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U.S. Energy Market: Part 1 Consumption

U.S. Energy Market: Part 1 Consumption. We consume 26% of World Energy or nearly 20 mmbo per day Mature market economy. U.S. Energy Consumption, 1775-1999. Energy Consumption by Fuel, 1949-2020. U.S. Energy Flow, 1999 (Quadrillion Btu). Transportation Consumption. Industrial Consumption.

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U.S. Energy Market: Part 1 Consumption

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  1. U.S. Energy Market: Part 1Consumption We consume 26% of World Energy or nearly 20 mmbo per day Mature market economy

  2. U.S. Energy Consumption, 1775-1999

  3. Energy Consumption by Fuel, 1949-2020

  4. U.S. Energy Flow, 1999 (Quadrillion Btu)

  5. Transportation Consumption

  6. Industrial Consumption

  7. Long-Term Heating Oil Use (1947-1999)Residential, Commercial & Farming

  8. Cost of Household Energy, 1979-1999Inflation Adjusted to 2000 Dollars

  9. O& G Journal - 8/28/2000

  10. Household Expenditures by Space-Heating Intensity, 1997

  11. Gasoline Market

  12. Gasoline Consumption O& G Journal - 7/24/2000

  13. Motor Vehicle Efficiency

  14. Gasoline Additives & Markets O& G Journal - 7/10/2000

  15. O& G Journal - 7/10/2000

  16. O& G Journal - 7/10/2000

  17. Environmental Investments O& G Journal - 7/17/2000

  18. O& G Journal - 7/17/2000

  19. Renewable Energy Consumption by Source

  20. Renewable Energy Consumption by Source

  21. Renewable Energy Consumption by Source

  22. U.S. Energy Market: Part 2Production

  23. Production and Consumption

  24. Petroleum Production and Consumption

  25. Oil Flow, 1999 (Millions Barrels per Day)

  26. Oil Well Productivity

  27. Lower 48 and Alaskan Crude Oil Production

  28. Natural Gas Overview

  29. Natural Gas Flow, 1999 (Trillion Cubic Feet)

  30. Energy Production, 2000

  31. Coal • Major source of energy since 19c. • Production in eastern and western US • Significant CO2and particulate emissions • Cleaner plants (still disposal issue) • Coalbed methane (capital investment) • International CO2 reduction (e.g., EPA/China) • Coal consumption down -both US & World • Key factors in production: rank, thickness, continuity of beds; sulfur content; transportation; politics

  32. Nuclear • Significant since early 1970’s • No new plants approved, but licenses renewed in several • Many plants deactivated • Nuclear waste disposal issue • International issues - Russia/FSU - France/Korea/Japan • Three Mile Island (1979) & Chernoble (1986)

  33. Types of Oil and Gas Wells • Exploration (high risk) ~10% av. success rate Frontier New basins • Development (lower risk) Fields (Rocky Mt thrust belt v. Permian Basin)

  34. Oil & Gas Exploratory Wells, 1949-1999

  35. O& G Journal - 9/25/2000

  36. O& G Journal - 9/25/2000

  37. Oil & Gas Exploratory Wells, 1949-1999

  38. O& G Journal - 9/25/2000

  39. Oil & Gas Exploratory Wells, 1949-1999

  40. Oil & Gas Development Wells, 1949-1999

  41. Oil & Gas Development Wells, 1949-1999

  42. Oil & Gas Development Wells, 1949-1999

  43. Oil & Gas Drilling Activity Measurements

  44. Drilling, Finding and Development Cost

  45. Technically Recoverable Petroleum Resource Estimates, January 1, 1999

  46. Technically Recoverable Petroleum Resource Estimates, January 1, 1999

  47. Technically Recoverable Petroleum Resource Estimates, January 1, 1999

  48. Summary • U.S. oil production will continue to decline • U.S. increasing will be dependent upon oil imports • Natural gas is of growing significance • Renewable energy and new technologies are extremely important • Protecting the environment is a high priority • A strong economy is a high priority

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