My observations in the Bakken suggest the same thing as this writer suggests.
From economics21:
It is true that the oil-price collapse was caused by the astonishing,
unexpected growth in U.S. shale output, responsible for three-fourths of
new global oil supply since 2008. And as lower prices roil operators
and investors, the shale skeptics’ case may seem vindicated.
But their
history is false: the shale revolution, “Shale 1.0,” was sparked not by
high prices—it began when prices were at today’s low levels—but by the
invention of new technologies. Now, the skeptics’ forecasts are likely
to be as flawed as their history. Continued technological progress,
particularly in big-data analytics, has the U.S. shale industry poised
for another, longer boom, a “Shale 2.0.”
John Shaw, chair of
Harvard’s Earth and Planetary Sciences Department, recently observed:
“It’s fair to say we’re not at the end of this [shale] era, we’re at the
very beginning.” He is precisely correct. In recent years, the
technology deployed in America’s shale fields has advanced more rapidly
than in any other segment of the energy industry. Shale 2.0 promises to
ultimately yield break-even costs of $5–$20 per barrel—in the same range
as Saudi Arabia’s vaunted low-cost fields.
The shale industry is
unlike any other conventional hydrocarbon or alternative energy sector,
in that it shares a growth trajectory far more similar to that of
Silicon Valley’s tech firms. In less than a decade, U.S. shale oil
revenues have soared, from nearly zero to more than $70 billion annually
(even after accounting for the recent price plunge). Such growth is 600
percent greater than that experienced by America’s heavily subsidized
solar industry over the same period.
Shale’s spectacular rise is
also generating massive quantities of data: the $600 billion in U.S.
shale infrastructure investments and the nearly 2,000 million well-feet
drilled have produced hundreds of petabytes of relevant data. This vast,
diverse shale data domain—comparable in scale with the global digital
health care data domain—remains largely untapped and is ripe to be mined
by emerging big-data analytics.
Shale 2.0 will thus be
data-driven. It will be centered in the United States. And it will be
one in which entrepreneurs, especially those skilled in analytics, will
create vast wealth and further disrupt oil geopolitics.
Archived. Incredibly good article. A must-read.
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