Natural-Gas Boom and Coming Bust in United States

L. David Roper
http://www.roperld.com/personal/RoperLDavid.htm
7 July, 2019
World Fossil Fuels Depletion

Contents

Introduction

The U.S. state of United States is having a boom in extracting natural gas by the technique of fractionating ("fracking") shale/dolomite formations. A "boom" in nonrenewable resource extraction from the Earth is defined as a time period in which extraction is occurring very fast in a given area; thus, many workers come in from outside the area to man the drilling rigs, to build housing for the oil workers and to provide other services for the increased population.

This article shows mathematically that the United States crude-oil boom will become a bust within a decade. A "bust" in nonrenewable resource extraction from the Earth is defined to begin at the time when extraction of the resource peaks and then falls to negligible amounts over a time period.

Natural-Gas Extraction Data for United States

The U.S. Energy Information Administration gives monthly and annual crude-oil extraction data for United States since 1981.

Those data are fitted by a depletion function, the Verhulst function, in this study to determine when the extraction will peak.

The data and the fits to the data are given in a later section.

Natural-Gas Reserves for United States

A reliable estimate of reserves is needed to fit extraction data by a function for projecting into the future for a nonrenewable resource Here is a good definition of reserves of a nonrenewable resource.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration gives reserves estimates from 1977 to 2011 for crude-oil extraction in United States, which are shown here by black dots for years 2005 to 2012:

The curve is a fit to the 10 EIA reserves estimates from 2005-2013 using the Verhulst function described in the next section, assuming that the curve will be symmetrical. The fit is done to get a rough estimate of the peak value of the reserves estimate in the future, which is ~900 x 1012ft 3.

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Verhulst-Function Fit to Natural-Gas Extraction Data for United States

The depletion function that is used in this article is the Verhulst function:


The asymmetry parameter, n, must be greater than 0.

where

The maximum of P(t) occurs at , which yields the peak value  .

For the symmetric case (n=1):  and .

For a depletion situation for which there are N peaks the depletion function is:

.

When a peak is symmetrical, the Verhulst function simplifies to

One needs an estimate of the amount of asymmetry, described by the parameter n, for the future peak due to fracking for shale natural gas for the Marcellus play, which can be obtained from the macro-analysis of the Seven major shale-gas plays by J. David Hughes (Drilling Deeper).

Hughes Seven Major Shale-gas Plays Micro-Analysis

J. David Hughes (Drilling Deeper) has done a micro-analysis of the all US shale-gas plays:

So the asymmetry parameter, n, for shale-gasl extraction in the U.S.can be estimated from the combined seven largest shale-gas plays projected extraction as determined by Hughes:


“Most Likely Rate” scenario of combined seven largest shale-gas plays extraction.

Hughes' curve is asymmetric; i.e., n > 1.

I fitted a Verhulst function to the Hughes combined seven largest shale-gas plays curve to get the asymmetric parameter n:


The asymmetric parameter, n, is 18. (The Y-axis has been changed from 109 ft3//day to 1012 ft3/yr.)

Then a Verhulst fit was done to the U.S. crude oil extraction data with the asymmetric parameter varied for the future shale-gas peak::

All Verhulst parameters were varied except the n parameter for the future peak, which searched to 4.85. The calculated 2017 reserves for this curve is 1281 x 1012 ft3, much above the estimated reserves value (~900 x 1012 ft3) given above.

The extraction is projected to peak before 2025 and then fall rapidly in future years.

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Conclusion

Even for very high estimates of crude-oil reserves for its extraction in United States, the current boom will turn into a bust within a decade.

It would be wise for United States to use the current natural-gas boom to build the policies and infrastructure for collecting energy from wind and solar, for encouraging drivers to drive electric vehicles and for fast charging stations for electric vehicles in personal and parking garages. Wind energy in United States has a good start already.

See http://www.roperld.com/science/RenewableEnergyElectricityDemand.pdf.

It would be wise for the government of United States to do some decade-long planning about how to best manage the coming natural-gas-extraction bust. A tax on natural-gas extraction to put in a fund to help manage the bust and to clean up the mess made by the extraction would be wise. Such tax might have an added benefit of slowing down the extraction so that the bust will not occur so soon, giving more time to prepare for it.

If the U.S. were an intelligent society it would slow down the extraction of natural gas and prohibit it being exported.

Natural-Gas Prices

Books

References

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L. David Roper interdisciplinary studies
World Fossil Fuels Depletion

L. David Roper, http://arts.bev.net/RoperLDavid/
7 July, 2019