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Global boom in tight oil production may be overplayed: BP's Ruhl

Increase font size  Decrease font size Date:2013-05-23   Views:447
Global boom in tight oil production may be overplayed: BP's Ruhl
Some predictions of surging global production of light, tight oil from unconventional source rocks may be overblown, with a of number of environmental and political question marks still hanging over the industry, delegates at a London oil conference heard Monday.

While some oil market forecasters have predicted tight oil production jumping to 10 million b/d by 2030, many countries hoping to exploit their shale and tight oil potential will find it difficult to replicate the pace of success in the US, BP's chief economist Christof Ruhl said.

In particular, the competitive advantage of the US' open economy cannot be matched by other big shale resource holders, such as China and Russia. BP estimates that there are some 240 billion barrels of technically recoverable tight oil globally. Asia has 50 billion barrels of tight oil, versus 70 billion barrels in North America.

"It's not just about resources...there is a huge role for policy and politics in determining the speed for which these resources will come on line," Ruhl told the oil conference.

Citing BP's 2030 oil market outlook, Ruhl said tight oil will likely expand by 7.5 million b/d to reach around 9 million b/d by 2030, accounting for nearly half of the 16.1 million b/d of global supply growth forecast for the period.

North America will continue to dominate global tight oil output, with limited growth outside the region and, by 2030, tight oil should reach 9% of global supplies, he said.

But US tight oil growth is expected to slow after 2020 due to high costs and drilling activity required to sustain output as well as environmental and other issues, Ruhl said.

BP is forecasting US tight oil production of around 4.8 million b/d by 2020, when output growth will slow to reach some 6.5 million b/d. But some forecasters have predicted US tight oil output soaring to almost 10 million b/d by 2030, according to BP.

"We are at the bottom of the range [of tight oil production forecasts]," Ruhl said. "A lot of that is irrational exuberance or hype, these are the same consultants that three years ago were running around saying that we are running out of oil. Now they are saying that we are drowning in it because they have something to sell," he said.

Even the US, where tight oil will help the country become almost self-sufficient in oil before 2030, some tight oil plays are untouched as yet due to environmental concerns, Ruhl said.

ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES

Environment concerns, which have been heard more frequently dogging shale projects in Europe, are expected to result in new US legislation on fracking, gas flaring, and ground water in the near future, according to David Fyfe, the head of market research at Gunvor.

The limitations of a local skilled work force and supply chain constraints could also slow the expansion of light, tight oil in the US, he said.

"I think light, tight oil is a massive resource, but let's not get carried away by about the growth potential," he said.

According to the Energy Information Administration, US net imports of liquid fuels could end by 2035 and the country could become a net exporter by 2040.

But the sudden turnaround of US oil fortunes comes despite assumptions that onshore tight oil plays would see a fall in production growth starting in 2020 with other, mostly offshore, resources playing a more important role.

Globally, tight oil developments are also likely to be constrained by the absence of geological data on tight plays, a contributing factor to the US tight boom over the last decade, according to Amita Sen, the chief oil analyst at Energy Aspects.

While source rock data from the US' Backen and Permian basin has been acquired over hundreds of years, similar detailed understanding of source rocks is simply "not available in any other part of the world," Sen said.

"There isn't that much new due to technology to shale...it's more like brute force. But even the geologists cannot predict how tight reservoirs will perform and deplete over the production life of tight plays," she said.

Another factor that US refiners are also having to come to terms with due to fast growing volumes of tight oil is the "phenomenal" variability of the oil quality from the developments, she said.

Some refiners in Texas and Louisiana are complaining that batches of tight oil from Eagle Ford shale can differ so much in quality that they "don't know the end products they are going to get" from processing the oil. "That's raising a few questions about 'Is this necessarily a sustainable source of production growth?'" she said.

"It is a good thing to be happening to the world, but let's not get carried away with reports such as of the US becoming the next Middle East," Sen said.

The EIA said in December that total US oil production, including tight oil, would grow to 7.5 million b/d or 7.6 million b/d by around 2019.
 
 
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