Edmonton Journal

U.S. oil boom upending markets

‘We’re in the middle of a new game’

- ASJYLYN LODER

NEW YORK — The U.S. oil boom has put European refineries out of business and undercut West African crude suppliers. Now domestic drillers threaten to roil Asian markets and challenge producers in the Middle East and South America.

Fifteen European refineries have closed in the past five years, with a 16th due to shut this year, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency said, as the U.S. went from depending on fuel from Europe to being a major exporter to the region.

Nigeria, which used to send the equivalent of a dozen supertanke­rs of crude a month to the U.S., now ships fewer than three, according to the U.S. Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion.

And cheap oil from the Rocky Mountains, where output has grown 31 per cent since 2011, will soon allow West Coast companies to cut back on imports of pricier grades from Saudi Arabia and Venezuela that they process for customers in Asia, the world’s fastestgro­wing market.

“I don’t really think anyone saw this coming,” said Steve Sawyer, an analyst with FACTS Global Energy in London.

“The U.S. shale boom happened much faster than people thought.

“We’re in the middle of a new game. There’s nothing in the past that predicts what the future will be.”

Advances in extracting oil from shale rock drove a 39 per cent jump in U.S. production since 2011, the steepest rise in history, and will boost output to a 28-year high this year, according to the EIA.

While drilling in shale is more expensive than other methods and poses environmen­tal challenges, the prospect of a growing supply is encouragin­g analysts to predict a more energy-independen­t nation.

With U.S. exports of gasoline and other refined products hitting a record last month, and with the country on pace to become the world’s largest oil producer by 2015 — five years faster than the IEA’s earlier prediction­s — industry advocates are now calling for an end to 39-year-old restrictio­ns on U.S. crude exports.

 ?? MLADEN ANTONOV/AFP/GET TY IMAGES/FILES ?? Workers change pipes at the Consol Energy horizontal gas drilling rig near Waynesburg, Pa. Advances in extracting oil from shale rock have driven a big jump in U.S. production.
MLADEN ANTONOV/AFP/GET TY IMAGES/FILES Workers change pipes at the Consol Energy horizontal gas drilling rig near Waynesburg, Pa. Advances in extracting oil from shale rock have driven a big jump in U.S. production.

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