This is worth some comment. The sheer
speed of the increase in North American production happens to be
astonishing. That and the rapid expansion of Iraqi production ended
firmly the forty year seller's cartel. It had already been
hopelessly weakened a long time ago but now it is effectively
irrelevant in terms of North America.
More importantly, We are able to become
independent of any imported oil at all. That oil will be then
released to the developing world who will certainly need access to it
anyway.
North America is also about to swing
into a huge trade surplus which will be sustained for years and will
cause a major strengthening of the US dollar. All this without doing
a thing internally that could only add to improvement.
Fears of five years ago in terms of the
limits of oil production have been nicely dispelled with the advent
of the accessing of tight formations and left behind oil in
established reservoirs. We have a flood of new oil coming on stream.
SEPTEMBER 27, 2012
Alberta Oil Magazine
has projections of oil production for the US and Canada out to 2016.
TheOilDrum has a typically overly pessimistic view of what will happen with world, US and Canadian oil production. The figures that they are using are already outdated for the US which has had an increase of 1 million barrels per day in crude oil since 2011.
US Crude oil production just reached 6.509 million barrels per day. There was a dip for several weeks because of production shutdowns because of weather in the gulf of mexico.
All US oil liquid production is at 10.8 million barrels per day. US Imports were down to 7.5 million barrels per day
In July, North Dakota oil production hit 674,000 barrels per day. It will be interesting to see what the September and October production is when the EIA reports US oil production is 200,000 barrels per day higher. Likely the increase is a mix of Texas and North Dakota and some recovery in Alaska.
Iraq Oil Production projections through 2017
Year Exports
Total Production
2012 2.6 million
bpd 3.2 million bpd
2013 2.9 million
bpd
2014 3.5 million
bpd
2015 3.75 million
bpd
2016 4.5 million
bpd (NBF interpolation)
2017 6.0 million
bpd
The EIA indicates there was a new peak in world crude oil in April, 2012 at 75.87 million barrels per day
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