Shale Production Booms and Foreign Oil Imports Decline

Shale plays, like the Eagle Ford, are contributing to U.S. production growth that has pushed imports of foreign oil below 50%. That's down from more than 60% just 5 years ago. While hydraulic fracturing is highly debated, its use combined with horizontal drilling has shifted the U.S. from a position of a majority consumer to a producer who supplies most of its oil needs. We're a long way from producing enough oil for the country, but at least we have a bargaining chip at the table. We can produce more oil and have untapped reserves in the ground. If you have a couple of minutes, this is a pretty good article from the LA Times. 

U.S. net petroleum imports have fallen to about 47% of the nation's consumption, down from a record 60.3% in 2005, Energy Information Administration statistics show. It's been 15 years since the nation's reliance on foreign oil has been this low.

Several factors figure into the import decline, but a big one is a little surprising: U.S. petroleum exploration is experiencing a quiet renaissance with the help of technology and new drilling techniques.

The number of oil rigs in production in the U.S. has reached a 24-year high, according to oil field services company Baker Hughes. In 2005, domestic production was 1.89 billion barrels. This year, experts say, production is expected to surpass 2 billion barrels.

Read the full news release at latimes.com

Eagle Ford Shale Play Not Closely Followed

The Eagle Ford is getting a little love, but the Bakken is the talk of the oil world. That might change if current projections come to fruition.  We might have a resource race on our hands that pits American production vs. American production. That's a nice problem when you consider we've haven't been able to have that conversation for decades. We're reliant on imports for a majority of our oil consumption, but the Eagle Ford and Bakken are beginning to put a dent in those numbers.........Maybe, we'll get Jim Cramer visit us in South Texas.

A few weeks back CNBC sent anchor and Mad Money host Jim Cramer up to the Bakken shale to get an on the ground view of the amazing changes taking place in the area. North Dakota is booming with an overwhelming demand for employees. The companies leading the drilling efforts such as Continental Resources (CLR) and Brigham Exploration (BEXP) have benefited handsomely from the massive growth in that area.

Though known by many industry experts and investors, another area exists in southern Texas that might match or exceed the oil produced from the Bakken. That area is called the Eagle Ford Shale.

With an estimated 25B boe, Eagle Ford has enormous untapped potential. Companies have in earnest only been drilling in the area for the last couple of years. Petrohawk (HK) was a leader in the area and BHP BIlliton (BHP) recently bought them out.

Read the full news article at seekingalpha.com

 

Shale Oil Production to Lower U.S. Imports

The Eagle Ford Shale, Bakken Shale, and Niobrara Shale are all estimated to reduce U.S. oil imports by as much as 500,000 barrels a day over the next five years, according to an industry study.  Shale Oil production could rise to 900,000 barrels a day in the same time frame and could be as much as 1.3 million barrels a day by 2020. Oil pipeline expansions from Cushing, Oklahoma, down to Houston and the Gulf Coast are needed to help improve prices for WTI crude in comparison to other benchmark crude prices.  TransCanada Corp.'s planned Keystone XL will increase oil deliveries to refineries in Cushing and the Gulf Coast by 700,000 barrels a day starting in 2013. The Double E pipeline from Enterprise Products Partners and Energy Transfer Partners and the Longhorn pipeline reversal by Magellan Midstream Partners might add 650,000 barrels a day of capacity into Houston from West Texas and Oklahoma.

Refineries are also looking to benefit. Valero Energy Corp, Flint Hills Resources, and Frontier Oil Corp. area all looking for ways to increase the amount of U.S. crude they refine.  Growing U.S. oil production has created an exciting environment for every U.S. refinery.

Read the full article at Bloomberg.com