Posted on 12/14/2015 10:06:52 AM PST by MichCapCon
The state of Michigan is enjoying low gas prices (and on Nov. 30 had the lowest prices at the pump in the nation), something analysts are saying can be attributed in part to the increased production of oil in the U.S.
Crude oil production in the U.S. has increased 63 percent from 5.4 million barrels a day in 2009 to 8.7 million barrels a day in 2014. Thatâs the most production on U.S. soil since 1986, according to the Energy Information Administration.
That increase in domestic oil production can be attributed to hydraulic fracturing, commonly referred to as âfracking.â That occurs in drilling when a high-pressure water mixture is shot into rock to release the gas inside.
âFor all intents and purposes, todayâs oil and gas drilling is fracking,â said Daniel Kish, the senior vice president of policy for the Institute for Energy Research, a free-market think tank that researches the energy market.
Michigan has seen a slight increase in oil production. The state produced 17,000 barrels per day in 2009 and that increased to 20,000 barrels per day in 2014, which ranked it 18th overall in the country.
North Dakota has seen its oil production increase from 218,000 barrels per day in 2009 to 1 million barrels just five years later. Texas has nearly tripled its oil production from 1.1 million barrels per day in 2009 to 3.2 million barrels per day in 2014.
Kish said the increases in North Dakota and Texas are due to a combination of horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing.
âRock that used to be avoided because oil and gas would not flow through it now is leading the charge of new U.S. energy supplies,â Kish said in an email. âThe great thing is that this triumph of engineering and human know-how is making the U.S. more energy secure while creating new energy wealth, lower prices for consumers and more investment.â
Yet, the amount of oil produced on federal offshore lands over that same timespan has decreased 16 percent from 61,000 million barrels a day to 51,000 million barrels a day.
âThe ironic thing is that because of private land and property, all this new energy has been created on the watch of the most anti-oil, gas and coal president we have ever had âPresident Obama,â Kish said. âThe largest increases in history of oil and gas production are happening because the government doesnât own the land. ... People do.â
The Sierra Club, an environmental group, has supported banning fracking in Michigan.
The national office of the organization acknowledged an email seeking comment but didnât respond.
and we private landowners (I have a measley 2.25A) pick up a few bucks monthly that helps offset the increased electric rates
Thank the indies and capitalism
Frack the Antrim! (and give me a job back home)
Not only the much increased volume of crude production, but the truly stupendous increase in the amount of natural gas available, has helped to sustain whatever economic recovery the country as a whole have seen in the past three or four years.
Not because of the Current Regime now squatting in the White Hut, but in spite of them. This revived economic activity has added a large margin of revenue to the national and state treasuries, though not enough yet to significantly slow or reverse the continued growth in public debt.
There is still more outgo than income, but the gap is narrowing.
I think someone has their numbers a little off. 51,000 Million barrels might be a worldwide "decade" number, but certainly not a "per day" number
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