A triumph of market forces rather than government planning
In November, the
International Energy Agency (IEA) recognized the remarkably positive
developments in the U.S. energy sector of the past few years. Not only did the
IEA project that U.S. oil production would exceed that of Saudi Arabia by 2020,
it also projected that the United States would become virtually energy
independent by 2035. However, what the IEA did not do was emphasize how much of
this good news has occurred as the result of market forces rather than
government planning aimed at securing energy independence.
The IEA is now
projecting that U.S. oil production will increase markedly to over 11 million
barrels a day by 2020. That should allow U.S. oil imports to decline to 4
million barrels a day from their present level of around 10 million barrels a
day. The IEA is also forecasting that the United States will become a major
natural gas exporter over the next few years.
Whether or not the
IEA’s bold projections materialize, there can be little doubt that major change
is underway in the U.S. energy sector. At the start of the Obama administration
in January 2009, the expectation was that U.S. oil production would continue
its decline of the past two decades and that oil imports would continue to
increase. Instead, there has been a veritable boom in U.S. oil and gas
production that has already significantly reduced U.S. energy import
dependence.
Since 2008, U.S.
oil production has increased by around 25 percent. This has facilitated a
reduction in oil imports as a share of U.S. oil consumption from 60 percent in
2005 to around 42 percent at present. More dramatically yet, the United States
has now overtaken Russia as the world’s largest natural gas producer, as a
result of a boom in shale gas production. In less than a decade, shale gas
production has increased from 2 percent of U.S. natural gas production to
around 37 percent at present.
Energy
independence has been a foreign policy goal of successive U.S. administrations
since President Nixon set that goal in 1973 in response to a major Middle
Eastern oil supply disruption that followed the Yom Kippur War. However, over
the past four years, the turnaround in the U.S. energy sector toward virtual
energy independence has been driven by market-related phenomena rather than by
the implementation of a national energy plan.
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