Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Annual Energy Outlook 2015 (interactive table viewer) Note: Product supplied is used as a proxy for consumption.
In its recently released Annual Energy Outlook 2015
(AEO2015) Reference case, EIA expects U.S. crude oil production to rise
through 2020 as oil prices recover from their steep decline, reducing
net petroleum (crude oil and petroleum products) imports. AEO 2015
explores the effects of domestic crude oil production under various
assumptions about world oil prices and domestic resource availability.
In
all AEO2015 scenarios, the United States remains a net importer of
crude oil (despite increased domestic production) and a net exporter of
petroleum products. As always with EIA base-case outlooks, AEO2015
assumes no changes in current laws and regulations. Thus, all cases in
the AEO2015 assume that current restrictions on U.S. crude oil exports
remain in place.
Increasing levels of domestic crude oil
production through 2020 have two effects: lower crude oil imports and
higher throughput at U.S. refineries. Higher refinery throughput
increases production and net exports of refined petroleum products like
motor gasoline and diesel fuel. Together, lower crude oil imports
and higher product exports reduce net imports of petroleum and other
liquids, which in 2013 provided 33% of total U.S. consumption (product
supplied). In the AEO2015 Reference case, this percentage falls to 14%
in 2020, when domestic crude oil production reaches 10.6 million barrels
per day. Domestic crude oil production then begins to decline, and the
net import share of product supplied increases to 17% by 2040.
The
United States also remains a net petroleum importer through 2040 in the
Low Oil Price case. Low world oil and petroleum product prices result
in an increase in domestic petroleum product consumption, which leads to
significantly lower net petroleum product exports than in the Reference
case.
Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Annual Energy Outlook 2015 (interactive table viewer) Note: Product supplied is used as a proxy for consumption.
In
two other cases, the United States becomes a net petroleum exporter
after 2020, as net petroleum product exports surpass net crude oil
imports. In the High Oil and Gas Resource case, increased domestic crude
oil production growth is driven by production from tight oil
formations. This higher production is a result of more optimistic
production assumptions compared with the Reference case, such as higher
estimated ultimate recovery (EUR), more significant technology
improvements, closer well spacing, and development of new tight oil
formations or additional layers within known tight oil formations. With
more domestic crude oil supply, the High Oil and Gas Resource case has
both the greatest decrease in net crude oil imports and the greatest
increase in net petroleum product exports through 2040 of all cases in
the AEO2015 analysis.
In the High Oil Price case, higher world oil
prices spur domestic crude oil production and reduce domestic petroleum
product consumption, leading to a significant increase in net petroleum
product exports through 2040. However, because the High Oil Price case
contains the same resource assumptions as the Reference case, drilling
moves into less-productive areas, resulting in a decrease in domestic
crude oil production in the later years of the projection. However, high
oil prices continue to hold domestic use of petroleum products below
the Reference case level, keeping the United States a net petroleum
exporter through 2040.
http://theenergycollective.com/todayinenergy/2219576/increasing-domestic-production-crude-oil-reduces-net-petroleum-imports
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