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Page added on November 13, 2012

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World Energy Outlook 2012 – NYT article focusing on the USA

World Energy Outlook 2012 – NYT article focusing on the USA thumbnail

Today the IEA’s World Energy Outlook for 2012 was released. I will comment on the report when I have had an opportunity to read it. At the moment numerous newspaper articles have misunderstood the contents of WEO2012. For example, an article in the New York Times has been published under the headline: U.S. to Be World’s Top Oil Producer in 5 Years, Report Says. The errors in the article were so serious that the NYT was forced to publish the following correction.

Correction: November 12, 2012
“An earlier version of this article misstated the International Energy Agency’s prediction of American self-sufficiency in energy production. The agency said 55 percent of the improvement would come from more oil production and 45 percent from improvements in energy efficiency. It did not say that domestic oil production would rise 55 percent. Also, an earlier version of a photo caption with this article misidentified the equipment shown in use in an oil field in Greensburg, Kan. It is a pump jack, not an oil rig.”

The IEA published the prognosis for future US oil production shown above before WEO2012 was released. Conventional oil production will continue to decline while unconventional oil is estimated to grow to around 5 million barrels per day between 2020 and 2025 before declining. The IEA’s estimate for increased unconventional oil production is greater than those presented by experts in the oil industry. At a conference in China at the end of September Laura Atkins presented a prognosis that could, instead, see maximal production of unconventional oil in the USA at 4 Mb/d, i.e. 20% lower than the IEA’s estimate.

She made the following comments regarding the prognosis (Source: Hart Energy and Rystad Energy):

  • Shale production volumes can increase rapidly
  • But, it takes a massive drilling program
  • And, not all wells are economic
  • Continuous learning is essential

The first area where shale oil began to be produced was Montana’s section of the Bakken field. As shown in the figure above, this area already reached maximal production of shale oil in 2006 at 9 million barrels per quarter, i.e. 100,000 barrels per day. We do not know at which level the falling production rate will level off but it could be 50,000 barrels per day. If this production profile is characteristic for the Bakken field then production in North Dakota will also reach a maximum within a few years and then decline to a level of about half the peak rate. This means that a plateau of US shale oil production lasting 15-20 years from around 2020 until 2035 or later that Laura Atkins presents probably is unrealistic. All together, this means that the prognosis made by the IEA for the maximal rate of shale oil production in the USA may be an overestimate by around 2 Mb/d.
En shale oil produktion med 3 Mb/d kommer inte att göra USA till ett exportland av olja med prduktionen kommer att göra att importberoendet kommer att minska. USA kommer inte att slå Saudiarabien vad det gäller den total produktion.


(The figure is Figure 14.4 from the book “Peeking at Peak Oil”, Aleklett, Lardelli, Qvennerstedt)

Production of 3 Mb/d of shale oil will not transform the USA into a
net oil exporter but will mean that the USA’s need to import oil will
be reduced. In the report that the US EIA presented in February they showed acurrent production of 1 Mb/dof shale oil and an import dependence of 41%. An increase to 3 Mb/d of shale oil production will reduce imports to 7 Mb/d and import dependence to 32%. The USA will not surpass Saudi Arabia in terms of total crude oil production.

 ASPO



10 Comments on "World Energy Outlook 2012 – NYT article focusing on the USA"

  1. BillT on Tue, 13th Nov 2012 2:01 pm 

    Even the liars cannot keep the lies straight…lol. Dream on if you think that oil and natural gas fraking have a future in the US. Why not?
    1. Water
    2. Financing
    3. Economy
    4. EROEI

  2. TIKIMAN on Tue, 13th Nov 2012 2:17 pm 

    We could have 10 gazillion barrells of shale oil to last us forever. But what does it matter when it’s only economical when oil is $150-200 a barrell?

    The easy oil is gone. (used to lubricate your mother)

    All thats left is the shit of the planet.

  3. GregT on Tue, 13th Nov 2012 3:29 pm 

    I wonder if all of the media outlets up here in Canada will bother to make corrections to this story.

    It’s time for the people to take back control of the media and governments of our countries, before it’s too late.

    Or is it too late already?

  4. actioncjackson on Tue, 13th Nov 2012 8:33 pm 

    It’s too late Greg. The people are a bunch of imbeciles with a very very small fraction seeing the truth through their own eyes. We’re locked in and I’m betting on collapse.

  5. actioncjackson on Tue, 13th Nov 2012 8:34 pm 

    And colored pencils, really?

  6. Plantagenet on Tue, 13th Nov 2012 8:45 pm 

    The liberal establishment has decided “peak oil” is a farce. The New York Times, the Guardian, and other liberal bastions of the media are all bashing peak oil.

  7. IanC on Tue, 13th Nov 2012 9:28 pm 

    I don’t want people to know the truth until our biodynamic farm is up and running.

    Thanks PO.com for helping me stay grounded in reality in the face of all this misinformation. I read the NY Times daily, but don’t believe a word they say on energy issues.

  8. MrEnergyCzar on Wed, 14th Nov 2012 12:38 am 

    People will cancel their subscriptions if they know we won’t grow anymore or have an oil issue… It’s in the times best interest to keep everyone uneducated on the reality of say..EROEI…

    MrEnergyCzar

  9. rollin on Wed, 14th Nov 2012 4:58 am 

    The best thing that can happen for the oil companies is for us to continue doing the same old nonsensical things. The best thing for us is to steadily wean ourselves off of fossil fuels and over-consumption. If we don’t need it we won’t feel the loss when it’s gone or gets too expensive.

  10. Arthur on Wed, 14th Nov 2012 11:47 am 

    “The best thing for us is to steadily wean ourselves off of fossil fuels and over-consumption.”

    Small town, Midwest, railway connection, lots of fertile ground and water, solar panels on the roof. That should do it.

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