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Today's tight natural gas markets have
been a long time in coming, and distant futures prices
suggest that we are not apt to return to earlier
periods of relative abundance and low prices anytime
soon. It was little more than a half-century ago that
drillers seeking valuable crude oil bemoaned the
discovery of natural gas. Given the lack of adequate
transportation, wells had to be capped or the gas
flared. As the economy expanded after World War II,
the development of a vast interstate transmission
system facilitated widespread consumption of natural
gas in our homes and business establishments. On a
heat-equivalent basis, natural gas consumption by 1970
had risen to three-fourths of that of oil. But
consumption lagged in the following decade because of
competitive incursions from coal and nuclear power.
Since 1985, natural gas has gradually increased its
share of total energy use and is projected by the
Energy Information Administration to gain share over
the next quarter century, owing to its status as a
clean-burning fuel.
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Recent years' dramatic changes in
technology are making existing energy reserves stretch
further while keeping long-term energy costs lower
than they otherwise would have been. Seismic
techniques and satellite imaging, which are
facilitating the discovery of promising new natural
gas reservoirs, have nearly doubled the success rate
of new-field wildcat wells in the United States during
the past decade. New techniques allow far deeper
drilling of promising fields, especially offshore. The
newer recovery innovations reportedly have
significantly raised the average proportion of gas
reserves eventually brought to the surface.
Technologies are facilitating Rocky Mountain
production of tight sands gas and coalbed methane.
Marketed production in Wyoming, for example, has risen
from 3.4 percent of total U.S. output in 1996 to 7.1
percent last year.
Moreover, improving technologies
have also increased the depletion rate of newly
discovered gas reservoirs, placing a strain on supply
that has required increasingly larger gross additions
from drilling to maintain any given level of dry gas
production. Depletion rates are estimated to have
reached 27 percent last year, compared with 21 percent
as recently as five years ago. The rise has been even
more pronounced for conventionally produced gas
because tight sands gas, which comprises an increasing
share of new gas finds, exhibits a slower depletion
rate than conventional wells.
Improved technologies, however, have
been unable to prevent the underlying long-term price
of natural gas in the United States from rising. This
is most readily observed in markets for natural gas
where contract delivery is sufficiently distant to
allow new supply to be developed and brought to
market. That price has risen gradually from $2 per
million Btu in 1997 for delivery in 2000, and
presumably well beyond, to more than $4.50 for
delivery in 2009, the crude oil heating equivalent of
rising from less than $12 per barrel to $26 per
barrel. Over the same period, the distant futures
price of light sweet crude oil has edged up only $4
per barrel and is selling at a historically rare
discount to comparably dated natural gas.
Because gas is particularly
challenging to transport in its cryogenic form as a
liquid, imports of liquefied natural gas (LNG) have
been negligible. Environmental and safety concerns and
cost have limited the number of LNG terminals and
imports of LNG. In 2002, such imports accounted for
only 1 percent of U.S. gas supply. Canada, which has
recently supplied a sixth of our consumption, has
little capacity to significantly expand its exports,
in part because of the role that Canadian gas plays in
supporting growing oil production from tar sands.
Given notable cost reductions for
both liquefaction and transportation of LNG,
significant global trade is developing. And high gas
prices projected in the American distant futures
market have made us a potential very large importer.
Worldwide imports of natural gas in 2002 were only 23
percent of world consumption, compared to 57 percent
for oil.
Even with markedly less geopolitical
instability confronting world gas than world oil in
recent years, spot gas prices have been far more
volatile than those for oil, doubtless reflecting, in
part, less-developed, price dampening global trade.
The updrift and volatility of the spot price for gas
have put significant segments of the North American
gas-using industry in a weakened competitive position.
Unless this competitive weakness is addressed, new
investment in these technologies will flag.
Increased marginal supplies from
abroad, while likely to notably damp the levels and
volatility of American natural gas prices, would
expose us to possibly insecure sources of foreign
supply, as it has for oil. But natural gas reserves
are somewhat more widely dispersed than those of oil,
for which three-fifths of proved world reserves reside
in the Middle East. Nearly two-fifths of world natural
gas reserves are in Russia and its former satellites,
and one-third are in the Middle East.
Creating a price-pressure safety
valve through larger import capacity of LNG need not
unduly expose us to potentially unstable sources of
imports. There are still numerous unexploited sources
of gas production in the United States. We have been
struggling to reach an agreeable tradeoff between
environmental and energy concerns for decades. I do
not doubt we will continue to fine-tune our areas of
consensus. But it is essential that our policies be
consistent. For example, we cannot, on the one hand,
encourage the use of environmentally desirable natural
gas in this country while being conflicted on larger
imports of LNG. Such contradictions are resolved only
by debilitating spikes in price.
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In summary, the long-term
equilibrium price for natural gas in the United States
has risen persistently during the past six years from
approximately $2 per million Btu to more than $4.50.
Although futures markets project a near-term modest
price decline from current highly elevated levels,
contracts written for delivery in 2009 are more than
double the levels that had been contemplated when much
of our existing gas-using capital stock was put in
place. The perceived tightening of long-term
demand-supply balances is beginning to price some
industrial demand out of the market. It is not clear
whether these losses are temporary, pending a fall in
price, or permanent.
Such pressures do not arise in the
U.S. market for crude oil. American refiners have
unlimited access to world supplies, as was
demonstrated most recently when Venezuelan oil
production shut down. Refiners were able to replace
lost oil with supplies from Europe, Asia, and the
Middle East. If North American natural gas markets are
to function with the flexibility exhibited by oil,
unlimited access to the vast world reserves of gas is
required. Markets need to be able to effectively
adjust to unexpected shortfalls in domestic supply.
Access to world natural gas supplies will require a
major expansion of LNG terminal import capacity and
development of the newer offshore regasification
technologies. Without the flexibility such facilities
will impart, imbalances in supply and demand must
inevitably engender price volatility.
As the technology of LNG
liquefaction and shipping has improved, and as safety
considerations have lessened, a major expansion of
U.S. import capability appears to be under way. These
movements bode well for widespread natural gas
availability in North America in the years ahead.
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