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U.S. to enjoy abundant oil, natural gas through 2040
The United States will be awash in energy resources for the
rest of the decade as improved hydraulic fracturing—or
“fracking”—techniques to extract oil and natural gas from
shale rock dramatically lift the country’s supplies, the
Energy Information Administration (EIA) said in releasing
its projections for the U.S. energy market
through 2040.
The report, which the Department of
Energy’s unit issued in early December, said
domestic crude oil production would rise
sharply in 2013 as shale production
explodes. Production, currently at about
6. 1 million barrels a day, will rise to 7. 5 million barrels a day by 2019, EIA said.
Starting in 2020, production will decline gradually for the
next 20 years to 6. 1 million barrels a day as most of the productive and profitable drilling areas are exhausted, EIA said.
Natural gas supplies are projected to rise from 7. 8 trillion
cubic feet per year by 2025 from 6. 8 trillion cubic feet in
2011, the EIA said. Natural gas will account for 30 percent
of U.S. electricity generation in 2040, nearly double that of
2000, EIA said. As with crude oil, the growth of natural gas
supplies will be driven by advances in fracking technology
and processes, the report said.
Natural gas will also gain popularity as a fuel for heavy-duty trucks and as a feedstock in the production of diesel
and other fuels, the report said. Diesel fuel consumption will
moderate as liquefied natural gas begins
supplanting diesel as an energy source,
according to the report. The report did not
offer specific data on projected natural gas
consumption by heavy-duty trucks.
Energy-related carbon emissions will
remain 5 percent below their 2005 levels
through 2040, the report said. This is due to
improved efficiency of energy use and a
shift from higher-carbon fuels like coal to lower-carbon
fuels like natural gas and renewable energy such as wind
and solar power, EIA said. Renewable energy sources will
account for 16 percent of electricity generation in 2040, up
from 13 percent in 2011, according to the report.
EIA said its projections are based on the assumption that
current energy laws and regulations will essentially remain
unchanged through 2040. ;