U.S. natural gas production could decline in 2016 for the
first time in 10 years, driven by low oil prices after a decade of gangbusters
growth from shale plays.
While most analysts forecast gas production will continue
growing year-over-year, albeit at a slower pace, a couple of outlier analysts
believe low oil and gas prices will prompt drillers to cut spending enough to
reduce gas production next year.
Any talk of cutbacks is an early sign that low oil prices
have slowed the U.S. shale gas boom that has revolutionized global markets and
is expected to transform the nation into a net exporter of gas by the end of
the decade.
U.S. gas production has increased every year from 51.9
billion cubic feet per day in 2005 to a record 74.4 bcfd in 2014, a 43 percent
increase. The U.S. Energy Information Administration expects gas output to
reach 78.4 bcfd in 2015 and 80.0 in 2016.
The lack of consensus among analysts shows how much still
depends on what oil prices do in the coming months.
U.S. crude oil futures fell about 60 percent from a high
over $107 a barrel in June to a six-year low under $43 on Tuesday.
"It all depends on market prices. If we get higher
gas and oil prices in the next three or four months than gas production won't
decline next year," said Randall Collum, Managing Director, Supply
Analytics, at energy data provider Genscape, which expects gas production to
fall 1.1 bcfd next year.
Any pullback in gas production was considered unthinkable
just six months ago.
"If you look back at what we said in October when
oil was trading around $80 a barrel, we were forecasting gas production would
grow by 2 bcfd in 2016," Collum said.
Analysts at Bank of America Merrill Lynch also forecast
gas production would decline in 2016.
The bank's call is for a 1.3-bcfd production decline next
year from 2015 due to declining growth in output from the Marcellus and Utica
shales in the Northeast in response to a 50 percent drop in natural gas liquids
prices, which are linked to oil prices.
Bank of America and Genscape also both forecast gas
production from oil wells, called associated gas, would decline as drillers cut
spending in oil plays like the Eagle Ford in South Texas.
Source: Philly.com
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