Life in 2050
This growth in production, consumption, and exports comes as U.S. natural gas prices are expected to remain relatively low and stable through 2050. The annual average Henry Hub spot price is expected to remain lower than $4.00 per million British thermal units (MMBtu) in real 2018 dollars through 2034 in the Reference case, and not to exceed $5.00/MMBtu by 2050. The range of Henry Hub natural gas spot prices in the AEO2019 is defined by the resource and technology side cases, indicating that assumptions about technically recoverable resources and costs drive the projections. The High Oil and Gas Resource and Technology side case projects lower prices that remain lower than $4.00/MMBtu through the projection period. The Low Oil and Gas Resource and Technology case projects steeper growth, with prices reaching $4.00/MMBtu by 2023 and exceeding $8.00/MMBtu by 2050.
U.S. natural gas pipeline exports to Mexico and Canada are also expected to increase through 2050. Exports to Mexico will grow from 5 Bcf/d in 2017 to 8 Bcf/d in 2050. Net imports from Canada will decrease as the United States exports more natural gas to Canada while importing less, particularly from western Canada. The net flow of natural gas between the United States and Canada is expected to change to net exports toward the end of the projection period as U.S. export volumes exceed import volumes from Canada.
And before we go any further I want to present a chart that the EIA updates each week in there report. The volume of natural gas that is produced from shale formations in the United States is one of the more fascinating charts. Shale is the future and there is no question about that. However there is the issue of overproduction which today has destroyed all of the value that existed in the natural gas business. Even without an economic case to continue operations, and scaling back on capital expenditures, the value of shale in terms of its endowment as a natural resource is impressive and reflected in these production volumes.
Since 2010 the natural gas business has been in a massive depression. Yet U.S. production of shale has increased from approximately 12.5 bcf / day to 65 bcf / day. There was widespread speculation that shale fields had reached their limit when in 2015 production moved sideways for about two years. Even at that the chart shows that shale averaged around 45 bcf / day during that time. Then, suddenly, in the past couple of years its trajectory exploded. At 65 bcf / day shale is now almost 75% of all natural gas production in the United States. The EIA expects production will reach 120 bcf / day by 2050, based on the assumption that the consumption of natural gas and LNG exports will be what drive the demand. Shales production capacity appears capable of delivering that supply during these next 31 years, and based on the past ten year history, certain to chronically and systemically exceed that demand.
Looking at the landscape of the oil and gas producers that are in the North American market today. One in which the natural gas business has been a disaster for over a decade. Where nothing has been done to mitigate the effects of the chronic and systemic overproduction. Without the recognition that overproduction is even occurring. These projections outward for the next 31 years will seal the deal for everyone who was on the fence as to what their future holds in the industry. Investors will continue to take as much capital out of these companies as they possibly can. Careers become something you pursue outside of the industry. You certainly would not study to participate in an industry with these kind of dismal prospects. And as a service industry representative, you’ll wait to be paid for the amounts outstanding in accounts receivable before you volunteer your time and money on behalf of any producer firm. This in no way represents a business, it’s the dead zone. Where not only money, but now everything goes to die.
No production discipline is being applied anywhere in the business today. Why would there, what’s the issue? Where will this desperately needed production discipline come from in 2030, 2040, or 2050? The issue is ever present today, no one is recognizing it or addressing it, now the projections appear to be for more of the same until 2050! The EIA’s low and high price projections assume a continuation of the accounting wizardry we’ve known in the industry. Make sure the investor pays for the capital costs and the consumer only pays for the operational costs. Yet I see outside of the Preliminary Specification no consideration of any change or the understanding that there are other opportunities for everyone concerned in oil and gas in other industries of the economy. Producers believe that eventually the production profile of the industry will drop below the level of demand and prices will bring about the “good times” once again. That worked for 5 of the last 33 years of the pre-shale era. Will this model still function in the shale era? I guess we’ll know in 2050.
Who knows what will happen in the future. We can only look to the past to determine the behaviours that occurred before. None of these behaviours have changed and the issues producers face today are spectacular. The only means of attaining a viable form of production discipline is through the adoption of the Preliminary Specifications decentralized production models price maker strategy. Alberta has shown the way that government mandates come with too much baggage. I’ve been saying these things for a while now and there doesn’t seem to be any concern being expressed by the oil and gas bureaucrats. We don’t know what their plans are and they aren’t sharing.
The Preliminary Specification, our user community and service providers provide for a dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil and gas industry with the most profitable means of oil and gas operations. Setting the foundation for profitable North America’s energy independence. People, Ideas & Objects Revenue Model specifies the means in which investors can participate in our future Initial Coin Offering (ICO) that will fund these user defined software developments. It is through the process of issuing our ICO that we are leading the way in which creative destruction can be implemented within the oil and gas industry. Users are welcome to join me here. Together we can begin to meet the future demands for energy. And don’t forget to join our network on Twitter @piobiz anyone can contact me at 403-200-2302 or email here.