November 12, 2012

The Middle East peace dividend of US oil self-sufficiency.


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Anthony Sampson wrote about http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_Sisters_(oil_companies)#Composition_and_history in 1975. Sampson meant a cartel of Western oil companies but it was always politically more popular for Western leaders to claim the main cartel was OPEC "Arab"  oil producing countries.
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The (now ongoing) Obama Administration is increasingly talking of potential US energy self-sufficiency made possible by coal seam gas (also known as "coalbed methane") and shale oil . Shale gas is seen as a byproduct of shale oil extraction. Extraction and production of shale oil appears to be technically undeveloped at present. It may meet some transport and chemical uses but not all those provided by conventional (liguid in natural state) oil.

The US is increasingly vocal in its hopes for independence from "OPEC's cartel" but US and other Western oil firms have always been part of the cartel effect with (by definition) few/no? efforts to undercut each others oil prices. Undercutting would, of course, threaten profitability in which oil firms argue is a high fixed cost/high expertise business.

There is also an Obama argument or implication that US energy self-sufficiency would permit a smaller US military footprint in the Middle East. However the US commercial and military interest groups are unlikely to withdraw from where they have commercial and strategic advantage. The US military would also be reluctant to loosen its hold on the potential energy sources of strategic competitors. This mainly means energy hungry China.

Meanwhile Russia is at present energy self-sufficient (oil, gas and coal) . The US would be mindful how powerful an energy bloc China and Russia could form - something for the US to frustrate/keep divided.

Pete

P.S. The International Energy Agency concurs about US energy self-sufficiency and even that the US will be a net energy exporter http://www.iea.org/newsroomandevents/pressreleases/2012/november/name,33015,en.html
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Meanwhile From Oilprice.com, November 11, 2012:

U.S. Shale Goes Boom, Rest of World Goes Bust

By Daniel J. Graeber | Sun, 11 November 2012OPEC, in its World Oil Report, said there's an overall sense that developing shale oil and natural gas could start to redefine the global energy mix. In the United States, the cartel said shale natural gas production alone grew by more than 60 percent from 2010 to 2012. For shale oil, supplies in the United States have already passed the 1 million barrel-per-day mark. Though shale reserves may ultimately be a game changer, said OPEC, outside the United States, the sector is in its infancy.
 
The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries published its 300-page World Oil Outlook this week. The cartel said it was "evident that this resource (shale oil and gas) will contribute to the overall energy mix." The cartel found total shale natural gas production in the United States increased from 15 million cubic feet for day in 2012 to 25 billion cubic feet per day two years later. There is a clear potential for shale natural gas on the global energy stage, said OPEC, as clean natural gas starts to replace coal as a source of electricity and becomes a major feedstock in the petrochemicals industry.

U.S. President Barack Obama last year said there was "perhaps a century's worth" of shale natural gas available in his country. The Ohio Department of Natural Resources, in a November report, said the Marcellus shale play contains as much as 363 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. Spanning an area from New York to Ohio, that reserve alone has enough natural gas potential to meet U.S. energy demands for the next 14 years.

Related Article: US Shale Gas Supplies won't Last Ten Years: An Interview with Bill Powers

In terms of shale oil, OPEC said it expects to see a rise in the importance in the reserve potential, whereas last year, "no significant shale oil contribution to liquids supply was envisaged." Resource development in the Bakken play in the northern plains states, the Eagle Ford play in the U.S. south and the Niobrara formation in an around Nebraska has pushed production over the 1 million barrel per day mark. For its WOO reference case, OPEC said as much as 3 million barrels of shale oil production could emerge per day in the United States by 2035.

OPEC, however, is less optimistic when it comes to a more comprehensive look at shale oil and natural gas. On a global scale, the report finds that shale natural gas production is coming mainly from the United States. Reserves exist elsewhere, like China and Eastern Europe, though the cartel cautioned there are "considerable" uncertainties when it comes to assessing the size of those resources. For shale oil, it said, there's been "no serious attempt" at estimating reserve potential, where recovery factors a "very low."

"Globally, shale oil and gas development is in its infancy, and there are thus considerable uncertainties about the size of the resources, the economics of development and the potential contribution to future supply," the report read."

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