America is Swimming in Oil, but 'Energy Dominance' Still Distant

February 2, 2018 Topic: Economics Region: Americas Tags: OilEnergyPoliticsMiddle EastCrudeTexas

America is Swimming in Oil, but 'Energy Dominance' Still Distant

The American oil industry is literally swimming in crude, and there is little sign of it ending anytime soon. But is it a game-changer?

The energy war is over, and America has won, proclaimed President Donald Trump. But while the world’s newest energy superpower is now producing record amounts of crude oil, why are some saying this could be as good as it gets?

“We have ended the war on American energy, and we have ended the war on beautiful clean coal,” Trump said Tuesday in his first State of the Union address. “We are now very proudly an exporter of energy to the world.”

Thanks to the shale revolution, the United States has become a net producer of natural gas and is expected to surpass Saudi Arabia this year in oil production, potentially changing Middle Eastern geopolitics.

The American oil industry is literally swimming in crude, and there is little sign of it ending anytime soon.

U.S. oil production for January is seen averaging more than ten million barrels per day (b/d) for the first time since November 1970, bolstering Trump’s call for “energy dominance.” Last week, production reached 9.88 million b/d, its highest weekly rate since 1983.

After averaging an estimated 9.3 million b/d in 2017, U.S. crude oil production is projected to average 10.3 million b/d in 2018, marking the highest annual average production in the nation’s history and surpassing the previous record of 9.6 million b/d set in 1970, according to the Energy Information Administration’s latest “Short-Term Energy Outlook.”

However, the EIA does not see the oil-production party ending there. It projects U.S. crude output to reach an average of 10.8 million b/d next year, before surpassing an estimated eleven million b/d in November 2019.

The administration expects much of the growth in this year’s crude production to come from tight rock formations within the Permian region in Texas and from the Federal Gulf of Mexico. The Permian region spans fifty-three million acres across western Texas and southeastern New Mexico.

Demonstrating the prospects for further output growth, “drilled but uncomplete” well numbers hit a record high of 7,342 in October 2017 amid anticipated higher oil prices.

According to the EIA, operators can increase production in certain areas of the Permian region even if benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil prices slip below $50 per barrel for an extended period. On January 31, WTI crude was trading at $64.15 a barrel, swelling profits of such low-cost producers.

Oil traders are growing increasingly confident over the outlook, with Bloomberg News reporting record bets on further price rises for both U.S. and global oil benchmarks.

“The long oil trade continues to be the place to be,” Tortoise Capital Advisors’ Rob Thummel told the financial news service.

The oil bulls point to OPEC’s discipline in maintaining output cuts, Russia and Saudi Arabia’s commitment to erode supply surpluses and declining U.S. stockpiles. A weaker U.S. dollar also tends to result in higher commodity prices, including oil.

BBL Commodities, one of the world’s largest oil-focused hedge funds, expects Brent crude to reach $80 this year, up from around $70 in January. Other analysts see WTI crude trading at between $60 and $75 a barrel in 2018.

Last Spike?

However, not all analysts are convinced that America’s oil production spurt will continue.

Ian Taylor, head of top oil trader Vitol, has predicted that 2018 could see the last spike in U.S. oil output before growth flattens due to rising costs.

“I think the question, a little bit in the longer term is—is this the last big rise in U.S. production?” he questioned in an interview with Reuters.

Taylor expects U.S. output to rise by 0.5 to 0.6 million b/d in 2018, but the increase is expected to cause cost inflation and make some production unprofitable.

“If you look at the economics on most of the big Permian players, not many of them make a lot of money,” he said.

Taylor sees prices rising on the back of “robust” growth in global demand, but tipped the market would remain “boringly rangebound” in the short and medium term.

“The market is tightening up. But it’s very shallow . . . There will be moments when we must get closer to $60 and moments I‘m sure when we’ll flirt with a number with a four in front of it. But it’s a pretty narrow range,” he added.

Yet others predict oil’s era is far from over, in the United States and globally.

In 2017, world production was estimated at 97.3 million b/d, and this could reach more than one hundred million b/d by 2019 depending on the growth in U.S. production and whether OPEC members comply with a 2017 production agreement that curtailed supply.

The International Energy Association (IEA) sees the United States becoming a net exporter of oil in the late 2020s, helped by rising tight oil output.

“With the United States accounting for 80 percent of the increase in global oil supply to 2025 and maintaining near-term downward pressure on prices, the world’s consumers are not yet ready to say goodbye to the era of oil,” the IEA said in its “World Energy Outlook 2017.”

However, the Paris-based organization sees U.S. production starting to plateau by 2030, declining thereafter as OPEC output rises. Improving vehicle efficiency and the growth of electric vehicles is expected to crimp oil consumption growth, although aviation, road freight and shipping are still set to remain heavily dependent on oil.

Political Benefits

Does America’s new record oil production matter geopolitically?

Richard Kauzlarich, codirector of the George Mason University’s Center for Energy Science and Policy, says it does give Washington more leverage with Saudi Arabia and other Middle Eastern nations.

“We're not beholden to every political crisis that arises in that part of the world from the cost of our energy,” he told Platts.

However, others argue that the United States remains dependent on global supply, with domestic demand currently double domestic output. Shale operators may not be able to respond quickly to any global-supply shocks, making supply from Saudi Arabia and elsewhere still vital to the world’s biggest economy.

Jason Bordoff, director of Columbia University’s Center on Global Energy Policy, says U.S. shale producers could take up to nine months to a year to ramp up production in a crisis, compared to just a few weeks for Saudi Arabia.

Nevertheless, Forbes contributor David Blackmon suggests that America’s new position as a global energy giant has greatly improved the nation’s international bargaining power.

“Domestic production is up, exports are up, reliance on Western Hemisphere imports is up, and the result, as The New York Times notes, is a suddenly enhanced bargaining posture for the United States,” Blackmon said.

“Regardless of who gets the credit, what it all amounts to is a pretty rosy current situation for the domestic oil and gas industry,” he said. “How long this will last is anyone’s guess, but it sure is a welcome change from the previous three years.”

Anthony Fensom, a Brisbane, Australia-based freelance writer and consultant with more than a decade of experience in Asia-Pacific financial/media industries. You can find him on Twitter: @a_d_fensom.

Image: Reuters Photo