Yesterday I made
the comment:
I doubt legislators in Bismarck are really paying much attention to the
Bakken. Not paying attention to something is how things take us by
surprise. I have always been and remain inappropriately exuberant about
the Bakken, but there are some realities.
Today,
RBN Energy has an essay on precisely what I was alluding to: the day of reckoning.
Last week RBN co-hosted the “Surviving the Flood” conference with Turner, Mason & Company
in Houston. The major theme of the conference was the expected timing
and likely impact of a “Day of Reckoning” for the US oil market that
could come any time between 2015 and 2020 depending on critical factors
influencing market dynamics. If and when the big day arrives, and if
export rules don’t change and refinery hardware is not upgraded, Gulf
Coast light Louisiana sweet (LLS) crude could be trading at a discount
of $15-$20/Bbl to international light sweet benchmark Brent. Today we
discuss the day of reckoning and its critical influencers.
The conclusion:
The Day of Reckoning could theoretically come as soon as next year
(2015) if all of the factors we have described here do not work in favor
of reducing US crude imports and increasing processing of domestic
shale. The extent to which some or all of these factors improve the
volume of domestic shale crude that US refineries process will delay
that DOR – perhaps until after 2020. A significant change to the export
rules to permit all crude exports is not expected by either RBN or TMC
but it would of course be a game changer that would postpone the DOR for
good. The positive news is that the oil industry is responding to the
challenge and making progress in pushing back the DOR. We will continue
to inform that debate.
Some data points North Dakota needs to keep in mind:
- there is a tsunami of light oil hitting the market; it already outstrips what refiners can handle
- North Dakota produces 12% of total US production
- North Dakota is producing 1 million bopd
- Texas is likely to increase its light oil production by another 1 million bopd by this time next year
An unchanging trajectory, the math -- actually arithmetic -- is easy.
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