Thursday, 18 August 2011

Forget the Middle East...

Why America will be the new energy capital of the world



Thursday, August 18, 2011

From Mark J. Perry's Carpe Diem:

Excerpts from a new special report from Foreign Policy:

"For half a century, the global energy supply's center of gravity has been the Middle East. This fact has had self-evidently enormous implications for the world we live in – and it's about to change.

By the 2020s, the capital of energy will likely have shifted back to the Western Hemisphere, where it was prior to the ascendancy of Middle Eastern megasuppliers such as Saudi Arabia and Kuwait in the 1960s.

The reasons for this shift are partly technological and partly political. Geologists have long known that the Americas are home to plentiful hydrocarbons trapped in hard-to-reach offshore deposits, on-land shale rock, oil sands, and heavy oil formations. The U.S. endowment of unconventional oil is more than 2 trillion barrels, with another 2.4 trillion in Canada and 2 trillion-plus in South America – compared with conventional Middle Eastern and North African oil resources of 1.2 trillion. The problem was always…


WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17, 2011

Adios OPEC: The Americas, Not the Middle East, Will Be the World Capital of Energy in the Future

Excerpts from a new Special Report from Foreign Policy:

"For half a century, the global energy supply's center of gravity has been the Middle East. This fact has had self-evidently enormous implications for the world we live in -- and it's about to change.

By the 2020s, the capital of energy will likely have shifted back to the Western Hemisphere, where it was prior to the ascendancy of Middle Eastern megasuppliers such as Saudi Arabia and Kuwait in the 1960s. The reasons for this shift are partly technological and partly political. Geologists have long known that the Americas are home to plentiful hydrocarbons trapped in hard-to-reach offshore deposits, on-land shale rock, oil sands, and heavy oil formations. The U.S. endowment of unconventional oil is more than 2 trillion barrels, with another 2.4 trillion in Canada and 2 trillion-plus in South America -- compared with conventional Middle Eastern and North African oil resources of 1.2 trillion. The problem was always how to unlock them economically.

But since the early 2000s, the energy industry has largely solved that problem. With the help of horizontal drilling and other innovations, shale gas production in the United States has skyrocketed from virtually nothing to 15 to 20 percent of the U.S. natural gas supply in less than a decade. By 2040, it could account for more than half of it. This tremendous change in volume has turned the conversation in the U.S. natural gas industry on its head; where Americans once fretted about meeting the country's natural gas needs, they now worry about finding potential buyers for the country's surplus (see chart above).

Meanwhile, onshore oil production in the United States, condemned to predictions of inexorable decline by analysts for two decades, is about to stage an unexpected comeback. Oil production from shale rock, a technically complex process of squeezing hydrocarbons from sedimentary deposits, is just beginning. But analysts are predicting production of as much as 1.5 million barrels a day in the next few years from resources beneath the Great Plains and Texas alone -- the equivalent of 8 percent of current U.S. oil consumption. The development raises the question of what else the U.S. energy industry might accomplish if prices remain high and technology continues to advance. Rising recovery rates from old wells, for example, could also stem previous declines. On top of all this, analysts expect an additional 1 to 2 million barrels a day from the Gulf of Mexico now that drilling is resuming. Peak oil? Not anytime soon.

A hydrocarbon-driven reordering of geopolitics is already taking place. The petropower of Iran, Russia, and Venezuela has faltered on the back of plentiful American natural gas supply: A surplus of resources in the Americas is sending other foreign suppliers scrambling to line up buyers in Europe and Asia, making it more difficult for such exporters to assert themselves via heavy-handed energy "diplomacy." The U.S. energy industry may also be able to provide the technical assistance necessary for Europe and China to tap unconventional resources of their own, scuttling their need to kowtow to Moscow or the Persian Gulf.

So watch this space: America may be back in the energy leadership saddle again."

9 Comments:

At 8/17/2011 1:47 PM, Blogger Benjamin said...

Dr. Perry is red hot today!
This is a terrific post.

Via Con Dios OPEC, and you can kiss my CNG car's ass!

At 8/17/2011 2:25 PM, Blogger Rufus II said...

Yep, we only Imported 65.1 MILLION BARRELS Of OIL LAST WEEK.

And, took another 5 Million Barrels out of our Strategic reserve.

We're practically swimmin' in the stuff.

At 8/17/2011 2:29 PM, Blogger NormanB said...

If only we had an adminstration that was pro-energy development. But instead we have either silence (it'd impinge on the green energy dream) or phony enviornmental roadblocks. Just another sign of dysfunctionality.

At 8/17/2011 2:30 PM, Blogger Rufus II said...

Oh, and we still "Import" 10% of our nat gas supply from Canada.

At 8/17/2011 3:05 PM, Blogger Benjamin said...

And the Bush Bros. still have a permanent ban on oil drilling off the coast of Florida in effect.

At 8/17/2011 3:56 PM, Blogger Buddy R Pacifico said...

What are the key ingredients in horizontal drilling? Water andProppants.Porppants are basically fine sand aggregates. There are lingering shortages of Proppants, but this is a booming industry with lots of new entrants and high-tech sand formulations. The average new well uses 3-5 million pounds of Proppants.

At 8/17/2011 5:29 PM, OpenID thefarmerslife said...

I took you to task with a comment yesterday on your post about the "Ethanol Scam" and I touched on the need for using all our energy sources. This post highlights a number of those things. Great job!

At 8/17/2011 8:20 PM, Blogger Michael Hoff said...

So look for Russia, Venezuela and Iran to funnel tons of cash to the American environmental movement and the DNC to whip up more hysteria about the evils of hydrocarbons. If they aren't doing so already.

At 8/18/2011 7:18 AM, OpenID American Delight said...

In that case you would think we'd be a little friendlier to our Latin neighbors to the south, instead of cozying up to China and the Arab Springers...

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Dr. Mark J. Perry is a professor of economics and finance in theSchool of Management at the Flint campus of the University of Michigan. Perry holds two graduate degrees in economics (M.A. and Ph.D.) from George Mason University near Washington, D.C. In addition, he holds an MBA degree in finance from the Curtis L. Carlson School of Managementat the University of Minnesota.Perry is currently on sabbatical from the University of Michigan and is a visiting scholar at The American Enterprise Institute in Washington, D.C.


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