How Much Longer Can Shale Support U.S. Oil and Gas Production?
Friday, 07/21/2023 rbnenergy.com Published by: David Braziel
Back in the early 2000s, the outlook for energy security in the U.S. was bleak. Domestic oil production had been on a steady decline since 1985 and gas production was also well off its apex in the 1970s. M. King Hubbert’s concept of peak oil ignited fears of eventual energy scarcity. Given fossil fuels’ ubiquity underlying our entire Western economic and industrial structure, it’s no wonder that folks were concerned. But then the Shale Revolution changed everything. It’s often been said that necessity is the mother of invention and, after many trials and with considerable ingenuity, U.S. producers learned to wring massive volumes of previously trapped hydrocarbons from shale and gave the U.S. energy industry a new lease on life. But there are still limits on how much crude oil, natural gas and NGLs can be economically produced — and concerns lately that the best of the U.S.’s shale resources may have already been exploited. In today’s RBN blog, we examine crude oil and gas reserves: how they are estimated and what they tell us about the longevity of U.S. production.
One of the most pressing questions in the energy space lately is how long the major producing regions in the U.S. onshore will hold out. A lot of producers have talked in their recent investor presentations about the fact that the opportunities for prolific new wells are dwindling in some regions — what’s commonly known as acreage degradation. That should be concerning to everybody, from consumers to policy-makers. Upstream investors want to be sure that producers have adequate acreage inventory to maintain production while midstreamers and downstream companies want to know that their assets won't be starved of supply.
Link to full article with graphs: https://rbnenergy.com/say-youll-be-there-how-much-longer-can-shale-...
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Good stuff, Skip. Thanks for posting this. Pretty darn interesting.
You're welcome, Jesse. RBN Energy is one of my favorite analytic sources. I've been reading articles by other trustworthy energy focused media along these same lines for a while now. I think it should inform how mineral owners manage their assets.
I don't think David Braziel's assessment that we only have ten years left of oil reserves in the major basins in the U.S. is accurate. Or maybe I missed something when I glanced at his article before the paywall went up at RBN Energy.
I suspect the U.S. probably has another 50 years of oil reserves (at least). Or maybe more, depending on the application of new technology to unlock such formations as the TMS.
Check out this article on statista.com. When you clink on the link, you'll see that their graph has over 34 trillion cubic feet of production in 2050. And the trend is up, not down in 2050. This squares with my thinking, i.e., U.S. reserves will continue to supply O&G for many decades to come.
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