08 Apr 2015

U.S. Oil Output Approaching Record Levels

Economics, Oil, Shameless Self-Promotion 6 Comments

In an article at IER, I discuss the once-fashionable “peak oil” theory, which treated a country or the world’s oil production as if it were just a giant well. The economics went out the window, and instead the analysis relied merely on the natural sciences.

Peak oil theory was popular for decades because it seemed to have correctly called the peak of U.S. output, in the early 1970s. But the last few years blew the theory out of the water:

2015.04.07-Peak-Oil

The development of shale resources, and the proliferation of hydraulic fracturing (“fracking”) and horizontal drilling, has turned the U.S. back into an oil powerhouse.

I don’t think this story is getting nearly the attention it deserves. When I was growing up in the 1980s, I distinctly remember serious grownups telling me there was an energy crisis, and the U.S. had to wean itself from oil so as not to be dependent on those wily Arab nations. If someone had said the U.S. in 30 years would overtake Saudi Arabia to lead the world in oil production, he would have been laughed out of the room.

Part of the problem with massive State interventions in energy markets–in order to fend off some future catastrophe–is that the catastrophes keep not happening, even though the interventionists didn’t get nearly what they said was vital to avoid them.

6 Responses to “U.S. Oil Output Approaching Record Levels”

  1. Tel says:

    The turning point in oil production war about that same time the US economy crashed. Go on, explain that.

    • Tel says:

      I meant “was”, got carried away with Civil War memorabilia just now, apply corrections as necessary.

      • Major.Freedom says:

        It only took the morons 20 years to figure out that markets work better than war.

  2. Alo says:

    Nice.

  3. Vangel says:

    First, the numbers look wrong. Second, shale Production I s a destroyer of capital that depends on accounting tricks and Fed liquidity. One would think that an Austrian School economist would look at the 10-K filings and check.

    • Bob Murphy says:

      One would think that an Austrian School economist would look at the 10-K filings and check.

      How many Austrian School economists do you think have checked a 10-K filing in the last year? You may be right or wrong about shale but give me a break with these rhetorical jabs.

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