From
Reuters, no less. Peak Oil is not, and never was, redundant
U.S.
oil output on brink of 'dramatic' decline, executive says
Oil executives warned on Tuesday of a "dramatic" decline in U.S. production that could pave the way for a future spike in prices if fuel demand increases.
6
October, 2015
Delegates
at the Oil and Money conference in London, an annual gathering of
senior industry officials, said world oil prices were now too low to
support U.S. shale oil output, the biggest addition to world
production over the last decade.
"We
are about to see a pretty dramatic decline in U.S. production
growth," the former head of oil firm EOG Resources Mark Papa,
told the conference.
Papa,
now a partner at U.S. energy investment firm Riverstone Holdings LLC,
said U.S. oil production would stall this month and begin to decline
from early next year. He said the main reason for the decline would
be a lack of bank financing for new shale developments.
Official
data show that nationwide U.S. output has already begun to decline
after reaching a peak of 9.6 million barrels per day (bpd) in April,
although production in some big shale patches, including North
Dakota, has held steady thus far. The Energy Information
Administration forecast on Tuesday that output would reach a low of
around 8.6 million bpd next year.
Until
this year, U.S. oil output was growing at the fastest rate on record,
adding around 1 million bpd of new supply each year thanks to the
introduction of new drilling techniques that have released oil and
gas from shale formations.
But
oil prices have almost halved in the last year on oversupply in a
drop that deepened after the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting
Countries in 2014 changed strategy to protect market share against
higher-cost producers, rather than cut output to prop up prices as it
had done in the past.
Benchmark
Brent crude was up 5 percent, or $2.50 a barrel, at $51.75 on Tuesday
as investors digested news from the London conference. It peaked in
recent years above $115 a barrel in June 2014.
SPIKE
The
chief executive of Royal Dutch Shell Plc agreed, saying U.S. oil
producers would struggle to refinance while prices remained so low,
leading to lower output in future.
"Producers
are now looking for new cash to survive and they will probably
struggle to get it," Ben van Beurden said.
Longer
term, there was a risk that low levels of global production could
bring a spike in oil prices, he said.
If
prices remained low for a long time and oil production outside OPEC
and the United States declined due to capital expenditure cuts, there
was not likely to be any significant spare capacity left in the
system, he said.
"This
could cause prices to spike upwards, starting a new cycle of strong
production growth in U.S. shale oil and subsequent volatility,"
van Beurden said.
Adam
Sieminski, administrator at the U.S. Energy Information
Administration, told reporters on the sidelines of the conference the
U.S. oil industry had reacted to lower prices by improving its
productivity.
But
this process could not continue forever.
"Now
we are seeing the limits at least in the near term and it is
beginning to impact production," Sieminski said. "We see
(U.S. oil production declines) continuing into next summer."
The
Secretary-General of OPEC, Abdullah al-Badri, said oil supply growth
from non-OPEC producers might be zero or negative in 2016 because of
lower upstream investment.
But
Papa said if U.S. light crude oil prices went back up to $75 a
barrel, U.S. oil production would resume growth at around 500,000 bpd
- or around half the record growth rates observed in the past few
years.
"I
see the United States as a long-term growth producer," he said.
"If low oil prices prevail - then the correction in oil prices
will be much more severe."
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