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US to become world’s largest oil producer by 2020, report says

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“The major oil companies abandoned the U.S. and went looking for oil overseas,” Verleger said, “but they left behind a lot of smart engineers who found the oil and natural gas, and they figured out how to extract it at relatively low costs.”

By 2015, U.S. oil production is expected to rise to 10 million barrels per day and increase to 11.1 million barrels per day by 2020, overtaking second-place Russia and front-runner Saudi Arabia, according to the IEA’s World Energy Outlook. The U.S. will export more oil than it brings into the country in 2030, the report said.

“Just a few years ago, people were still talking about peak oil. Now we’re talking about the U.S. becoming the new Saudi Arabia,” said Phil Flynn, an analyst with the Price Futures Group. “They said we couldn’t drill our way out of this mess, but we are drilling our way out of this mess.”

Around 2030, however, Saudi Arabia is expected to be producing some 11.4 million barrels of oil per day, outpacing the 10.2 million from the U.S., the IEA report said. In 2035, U.S. production will slip to 9.2 million barrels per day, far behind the Middle Eastern nation’s 12.3 million daily barrels. And by 2035 Iraq will have exceeded Russia to become the world’s second-largest oil exporter.

At that point, inflation-adjusted oil prices will reach $125 a barrel. By then, however, the U.S. won’t be relying much on foreign energy, according to the IEA report.

Globally, the energy economy will undergo a “sea change,” the report said, with nearly 90 percent of Middle Eastern oil exports directed toward Asia by 2035.

“No country is an energy ‘island,’ and the interactions between different fuels, markets and prices are intensifying,” the report said.

Some energy experts said the U.S. oil production boom carried environmental consequences. Energy-related carbon dioxide emissions will creep up, according to the IEA report, causing a long-term average temperature increase of about 6.5 degrees Fahrenheit.

They also worried that the new oil data might ultimately have the same effect of the Prudhoe Bay oil gains in Alaska in the 1970s — fostering more complacency about developing alternative forms of energy.

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