WASHINGTON,
D.C. -- The nation's dependence on foreign crude oil is steadily declining and
within a year should be where it was in 1968, say federal forecasters.
The
U.S. Energy Information Administration predicts that by 2015,
imports of crude oil and refined fuels should fall to an average of just 21
percent as U.S. shale oil production increases. In contrast, imports accounted for about 40 percent of the petroleum and refined fuels
consumed by Americans in 2012, the EIA estimates.
But
don't expect the price at the pumps to tumble at the same rate that U.S. crude
production increases.
Oil
companies regularly export as well as import gasoline and diesel fuel,
insulating the industry from demand declines at home. Those exports to distant
markets link U.S. prices to global fuel prices.
And
the industry is now calling for Congress to
lift crude oil bans
imposed in the 1970s when experts believed that U.S. production had permanently
stalled. One argument is that U.S. exports would lower
global oil prices.
Imports
of oil and fuels by oil companies peaked at about 60 percent in 2005, before
the shale boom got under way.
Since
then, U.S. oil production has been increasing monthly. The EIA estimated oil
production averaged 8.6 million barrels a day in August, the highest level
since 1986.
The
EIA has revised its forecast for 2015 and now expects domestic crude production
to average 9.5 million barrels a day next year -- the highest domestic
production since 1970.
Because
the cost of oil accounts for a large percentage of what consumers pay at the
pump, the EIA expects average gasoline prices also to fall some, but not
tumble.
The
EIA figures that the national average price of gasoline in December should be
about $3.18.
And
the average for all of 2015, including spring price spikes, should be about
$3.41 a gallon, EIA forecasters believe. That is the average price of gasoline currently in Northeast Ohio, calculates GasBuddy, the
Internet-based price watchdog.
GasBuddy
and its parent company, the Oil Price Information Service, or OPIS, earlier
predicted the national average price of gasoline would fall to about $3.20 a
gallon by the end of the year and that many stations would see prices
close to $3.
Source:http://www.cleveland.com/business/index.ssf/2014/09/cheaper_us_crude_oil_productio.html
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