Decline In U.S. Oil Production Accelerates
New EIA data once again points to a deeper contraction than previously expected.
The revelation was initially revealed in late August, when the EIA reported that the United States produced much less oil than expected in the first half of 2015. On the whole, the country produced 40,000 to 100,000 fewer barrels than previously reported between January and May. The August report also showed that U.S. oil production peaked in April at 9.6 million barrels per day (mb/d), before falling to just 9.3 mb/d in June.
The declines suggested that the contraction in the U.S. shale industry was deeper than the world had initially thought. And one can only assume that the decline either kept up at a similar rate, or even accelerated in the intervening months since June.
The latest data from EIA confirms this trend. In its Short-Term Energy Outlookreleased on September 9, the EIA estimates that the U.S. oil industry lost another 140,000 barrels per day between July and August. That is a faster rate than the 100,000 barrels lost in June. Moreover, the agency predicts that output will continue to decline for another year until August 2016, before picking up again.
The U.S. is expected to produce 9.2 mb/d on average in 2015, which will drop to just 8.8 mb/c in 2016. Both of those figures are 0.1 mb/d lower than last month’s projection.
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This contraction is one of the biggest determining factors to oil prices finding their footing. At its expected low point one year from now in August 2016, U.S. oil production will bottom out around 8.6 mb/d, about 1 mb/d below the peakreached this past April. That could go a long way to cutting into excess global oil supplies.
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