scholarly journals Factors That Will Influence Oil and Gas Supply and Demand in the 21st Century

MRS Bulletin ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 33 (4) ◽  
pp. 317-323 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen A. Holditch ◽  
Russell R. Chianelli

AbstractA recent report published by the National Petroleum Council (NPC) in the United States predicted a 50–60% growth in total global demand for energy by 2030. Because oil, gas, and coal will continue to be the primary energy sources during this time, the energy industry will have to continue increasing the supply of these fuels to meet this increasing demand. Achieving this goal will require the exploitation of both conventional and unconventional reservoirs of oil and gas in an environmentally acceptable manner. Such efforts will, in turn, require advancements in materials science, particularly in the development of materials that can withstand high-pressure, high-temperature, and high-stress conditions.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Osamah Alsayegh

Abstract This paper examines the energy transition consequences on the oil and gas energy system chain as it propagates from net importing through the transit to the net exporting countries (or regions). The fundamental energy system security concerns of importing, transit, and exporting regions are analyzed under the low carbon energy transition dynamics. The analysis is evidence-based on diversification of energy sources, energy supply and demand evolution, and energy demand management development. The analysis results imply that the energy system is going through technological and logistical reallocation of primary energy. The manifestation of such reallocation includes an increase in electrification, the rise of energy carrier options, and clean technologies. Under healthy and normal global economic growth, the reallocation mentioned above would have a mild effect on curbing the oil and gas primary energy demands growth. A case study concerning electric vehicles, which is part of the energy transition aspect, is presented to assess its impact on the energy system, precisely on the fossil fuel demand. Results show that electric vehicles are indirectly fueled, mainly from fossil-fired power stations through electric grids. Moreover, oil byproducts use in the electric vehicle industry confirms the reallocation of the energy system components' roles. The paper's contribution to the literature is the portrayal of the energy system security state under the low carbon energy transition. The significance of this representation is to shed light on the concerns of the net exporting, transit, and net importing regions under such evolution. Subsequently, it facilitates the development of measures toward mitigating world tensions and conflicts, enhancing the global socio-economic wellbeing, and preventing corruption.


2021 ◽  
Vol 73 (06) ◽  
pp. 10-11
Author(s):  
Dwayne Purvis

As the world reaches a tipping point in its will to address climate change, the industry must find a new way forward, especially in the United States. Many are right to say that oil and gas are not going away; the transition is planned to take 30 years or more and will not decline to zero production. This fact, though, obscures the reality that peaking, then declining, demand for oil—gas is another story—will structurally change and globally redistribute the industry’s exploration and employment. The story of oil supply and demand began its race to the top 150 years ago. “Shortage” and “glut” have meant that paired growth got out of sync, not that there was a real loss of production. For many decades the world has needed about 1 million B/D more each year than the previous year, but on a percentage basis growth has slowed. At the same time supply from previous years declines about 5 to 6% per year, arguably higher in recent years. The treadmill for new supply has been running hot for decades. All major public forecasts in the past year call for oil demand to plateau between now and about 2030 when accounting for ongoing changes to policy. (To be clear, some show a peak in the 2030s in “business as usual” cases, but they also show even sooner peaks if policy and demand changes accelerate). BP’s Energy Outlook 2020 from last fall took the bold—and well-argued—position that peak oil demand is today and that it is only a question of how fast demand declines. “Peak” demand isn’t really a peak like the Matterhorn; it is flatter like a weathered jebel. We know this from the example of the peak oil demand experienced by the developed world. We also know from that experience that forecasting agencies failed to predict the peak OECD oil demand in 2005 literally by decades even as demand turned down. Reversal of demand growth presents a figurative and mathematical inflection point. Though existing production continues, growth becomes negative, and the pace of the new-supply treadmill plummets. When the need for new supply approximately halves, the Pareto principle tells us that the number of new projects required will fall more than half. Thus, the need for those industry professionals preferentially tasked with finding new oil supply—geophysicists, exploration geologists, drillers, reservoir engineers, landmen—may fall quickly. Other disciplines like operations that service existing production will face only the headwinds of cost reductions and then the long, slow slide toward mid-century targets. The United States via its swarm of large and small companies has dominated the global supply story for more than a decade with its unique shale revolution, but it had previously shriveled to a second-tier producer. Fig. 1 shows 55 years of oil production history. Fig. 1a shows the US supply deconstructed to its functional parts while Fig. 1b shows ascendent producers on the same scales.


2011 ◽  
Vol 121-126 ◽  
pp. 3034-3038 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiao Xu Guan ◽  
Yi Xuan Fan ◽  
Qiang Cao

With the era of high oil prices and prominent contradict between domestic oil and gas supply and demand, a boom of unconventional natural gas development has set off. While a major success of shale gas development has been made in the United States, it has also brought a successful experience and advanced technology to China. China also have carried out deep research and have achieved certain results in coal bed methane and tight sandstone gas, etc. However, difficulties and problems faced in the development process need to be carefully dealt with .


2021 ◽  
Vol 61 (2) ◽  
pp. 347
Author(s):  
Simon Molyneux

The petroleum (oil, gas and LNG) business environment in 2020 was adverse. Two factors disrupted the foundations of the global oil and gas industry. First, the COVID-19 global pandemic caused an unprecedented reduction of demand that combined with high levels of production resulted in oversupply of oil, gas and LNG. This gap between supply and demand resulted in a collapse in commodity prices, reduced revenues and cancelling or deferral of investment. Second, societal awareness of the impact of climate change on planet Earth increased. Pressure to reduce carbon emissions and a concomitant societal-shift against carbon-emissions intensive petroleum-based forms of energy generation intensified. Many major players in the petroleum industry re-framed their strategies to focus on energy supply in general and in some cases plan to cease their exploration, development and production activities in the coming decades. In Australia, in part global factors manifested in the deferral of investment decisions on three LNG investments. The Australian Government signalled that gas developments would be a critical part of Australia’s post-COVID recovery and that management of abandonment and decommissioning liabilities would be a factor in the approval of transactions leading to a change in ownership. This paper will describe each of the factors faced by the industry in 2020 and frame the issues facing the petroleum industry in 2021 and beyond.


2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Gulnaz M. Galeeva ◽  
Elena N. Zagladina

This paper considers the problems and dynamics of investment activities of enterprises in the Russian economy. In the current context oil and gas companies have got in to a challenging situation against the background of their competitiveness in the world market. Balance between supply and demand has been changed in the course of shale revolution in the United States, due to Iran’s coming back to the world’s oil market and “market share retention” policy being pursued by the countries – OPEC members. The paper specially consider Tatneft, since it plays an important part in the national, economic, political, public and social life of the Republic of Tatarstan. The Company’s stable operation in strategic raw materials extraction, its budgetary and hard-currency injections warrant progressive and harmonious development of the Republic. The most important factor for the investing activity it the international agreements of cooperation in oil and gas sector.


2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Carly Hewett

The statutory framework surrounding oil and gas law and the related title issues in Texas and New Mexico, while similar in many instances, do have some notable differences. New Mexico case law is very limited, which could be due to a variety of reasons, including a smaller state population and the fact that New Mexico and the United States own much of New Mexico’s oil and gas productive acreage. Therefore, practitioners often look to other jurisdictions, including Texas, for guidance. Texas’s secondary authority is also better developed with its own adopted title standards.1 New Mexico does not have such guidance. This Article will focus on the distinctions between the oil and gas laws and the passage of title in Texas and New Mexico from a title examiner’s perspective. Both states do have a regulatory body—the Texas the Railroad Commission (“TXRRC”) and the New Mexico Oil Conservation Division (“NMOCD”)2—that oversees oil, gas, and other mineral activities by regulating activities such as well spacing, allowables, and pooling.


1977 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anthony F. H. Britten

Some surprisingly simple artificial factors influence the availability of factor VIII for hemophilia treatment. Demand is affected by choice of product, and choice of treatment style (episodic vs. prophylactic), and also by availability funds.Autobiographic data suggest the feasibility of long-term low dosage prophylaxis (6u/KgA8 hrs.). This tentative conclusion is based on 2½yrs. of unprecedented near-total freedom from hemorrhage. The significance is the potential saving of 60% of factor VIII concentrate, compared with the more orthodox dose (15u/KgA8 hrs.) which has been shown to increase factor VIII usage by 2.5–3 times compared with episodic therapy.The American Red Cross produced 293,332 units of cryoprecipitate from 4,690,217 whole blood donations in 1975-6 (6.25% of blood collected). Production could readily be increased if the demand existed. The following artificial factors have an influence on cryoprecipitate production: health insurance policies; price structure; the international market for factor VIII.It is concluded that there is no shortage of available factor VIII, that more could readily be made available, that prophylaxis may be possible without increasing demand for factor VIM, that financial considerations are seriously distorting hemophi1ia treatment, that hemophilia treatment in the United States is being subsidised by other countries, and that understanding of these factors can help to overcome them.


1989 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 224-237
Author(s):  
Daniel A. Dreyfus

U.S. energy markets are very large in terms of global energy consumption and the U.S. is a large net importer of both oil and gas. The dynamics of the U.S. energy supply and demand balance, therefore, will be the determining factor for future crossborder gas trade. U.S. primary energy consumption will increase at about one percent annually over the long term with natural gas consumption increasing at about one-half that rate. The potential growth markets for gas are commercial, industrial, and especially electric utility uses. Some large, new, environmental applications have the potential to increase this growth but are dependent upon policy changes rather than economic competition. The portfolio of gas sources which currently make up the U.S. gas supply will have to be supplemented by new initiatives. By the year 2010, new initiatives will be needed to provide one-third of the required supply. Among the new initiatives, additional Canadian gas exports from frontier or unconventional resources will figure prominently. Of common interest to both U.S. domestic and Canadian producers is the confidence that potential gas users will have in continued reliability of supply and stability of price of the portfolio of gas required to support long-term investments in gas-using facilities.


2020 ◽  
pp. 002190962097244
Author(s):  
Pamreihor Khashimwo

India’s energy security is intricately linked to economic and population growth, accessibility, availability, affordability, and supply and demand. India’s quest for energy security is going slow and after a late start. India embraced various domestic efforts and has drawn up supplier relationships around the globe in coal, oil, gas, nuclear, hydroelectric power, and renewable energy. It appears India is not likely to be fully independent of external sources of supply for its energy requirements in the short-term and medium-term. There is no major technological breakthrough in alternative energy to free the country from its energy predicament, thus, India needs to adopt multi-dimensional strategic energy security approaches. In the absence of major oil and gas reserves in Indian territory, the country may be forced down a perilous path that includes a massive increase in the use of coal, associated with environmental concerns, and increasing dependence on external sources. The key focus of the study is to examine the key concerns, trends, challenges, and various options available to India to face the challenges in energy security.


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