National Post

Record U.S. domestic crude output predicted

- Jessica Summers Bloomberg

• U.S. crude production will soar to a record this year before rising even more in 2019, according to a government forecast published Tuesday.

Nationwide output will average 10.85 million barrels a day next year and 10.27 million this year, both surpassing the prior record of 9.6 million pumped in 1970, the Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion said in its monthly Short-Term Energy Outlook, which included the first estimates for 2019. Production will top 11 million barrels a day in November 2019.

The growth of North American shale production, which caused an estimated 5 per cent increase in U. S. crude output in 2017, has rocked the oil industry in the past few years, spurring OPEC and other traditiona­l producers to cut output to trim global inventorie­s.

“Led by U. S. production, particular­ly the Permian Basin, and now new oil sands projects in Canada, nonOPEC production is forecast to continue growing through the end of 2019,” John Conti, the agency’s acting administra­tor. “We expect to see growth near 2 million barrels per day in 2018 and 1.3 million barrels per day in 2019.”

WTI crude will average US$ 55.33 a barrel this year, the EIA said, up from last month’s estimate of US$52.77, and US$ 57.43 in 2019. The global benchmark Brent is forecast to average US$59.74 in 2018, up from US$57.26 estimated in December.

The EIA increased its estimates for global production and demand in 2018. Output is seen at 100.34 million barrels a day, up from 100.01 million previously, with demand at 100.11 million, compared with 99.96 million.

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