations will be drilled.

    The future production of CURRENTLY producing shale wells is easy enough to estimate. What can’t be predicted is how fast the remaining undrilled locations will be drilled unless one can accurately predict oil prices well into the future. But regardless of how high prices get there will always be a finite number of wells that can be drilled. As I just mentioned above the horizontally drilled and frac’d Austin Chalk was the hottest oil play of the planet 2 decades ago. Much hotter than the EFS and Bakken are today. The play covered at least 5X the area as the EFS. And yet today there’s not a great deal of activity in the AC even though it sits immediately above the EFS. Yes: ever lease taken for the EFS could be drilled for the AC also. The problem is that was done long ago. The AC ran its course and petered out. So will the EFS, the Bakken and every other trend in the US. As it has always been it’s just a question of oil prices and time.

    There’s nothing wrong with being enthusiastic about the surge in US oil production as long as one remembers why it has happened: higher oil prices. Which tends to take a good bit of the shine off the situation when you recall US oil consumers are now paying almost 3X as much as they were just 10 years ago.

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