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US Net Crude Oil Exporter for the first time in 75 years?
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JonSCKs
Posted 12/10/2018 08:30 (#7161395 - in reply to #7161381)
Subject: more Accurately including Refined Products (and Ethanol) then yes.


Robert Rapier sets the story straight..

(https://www.forbes.com/sites/rrapier/2018/12/09/no-the-u-s-is-not-a-net-exporter-of-crude-oil/#52ff79174ac1 )

No, The U.S. Is Not A Net Exporter Of Crude Oil

Last week Bloomberg created quite a stir with this story: The U.S. Just Became a Net Oil Exporter for the First Time in 75 Years. I have seen a number of follow-up stories that praised the significance of this development, but others laughed it off as misleading or incorrect.

There is some truth to both viewpoints. Yes, the headline is somewhat misleading and requires some context. But there continues to be a trend in the direction of energy independence for the U.S. So, today I want to break down the numbers so readers can understand the truth about U.S. petroleum production, consumption, and exports.

Domestic Crude Production Has Surged

The Bloomberg story is based on data from the Energy Information Administration (EIA). Each week the EIA publishes detailed statistics on U.S. oil production, consumption, exports, and inventories in a report called the Weekly Petroleum Status Report. So, let's go straight to the source.

For the week ending 11/30/18, the EIA reported that the U.S. produced 11.7 million barrels per day (BPD) of crude oil. That represents a 2 million BPD increase from the year-ago number. This number is generally accepted even by those who believe the Bloomberg headline was misleading.

Further down in the report, the category of Products Supplied is listed at 20.5 million BPD. This is approximate U.S. crude oil consumption for the week. Thus, as some skeptics of the story suggested, the bottom line is that the U.S. is burning more than 20 million BPD while producing less than 12 million BPD. Thus, the conclusion for some was that the U.S. isn't close to being energy independent.

Other Supply

But there is important context between these numbers. First, the 20.5 million BPD is a fairly accurate representation of U.S. consumption, but there is a large U.S. production number that isn't included in the crude oil production numbers.

There is a line item called Other Supply, which consists primarily of natural gas liquids (NGLs) and fuel ethanol. This category represents a significant input to refiners in addition to the 11.7 million BPD of production (and the 4.0 million BPD of net crude oil imports). Other Supply represented 6.9 million BPD of production, and it mostly ends up as feedstock for refiners or petrochemical production. (Note that this category also includes "Refinery Processing Gain" of 1.2 million BPD, which results from refiners making products that are of a lower density than crude oil).

So, Domestic Production of crude oil plus Other Supply is equal to (11.7 + 6.9) = 18.6 million BPD -- which is still about 2 million BPD less than the U.S. consumes.

Growing Exports

However, these numbers doesn't account for exports. During that particular week, the U.S. imported 7.2 million BPD of crude oil, and exported 3.2 million BPD. Thus, net crude oil imports were 4 million BPD.

But product exports are a different story. During that week the U.S. imported 1.6 million BPD of finished products, while exporting 5.8 million BPD (which includes some ethanol and NGLs). Net U.S. exports of finished products were 4.2 million BPD. (The U.S. became a net exporter of just finished products in 2011).

The U.S. also exports crude oil. President Obama repealed the 40-year old crude oil export ban in 2015, and crude oil exports have soared since. As an aside, the reason the U.S. simultaneously imports and exports crude is that some of what we produce isn't a good match for our domestic refineries. So we export some domestic crude and import crude that is a better match for our refineries.

Fact Check

So, here's a summary of the important inputs to the balance that resulted in the Bloomberg claim:

  • U.S. crude oil production - 11.7 million BPD
  • Other supply (NGLs, ethanol, processing gain) - 6.9 million BPD
  • U.S. crude oil imports - 7.2 million BPD
  • U.S. crude oil exports - 3.2 million BPD
  • U.S. finished product imports - 1.6 million BPD
  • U.S. finished product exports - 5.8 million BPD
  • U.S. petroleum consumption - 20.5 million BPD

So the Bloomberg headline results from a net crude oil importnumber of 4.0 million BPD and a net finished product export number of 4.2 million BPD. So, indeed when you consider crude oil and finished products, for the week ending 11/30/18, the U.S. was a net exporter of 0.2 million BPD of crude plus finished products. (For perspective, this average over the previous four weeks was 2.0 million BPD of net imports).

Verdict: Remarkable Achievement, But Misleading Headline

Significantly, this is the first time this category of weekly crude plus finished products became an export number since the EIA began reporting this information in 1991. This is a far cry from 2005, when that weekly number hit an all-time-high of 14.4 million BPD. As far as I can tell, Bloomberg is correct that this hasn't happened in the past 75 years. 

But that's not what the headline claimed. The headline said "oil." The U.S. is still a net importer of oil to the tune of 4.0 million BPD. 

Further, total U.S. production of oil and other supply that is fed into refineries is 18.6 million BPD, while U.S. consumption is 20.5 million BPD. That still puts U.S. consumption at nearly 2.0 million BPD more than we produce. (It's actually a little worse than that, because not all NGLs end up as refinery feedstock).

So the bottom line is that we aren't net exporters of crude oil, and we aren't energy independent. But, the U.S. has trended in that direction for over a decade. Regardless of whether it remains that way, this is undoubtedly a remarkable achievement. I know a lot of people -- including myself -- would have scoffed at such a prediction in 2005.

 

 

Robert Rapier is a chemical engineer in the energy industry. Robert has 25 years of international engineering experience in the chemicals, oil and gas, and renewable energy industries, and holds several patents related to his work. He has worked in the areas of oil refining.


The Ethanol is somewhat minor in the grand scheme of all things energy.. but it is "a part" granted a SMALL part.. but a part non the less.. of the REASON WHY when blending 10% and adding over a million barrels per day to the domestic supply.. that the US can become MORE Energy Independent..


In fact.. matching a chart of Energy Independence to a chart of domestic Ethanol production.. both of which have exploded since around 2005.. shows the same trend.

Coincidence,,??

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