Permian Basin oil and gas growth expected to hit 66 % with new pipeline capacity

CNBC:
Shale oil's impact will have "huge implications" for global energy markets for many years, Fatih Birol, executive director at the International Energy Agency, told CNBC on Tuesday.

Oil prices have been trading sharply lower amid growing concerns that an economic slowdown in China could temper demand. And even as some producers cut their output, prices have been put under further pressure by a growing supply from the United States.

"(If) anybody thinks we have seen the full impact of the shale revolution in the United States, then he or she is making a big mistake," Birol told CNBC's Steve Sedgwick at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

"We will see huge implications of shale, both for oil and gas, for many years to come."

OPEC and its production allies have officially implemented a fresh round of supply cuts, which will see 1.2 million barrels per day removed from the market from the start of January.

Birol said that despite those cuts, prices in 2019 should face renewed pressure with Permian Basin output in western Texas and southeastern New Mexico set to ramp up.

"A huge amount of pipeline capacity is coming in the Permian, 66 percent growth compared to previous years, so the U.S. oil industry's ability to react to the market is much faster and bolder now," he said.

Birol said unless there was a large geopolitical event, it would be very difficult to see prices nearing $90 per barrel — as the Brent crude benchmark did in October.
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It is not just pipeline capacity.  The Texas Gulf Coast is adding port facilities to export large quantities of crude as well as LNG.  If refineries convert operations to handle the light crud exclusively it would dramatically decrease US imports.

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