Um, I don't think you're looking at real statistics. According to this report 
we have a LOT more than you think:

http://www.rand.org/pubs/monographs/2005/RAND_MG414.pdf

The largest known oil shale deposits in the world are in the Green River 
Formation,
which covers portions of Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming. Estimates of the oil
resource in place within the Green River Formation range from 1.5 to 1.8 
trillion
barrels. Not all resources in place are recoverable. For potentially 
recoverable oil shale resources, we roughly derive an upper bound of 1.1 
trillion barrels of oil and a lower bound of about 500 billion barrels. For 
policy planning purposes, it is enough to know that any amount in this range is 
very high. For example, the midpoint in our estimate range, 800 billion 
barrels, is more than triple the proven oil reserves of Saudi Arabia. Present 
U.S. demand for petroleum products is about 20 million barrels per day. If oil 
shale could be used to meet a quarter of that demand, 800 billion barrels of 
recoverable resources would last for more than 400 years.

> You seem to have a skewed perspective. So what if somebody in Israel 
> sets up a plant to produce 20000 barrels of oil per day. The US uses 
> 20 million barrels a day and imports 10 million barrels per day. Even 
> the highest estimates for what the oil shale deposits in the US can 
> produce in two decades end at 5 million barrels a day.


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