US Oil Production Makes Waves

Similar documents
The Best-Laid Plans of Saudi Arabia and Russia

Testimony of Samantha Gross 1 Fellow, Cross-Brookings Initiative on Energy and Climate, Brookings Institution

OPEC Behaviour through the Lenses of the Oil Price Cycle

Energy Prospectus Group

Quarterly Energy Comment

Running Head: CONVENTIONAL OIL 1

SPERI Global Political Economy Brief No. 9. Oil: The Missing Story of the West s Economic and Geopolitical Crises.

Quarterly Oil Market Update. Volatility is back

BP Energy Outlook 2035

The US-OPEC Oil War Takes Another

Key Findings. Background and Introduction

1 Are the recent oil price increases set to last? Prepared by Irma Alonso Álvarez and Frauke Skudelny

Challenging Aspects of MCDM

THE FUTURE OF OIL AND GAS LAW*

Quarterly Energy Comment

The Impact of the 2017 Oil Price Recovery on Texas Real Estate

NYHEDSBREV AUGUST 2010

How the Shale Boom Has Transformed the US Oil

THE RISE OF REGIONAL OIL MARKETS UNITED STATES SHALE COULD HERALD REGIONAL OIL REVOLUTION. Bernhard Hartmann Saji Sam Bruno Sousa

Oil Supply and Demand. Student s Name. Institution Affiliation. Course. Date

U.S. Oil Prices Outlook January 2019

Quarterly Oil Market Update. Supply factors weigh heavily on oil

Brent spot Brent 20-day rolling average WTI spot WTI 20 day rolling average. USD per barrel. USD per barrel. WTI - Brent Arb

ORG Explains Sustainable Security Programme

Production drilling. Figure Annual total size of the Russian oilfield services market from 2005 through 2011, millions of rubles

Twilight of Big Energy

Impact of the GCC Crisis on Global Energy Markets. Joe Macaron

OIL S BOOM-OR-BUST CYCLE MAY BE OVER. Recent price swings highlight a new era of uncertainty. Saji Sam, Juan Trebino, and Bob Orr

Short-Term Energy Outlook (STEO)

Clingendael Spectator (vol.72) Item 5 of 7 ARTICLE

Special Report on Crude Oil Friday, February 21, 2014

A monthly publication from South Indian Bank. To kindle interest in economic affairs... To empower the student community...

FROM RAILROAD COMMISSIONER RYAN SITTON

Short Term Energy Outlook March 2011 March 8, 2011 Release

Strategic Issues Facing the Natural Gas Industry

Quarterly Energy Comment

Russia and the Ukraine The Worrisome Connection to World Oil and Gas Problems

Institute of Law and Finance University of Frankfurt

Global 2040 Forecast Sees Only Slight Fall in Fossil Fuels

U.S. faces hurdles in getting oil supply to market

eee eee ee e eeyy EsEE s Es E 6ee s ss s s s s s s s e eee ee eeeee

Fuel Focus. National Overview. In this Issue. Recent Developments. Volume 2, Issue 10 May 25, 2007

Are High Oil Prices Here to Stay? Athens, November 23 rd, 2011

Quarterly Energy Comment

Oil Security Index Quarterly Update. April 2014

The Outlook for the Global LPG Market

Why Investors Should Beware Of The Bakken. By Arthur Berman - Mar 01, 2017, 4:27 PM CST

American Strategy and US Energy Independence

Fuel Focus. Understanding Gasoline Markets in Canada and Economic Drivers Influencing Prices. Issue 18, Volume 9

Challenges of Fracking for the MENA Region Martin Bachmann, Member of the Board

The Reemergence of the United States as a Global Petroleum Producer

Trends in the Global Petroleum Industry Balasundram Maniam 1, Todd Robbins 2, Geetha Subramaniam 3 1,2 Sam Houston State University,Houston,USA

Thomas A. Petrie, CFA Petrie Partners, Chairman

Thomas A. Petrie, CFA Petrie Partners, Chairman

Crude Oil and Natural Gas Trade in North America: Anything New?

US Oil and Natural Gas Perspective

Outlook for the Oil and Gas Industry

Can we predict Global Oil Price? The Implications of Energy Security in East Asia

Wednesday, October 17 Handout: Oligopolies

COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF MONTHLY REPORTS ON THE OIL MARKET

Quarterly Oil Market Update. Volatility Returns to Oil Markets

OPEC's Spare Crude Oil Capacity - Will it Disappear by the End of 2011?

ENERGY POLICY AT A GLANCE CRUDE OIL EXPORTS

Finding Global End Use Markets for the Growing LPG Supply

Shale, the new oil swing producer?

API Industry Outlook. Third Quarter R. Dean Foreman, Ph.D. Great Plains and EmPower ND Energy Conference October 8, 2018.

Special Conference II: Development and Sustainability. Reducing dependency on energy supplies from politically unstable regions MUNISH 14

Commodity Market Monthly

SPECIAL MONTHLY REPORT ON ENERGY (MAY 2018)

Navigating a Path to Improved Energy Security

The Doha Oil Producers Meeting and Implications

MEMORANDUM. May 6, Subcommittee on Energy and Power Democratic Members and Staff

Weak Oil Prices and the Global Economy

Dallas Fed Energy Survey

Bord Gáis Energy Index Understanding energy

Shale Oil: A Turning Point for the Global Oil Market

The State of the Energy Markets

ENERGY SLIDESHOW. Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas

Report: US 2018 CO2 emissions saw biggest spike in years 1 hour ago

January Christof Rühl, Group Chief Economist

U.S. EIA s Liquid Fuels Outlook

ENERGY SLIDESHOW. Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas

In this report, last week many commodity prices continued to rise, yet there were mixed economic signals about global growth problems.

Oil Price Volatility Challenges and Opportunities. December 5, 2016

U.S. Winning Oil War Against Saudi

The Successful Development of Shale Gas Resources in the United States

US Oil and Gas Import Dependence: Department of Energy Projections in 2011

Oil and natural gas: market outlook and drivers

Short-Term Energy and Summer Fuels Outlook (STEO)

2017, Vol. 8, N o 25 Oil Trade in the Context of Oil Price Fluctuations at the Turn of 2014 and Abstract

Demand-pull or Supply-push? Changes in crude oil markets and possible implications for refining

The GDP growth rate remains high in India and Indonesia, the major markets in the region.

Energy and Regional Economics

OPEC: Vision, Mission and Development World Oil Outlook to 2025

OPEC+10 production restraint reversed supplydemand. allowed inventories to fall. Supply growth is outside OPEC. New dynamic: rapidresponse

Solution Key 9/10/2012

U.S. Crude Oil, Natural Gas, and NG Liquids Proved Reserves

Contents. Introduction Global energy trends Outlook 2030: Fuel by fuel Implications. Energy Outlook 2030 BP 2013

First Person From Moonbeam Gas to Shale Revolution to What s Next

5. Empirical Results. 5.1 Event study analysis

Transcription:

US Oil Production Makes Waves June 19, 2017 While oil prices are going down, U.S. oil exports are going up. Originally produced on June 12, 2017 for Mauldin Economics, LLC By George Friedman and Jacob L. Shapiro There s no end in sight to slumping oil prices good news for consumers but a dire development for major oil producers like Saudi Arabia and Russia. And now, rising US oil production and exports are contributing to the slump. Last week, oil prices reached new lows for 2017, with Brent crude dipping below $48 per barrel and West Texas Intermediate dipping below $46. The drop has been attributed to an unexpected increase in US crude inventories, which rose by 3.3 million barrels last week (according to the US Energy Information Administration), despite expectations that it would drop by 3.5 million barrels. The rise in production is compounded by rising US oil exports, since the US lifted a 40-year ban on these exports in 2015. This led to modest increases in oil exports in 2016 but substantial increases so far in 2017. This is a key reason prices will remain low in the long term. Ebbs and Flows in US Exports It is worth remembering why the United States banned oil exports in 1975 (exceptions were allowed at the discretion of the president). 1970 set a record for the highest crude oil production in the US, though this record will likely be broken in the next two years. The US was producing a lot, but it was also consuming a lot, forcing it to import more from OPEC states, which produced about 55% of the world s oil in 1973. This meant that OPEC could essentially control prices. And after the US backed Israel in the 1973 Yom Kippur War, OPEC retaliated by raising oil prices. This created a fourfold jump in prices and a global oil shock. One of the many ways the US responded was the 1975 Energy Policy and Conservation Act. This was designed to decrease its reliance on imports by banning oil exports, 1 / 5

ensuring US-produced oil would only be consumed domestically. Fast-forward to today, and supply is no longer as big a concern. The US has weaned itself off foreign oil, partly through technologies like hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling. In 2013, the US started producing more oil than it imported, and it hasn t looked back. US crude oil production has almost doubled since 2010 and is already surpassing forecasts for 2017. In late 2016, the US Energy Information Administration estimated that the United States would produce 8.7 million barrels per day on average in 2017. New estimates suggest it will produce 9.2 million barrels per day in 2017 and up to 10 million barrels per day in 2018. 2 / 5

But it s not just the US production numbers that are making waves: It s the spike in US crude oil exports. The US exported 830,000 barrels of crude per day in March, a whopping 64.2% increase year over year. In February, it exported 1.1 million barrels per day, a nearly 200% increase year over year. According to The Wall Street Journal, the February numbers are closer to the new norm, as it expects the US to export, on average, roughly 1 million barrels per day in 2017. A Disaster for Oil Producers This is a huge challenge for major oil producers, especially Saudi Arabia and Russia. In December 2016, OPEC and its oil-producing partners agreed to cut production by about 1.8 million barrels per day, or roughly 1.5% of global crude production at the time. OPEC, led by the Saudis, has largely made good on this pledge, reducing production by 1.1 million barrels per day in the first quarter of 2017. The Russians have played with the numbers cutting production compared with December 2016 levels but not in year-over-year terms. 3 / 5

The OPEC deal managed to stabilize oil prices around $50 per barrel, and last month the cuts were extended for another nine months. If it were still 1973, that might have caused a jump in oil prices. But in 2017, OPEC produces only about 40% of the global supply, and the US is among the top three producers in the world. The price of Brent crude spiked to $54.15 per barrel after the cuts were extended but has since dropped almost 12% and may continue to fall. This means that even the combined forces of OPEC and non-opec producers can t prop up oil prices unless they are willing to slash production more severely. It also means that there is enough oil on the market, partly from the US, to satisfy demand, even when major producers limit their supply. Maintaining prices at current levels is the best outcome these producers can hope for. But even this comes with the downside of losing market share to competitors, without getting oil prices back to the levels that Russia and Saudi Arabia would need to stabilize their economies. 4 / 5

Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org) Geopolitical Futures When we discuss US power in the world, we often trot out a few key points: The US economy accounts for just under a quarter of global gross domestic product; it has a military force without peer in the world; and its economy is not dependent on exports. We can now add the following points to this list: The US is the third-largest oil producer in the world; it is less dependent on oil imports than at any point in the last 40 years; and it is stealing customers from Russia and Saudi Arabia even with prices as low as $50 per barrel. Even a few years ago, US shale producers would have found it hard to make a profit at that price, but they are succeeding at that now. Oil prices are going down, US oil exports are going up, and the ramifications will be global. 5 / 5