Privatization in Mexico,  Texas bonanza, boom in North Dakota, guess  what?
Expect lower gas prices in the future, gradually, but a real decline at the 
 pump.
BR
 
--------------------------------------------------------------
 
Real Clear Politics / Real Clear Energy

 
December 16, 2013  
'Saudi Texas' in 2014 Will Produce More Oil Than Some OPEC  Members
By _John  Daly_ (http://www.realclearenergy.org/authors/john_daly/) 

Texas oil production is surging, and estimates for 2014 predict that output 
 of more than 2.7 million barrels per day will push the Lone Star State’s  
production above OPEC members _Nigeria_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/nigeria/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolin
k) 

(2.524 bpd), _Venezuela_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/venezuela/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolink)
   (2.489 
bpd) and _Algeria_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/algeria/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolink)
   (1,875 million 
bpd.). 
The news comes as University of Texas at San Antonio Institute for Economic 
 Development Research Director Thomas Tunstall, an expert on the Eagle Ford 
shale  deposit, told the annual meeting of the South Texas Energy and 
Economic  Roundtable that next year output from the Eagle Ford shale deposits 
and 
the  Cline shale fields in the Permian Basin in west Texas would _surpass_ 
(http://www.woai.com/articles/woai-local-news-119078/texas-fracking-output-to
-surpass-several-11901451/#ixzz2nNFcj7EG)   1 million barrels apiece per 
day, up from their current rate of 650,000 bpd,  which will help Texas alone 
to produce more oil than several nations who are  current OPEC members. 
Tunstall added that 25,000 wells are being drilled into the Eagle Ford 
shale  in southern Texas over the course of its field life using fracking to 
liberate  tight oil, a technique developed in the _United  States_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/united_states/?utm_source=rcw&utm_mediu
m=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolink) , but as the technology is fully developed 
in Mexico, Canada,  _China_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/china/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolink)
   and 
elsewhere, all of which are known to have extensive tight oil reserves,  
pressure on OPEC will intensify. 
Tunstall’s optimism is supported by statistics from the U.S. government’s  
Energy Information Administration, which _reported_ 
(http://www.houstonchronicle.com/business/energy/article/New-data-show-meteoric-rise-of-Texas-oil-50
32539.php)   that in September Texas pumped 2.7 million barrels of crude 
per day, an  extraordinary 30 percent increase over September 2012 figures, 
the highest  average oil production in Texas since monthly record-keeping 
began in January  1981. 
_According _ 
(http://www.bizjournals.com/sanantonio/blog/2013/12/oil-and-gas-industry-will-continue-to.html?s=print)
 to the Federal Reserve Bank of 
Dallas, “oil and gas companies in Texas and  nearby states are expecting 
continued growth next year.” Mark Perry of the  conservative Washington DC 
American Enterprise Institute noted, “1.35 million  bpd _increase  in oil_ 
(http://www.aei-ideas.org/2013/11/the-remarkable-shale-oil-bonanza-in-saudi-texas-oil
-output-has-doubled-in-only-29-months-to-a-33-year-high-in-september/)  
output in only 29 months in one U.S. state is remarkable, and would  have never 
been possible without the revolutionary drilling techniques that just  
recently started accessing vast oceans of Texas shale oil in the Eagle Ford  
Shale and Permian Basin oil fields.” 
But if all that is good news for the Texan economy, concerns are growing 
that  increased fracking injection well activity is producing regional surges 
in  seismic activity, including around Eagle Ford. Researchers at the 
University of  Texas _found_ (http://www.eenews.net/stories/1059991334)  that  
underground injection of carbon dioxide to boost oil production "may have  
contributed to triggering" a series of earthquakes north of Snyder several 
years 
 ago. Texas already has had some of the best-documented seismic activity 
around  injection wells, causing some researchers to link injection to 
earthquakes in  the Haynesville Shale in East Texas and the Barnett Shale in 
the 
Dallas area,  and in 2009 Chesapeake Energy Corp. shut down two wells linked 
to quakes near  the Dallas-Fort Worth Airport. 
What is leading to rising anxiety in small towns like Azle and Springtown  
northwest of Fort Worth, bracketed by numerous fracking sites, is last month’
s  _swarm_ 
(https://stateimpact.npr.org/texas/2013/11/20/mapped-the-latest-earthquake-swarm-in-texas/)
   of 20 earthquakes, the biggest a magnitude 
3.6. 
On 11 December the Dallas City Council passed new restrictions barring  
hydraulic fracturing within 1,500 feet of a home, school, church, and other  
protected areas, effectively barring the practice within the city. Dallas had  
previously outlawed fracking within 300 feet of protected areas. 
The ordinance was approved by a 9-6 vote, with Mayor Mike Rawlings voting 
in  favor. 
Not surprisingly, the natural gas industry was quick to react. Trinity East 
 representative Dallas Cothrum, which had hoped to exploit the city’s 
location on  the edge of the massive Barnett Shale region lamented, “You just 
can’
t drill  under these conditions. It’d require more than 250-acres of 
property and in an  urban area it’s just not possible.” Dallas City Council Lee 
Kleinman, who_ opposed_ 
(http://rt.com/usa/dallas-passes-fracking-restrictions-178/)   the new 
restrictions said, “We might as well save a lot of paper 
and write a  one-line ordinance that says there will be no gas drilling in 
the city of  Dallas. That would be a much easier ordinance to have.” 
As Texan oil and natural gas production continue to surge due to fracking, 
so  do local concerns over the technique’s possible consequences, including  
increased seismic activity. With the U.S. Geological Survey and researchers 
from  Texan universities all studying the phenomena, more data will 
inevitably be  forthcoming, but whether a “smoking gun” will be found linking 
fracking and  earthquakes remains to be seen. What is beyond debate is the 
increased rate of  seismic activity. 
One oil major has decided that increased seismic activity risks are  
acceptable; ConocoPhillips “is _planning  to make_ 
(http://www.mysanantonio.com/business/eagle-ford-energy/article/ConocoPhillips-to-bolster-budget-in-2014-504
2627.php)  $16.7 billion in capital expenditures to boost drilling in U.S.  
shale plays, including the Eagle Ford.” 
So, while Texas has an obviously sunny hydrocarbon future, it appears to 
have  significant potential environmental costs, many of which are presently 
poorly  understood. The IEA reports that in 2010 Texas led the nation in 
wind-powered  generation capacity and became the first state to reach 10,000 
megawatts of wind  capacity. Accordingly, while embracing the revenue stream 
from oil and natural  gas produced by fracking, increasing state usage of 
renewables will at least  spare the state from increased seismic activity and 
polluted subterranean water  sources.

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