Page added on December 16, 2013
The production of both oil and natural gas is now booming in the United States, but a new 30-year federal forecast sees a falloff in oil after 2020. It expects no slowdown for natural gas.
America’s energy boom will continue for decades, and natural gas will replace coal as the largest source of U.S. electricity by 2035, the Department of Energy forecast today.
U.S. production of crude oil will increase through 2016, when it will approach the record set in 1970, before leveling off and then slowly declining after 2020. Natural gas production will grow steadily, jumping 56% from 2012 to 2040, according to an early release of an annual report by DOE’s Energy Information Administration.
“Advanced technologies for crude oil and natural gas production are continuing to increase domestic supply and reshape the U.S. energy economy as well as expand the potential for U.S. natural gas exports,” Adam Sieminski, EIA Administrator, said in releasing the Annual Energy Outlook 2014.
This energy bonanza is largely due to the combined use of horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing or fracking, which releases oil and gas from shale deposits by blasting chemical-laced water underground to break up the rock. Yet fracking faces growing criticism as some scientists link leftover fracking fluids to groundwater contamination.
EIA’s 2014 forecast says low prices will make natural gas increasingly attractive so in some areas, it will replace power once supplied by nuclear or coal plants. In 2040, it expects natural gas will account for 35% of the nation’s electricity generation while coal will account for 32%.
Two other trends will also intensify: more efficient cars and light trucks will reduce energy use while renewable sources such as solar and wind will produce more power. The result: The United States will export more energy and import less. The net import share of U.S. energy consumption could drop to as little as 4% by 2040 — down from 16% in 2012 and 30% in 2005..
The 2014 forecast sees a more robust U.S. energy market than did its 2013 counterpart. But it offers only one scenario, known as the “reference case,” that assumes current laws and regulations will remain generally unchanged through 2040. Next year, EIA will release a complete forecast, offering varying scenarios that account for pending proposals.
For example, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has proposed to limit greenhouse gas emissions from new power plants — a rule that would disproportionately affect coal-fired plants and further impede their ability to compete with natural gas facilities.
The 2014 forecast has good news for U.S. energy-related carbon dioxide emissions. It says they’ll remain below their 2005 level through 2040 because of the nation’s growing reliance on wind and solar power, which emit no CO2, as well as natural gas-fired plants, which emit about half what coal plants do.
“Future policies will change in a way to decrease greenhouse gas emissions,” says Richard Newell, former EIA chief and now director of the Duke University Energy Initiative. He expects EPA regulations, along with growth in wind and solar power, will more quickly reduce coal’s share of the U.S. electricity market than the early 2014 report forecasts.
Newell also expects the production of oil from shale rock, commonly known as “tight” oil, could continue increasing beyond 2020 because of technological advances. He says such advances made it possible to cost-effectively produce this oil, which now accounts for nearly half of U.S. crude oil but barely existed a few years ago.
“It’s hard for us to see too far into the future,” Newell says, adding: “The history of energy production is the history of technology application…I wouldn’t be surprised if the future tells a different story.”
6 Comments on "U.S. forecasts natural gas boom through 2040"
shortonoil on Mon, 16th Dec 2013 7:46 pm
With decline rates of 60 – 80% per year for shale gas wells, condensate prices down to $73/b (the Eagle Ford produces 70% condensates), and the majors heading for the hills (with multi $billion losses in shale) 2040 sounds like a prelude to the “Tales of Narnia”. That’s what you get when organizations can buy the Media, “sweet delusions”.
rockman on Mon, 16th Dec 2013 9:44 pm
NG production from conventional gas wells and that associated with oil production has declined slightly in the last 6 years. Production from shales has doubled every 3 years or so over the same period. Of course, this required a proportional increase in the number of whales wells drilled. Given the high decline rate in NG production from shale wells in order to see the projected increase in production over the next two decades requires an ever increasing number of wells drilled. Current trend numbers indicate that won’t be the case.
Pops on Mon, 16th Dec 2013 9:50 pm
Meanwhile back in the real world, Shell gives up on gas to liquids “technology application” saying it has better things to do with it’s money . . .
BillT on Tue, 17th Dec 2013 1:24 am
“Once upon a time …”
DMyers on Tue, 17th Dec 2013 4:30 am
With respect to natural gas, the historical record is clear. Gas booms lead to very high expectations but much lower actual returns. Of course, those who ignore history are bound to repeat it. For that reason, we will see another great promise, followed by another great disappointment, when it comes to natural gas.
John_A on Tue, 17th Dec 2013 4:51 am
With respect to natural gas, the historical record is clear. The blazing idiots who pimped the Natural Gas Cliff in the US back in 2005 are now scurrying for cover under the nearest rock, to hope and pray for their next opportunity to pimp fear, because they have irrefutably demonstrated they know nothing of the geology, engineering or economics involved in how these resources are developed.