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Since 2000, oil companies working in the U.S. have doubled the number of wells
drilled per year - with a glaring lack of results.

While more investment dollars have been flowing into oil exploration, less
oil has been flowing out of the ground. The zones being accessed by developmental
wells are third-tier producers, so the new drilling has failed to offset the
depletion of America's aging oil fields.
The realization is setting in that the United States has already discovered
all the big pools of easy-to-access oil within its borders. The best parts
of the turkey have been eaten, and now we're trying to make the leftovers last
as long as possible. There may be a few prizes left on the outer continental
shelf, but these will be difficult to discover and expensive to exploit.
Last week the White House admitted that complacency by previous governments
has let the problem get worse. When asked about Alaska and the continental
shelf, Edward Lazear, chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers
said: "We could have been thinking about all of this 10 or 15 years ago when
it comes to alternatives or new exploration, and we weren't." Today's efforts,
he implies, are too little, too late.
Lazear gave some other telling insights into the way the current administration
assesses the U.S. oil situation. According to the White House's research, global
oil demand isn't going to fade, as so many pundits have speculated, even if
there is an economic slowdown in the U.S.
Instead, growth in oil demand "is here to stay and will be around for a very
long time to come, until we find significant ways to conserve." Notice the
resignation implicit in this statement. There's no attention to boosting supply;
rather, the only hope for price relief is to dampen demand.
Oil shale, despite all the hype, won't be the magic bullet. Currently, U.S.
oil shale is producing only a few thousand barrels a year from test projects,
and ramping up from there faces enormous economic and environmental hurdles.
It's difficult to see how the Green River formation can be turned into the
next Texas without putting a huge strain on the Colorado River, a major lifeline
of water supply to America's southwestern states.
The Argonne National Laboratory estimates that 1 million barrels per day of
new oil production from oil shale would consume up to 300,000 acre-feet of
water per year. It would also require 1.2 gigawatts of electricity, the equivalent
of 10 new power plants, plus five new coal mines to feed them. Eventually,
high oil prices will drive the development of oil shale forward, but it will
take decades, not years, to figure out the logistics of drawing oil from stone
on an economical, mass production scale.
But what about ethanol? E85, a blend of 85% ethanol and 15% gasoline, might
buffer the impact of oil prices a little, no matter where global oil demand
takes us. The White House has been a stout supporter of ethanol, mandating
that fuel producers supply at least 36 billion gallons of renewable fuel in
the year 2022.
"The new variable is alternative fuels," Mr. Lazear says. "It will take seven
to ten years to know whether it will really pan out." That doesn't sound particularly
upbeat, but it is realistic. Even the current administration realizes that
for the foreseeable future, the benefits of ethanol are marginal at best. Ethanol
is a long shot, they say, so keep your fingers crossed.
And if you think this is the isolated opinion of one White House staffer,
listen to what's coming out of the U.S. Department of Energy. Just last week,
Assistant Energy Secretary Alexander Karsner said that "[t]he places where
oil can be found and extracted and brought to bear in the world are decreasing.
It will get harder, and demand will outstrip supply for probably the rest of
my lifetime."
You could view these dismal evaluations as disheartening, or you could find
it reassuring to know there are a few minds in government that grasp the severity
of the global energy crisis. At least they've acknowledged that no new, magical
source of supply will spring up to halt the dynamics driving oil prices higher.
How long will it be before we hear the phrase 'Peak Oil' invoked by a U.S.
President to emphasize the need for energy independence? The sooner it happens,
the better. After all, the first step toward solving any problem is overcoming
denial.
Chris Gilpin is a senior editor of the Casey Energy Speculator (CES), a
monthly newsletter dedicated to uncovering deeply undervalued investment
opportunities in oil, natural gas, uranium and alternative energy. The CES
specializes in the unbiased investigation of small-cap energy companies with
the very real potential for 100% or better returns over a short time horizon.
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