the u.s. – global picture for oil and natural gas

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The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas GEOL 4233 August, 2011

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The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas. GEOL 4233 August, 2011. The Global Outlook (Oil). Non - OPEC. OPEC. Map of world regions showing OPEC member states. A Silver Lining ?. The ‘Developing’ World. The ‘Developing’ World. ‘Peak Oil’. Depletion is Universal. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas

The U.S. – Global PictureFor Oil and Natural Gas

GEOL 4233 August, 2011

Page 2: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas
Page 3: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas

The Global Outlook(Oil)

Page 4: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas
Page 5: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas
Page 7: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas

Non - OPEC OPEC

Page 8: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas

Map of world regions showing OPEC member states.

Page 9: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas

A Silver Lining ?

Page 10: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas

The ‘Developing’ World

The ‘Developing’ World

Page 11: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas
Page 12: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas
Page 13: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas
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Page 15: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas
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Page 18: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas

‘Peak Oil’

Page 19: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas

Depletion is Universal

Page 20: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas

Oklahoma Cumulative Oil* Production vs Field Size

>10 MMBO

< 10 MMBO

(163 Fields)

(> 2000 Fields)

12.1 BBO

2.4 BBO

From International Oil Scouts Association

* -Including Condensate through 1/2000

Page 21: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas

40

30

20

10

01850 1875 1900 1925 1950 1975 2000 2025 2050

Bill

ion

s o

f B

BL

S p

er

yea

r

2.1 TBO Ultimate Recovery

1.8 TBO Ultimate Recovery

World oil production through 2000 (heavy dots) showing projected production through 2050 (dashed lines)for two possible ultimate recoveries. From Deffeyes (2001).

Page 22: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas
Page 23: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas

U.S. Crude Oil Production(From E.I.A.)

0

500,000

1,000,000

1,500,000

2,000,000

2,500,000

3,000,000

3,500,000

4,000,000

1949

1952

1955

1958

1961

1964

1967

1970

1973

1976

1979

1982

1985

1988

1991

1994

1997

2000

2003

2006

Thou

sand

Bar

rels

Alaska

Lower 48

Page 24: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas

The Global Outlook(Natural Gas)

Page 25: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas
Page 26: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas
Page 27: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas
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Page 30: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas

Total 2010 Consumption - 106.8 TCF

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Page 34: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas

Bontang LNG Facility (East Kalimantan, Indonesia)

L.N.G.

Page 35: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas

The Energy Future

Page 36: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas
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Page 39: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas

Into the Future

Page 40: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas

•Coal

• Oil• Tar Sands• Oil Shales• Enhanced Recovery

• Natural Gas• Gas Shales• Tight Gas (Sandstones)• CBM (Coalbed Methane)• LNG (Liquefied Natural Gas)• GTL (Gas To Liquids)• Hydrates

• Technology• Horizontal / Deep Water Drilling• Improved Seismic Imaging• Enhanced Recovery Techniques

Fossil-Fuels

Page 41: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas

Non-Fossil Fuels

• Wood, Etc

• Nuclear

• Hydroelectricity

• Biofuels

• Solar

• Wind • Future Technologies

Page 42: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas

Conclusions

1) Oil and gas will continue to dominate energy consumption.

2) U.S. energy dependence (interdependence) will increase.

3) Higher prices and volatility will remain the norm.

4) World oil productive capacity is at or near its peak (plateau).

5) Natural gas demand will rise, with shale-gas & LNG satisfying an increasing share.

Page 43: The U.S. – Global Picture For Oil and Natural Gas

Acknowledgements

IHS Energy Group

U.S. Department of Energy (E.I.A.)

Oklahoma Corporation Commission

Oklahoma Tax Commission

International Oil Scouts Association

Oil and Gas Journal