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Www.eia.gov U.S. Energy Information Administration Independent Statistics & Analysis Federal Forecasters Conference – The Value of Government Forecasts.

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Presentation on theme: "Www.eia.gov U.S. Energy Information Administration Independent Statistics & Analysis Federal Forecasters Conference – The Value of Government Forecasts."— Presentation transcript:

1 www.eia.gov U.S. Energy Information Administration Independent Statistics & Analysis Federal Forecasters Conference – The Value of Government Forecasts September 27, 2012| Washington, D.C. Adam Sieminski, Administrator Energy Forecasting in Volatile Times

2 About EIA The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) collects, analyzes, and disseminates independent and impartial energy information to promote sound policymaking, efficient markets, and public understanding of energy and its interaction with the economy and the environment. By law, EIA’s data, analyses, and forecasts are independent of approval by any other officer or employee of the United States Government. 2 Adam Sieminski September 27, 2012

3 Short-Term Energy Outlook: U.S. retail gasoline and crude oil prices dollars per gallon Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration Short-Term Energy Outlook, September 2012 forecast 3 Adam Sieminski September 27, 2012

4 Energy price forecasts are inherently volatile West Texas Intermediate crude oil price dollars per barrel Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration Short-Term Energy Outlook, September 2012 4 Adam Sieminski September 27, 2012

5 Probability of December 2012 WTI contract expiring above different price levels Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration Short-Term Energy Outlook, September 2012 5 Adam Sieminski September 27, 2012

6 Domestic production of shale gas and tight oil has grown dramatically over the past few years 6 tight oil production for select plays million barrels of oil per day Source: HPDI, Texas RRC, North Dakota department of mineral resources, and EIA, through March, 2012. shale gas production (dry) billion cubic feet per day Adam Sieminski September 27, 2012

7 Speed of development raises new data collection issues 7 Texas oil production million barrels per day Source: Hydrocarbon Production Database Incorporated (HPDI), EIA, State of Texas. Data through April, 2012 Differences indicate lags in reporting and processing data at the State level Adam Sieminski September 27, 2012

8 Increased natural gas production lowered prices power plants paid for this fuel South delivered fuel prices dollars per megawatthour Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Power Plant Operations Report 8 Adam Sieminski September 27, 2012

9 Lower natural gas prices at power plants lead to increased natural gas use for power generation Monthly generation from major fuels thousand megawatthours Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Power Plant Operations Report 9 Adam Sieminski September 27, 2012

10 Challenges in providing official forecasts and projections to policymakers: Focus on the near-term Complicated models Uncertainties in the impact of policy changes 10 Adam Sieminski September 27, 2012

11 Accurate forecasts in global markets require global inputs OPEC surplus capacity and historic average million barrels per day Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration Short-Term Energy Outlook, September 2012 forecast 11 Adam Sieminski September 27, 2012

12 Correlations (+ or -) between daily returns on crude oil futures and financial investments have also strengthened Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration WTI crude oil price peak < -0.65-0.65 to -0.4-0.4 to -0.25-0.25 to 0.250.25 to 0.40.4 to 0.65> 0.65 Negative correlationPositive correlation * U.S. Dollar Index (DXY), which is a weighted index of a basket of currencies, per U.S. dollar. As the dollar strengthens against other currencies, the value of the index rises. ** U.S. Treasury is based on the negative of the change in yield on 30-year U.S. government bonds because as yields rise, bond prices fall. 200120022003200420052006200720082009201020112012 S&P 500 U.S. Dollar* U.S. Treasury** 12 Adam Sieminski September 27, 2012 Note: Correlations computed quarterly

13 Accurate forecasts also require monitoring of events outside of model inputs 10 year bond yield (spread above German yields) dollars per barrel Source: Intercontinental Exchange, Bloomberg LLC 13 Adam Sieminski September 27, 2012

14 Long-term Projections 14 Adam Sieminski September 27, 2012

15 The shale gas & tight oil technology story is only beginning, with much yet to be written Technology is creating new resources out of source rocks Production data provides a rearview mirror perspective –see the changes, but with a delay –EIA does not anticipate step changes in technology applications –EIA does recognize and incorporate long-term technological change Annual re-estimating of U.S. plays is necessary –new data is providing significant new detail of what production is possible Broad implications exist for world wide oil and gas production 15 Adam Sieminski September 27, 2012

16 Theory Experiment Commercial Practice Changing understanding of geology, technology and economics 16 Geology Engineering / Technology Economics Gas in Place Technically Recoverable Resources Drilling Data Adam Sieminski September 27, 2012

17 Shale gas resource potential and related costs remain highly uncertain Three alternate cases High Technically Recoverable Resource (TRR) case assumes High EUR case with wells closer together (80 acres per well), and it could represent finding more plays. High Estimate Ultimate Recovery (EUR) case assumes an EUR per shale gas well set 50% higher than in the Reference case. Results in lower per Mcf costs. Low EUR case is like High EUR but lower. High TRR Reference High EUR Shale gas production trillion cubic feet Low EUR 17 Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Annual Energy Outlook 2012 Adam Sieminski September 27, 2012

18 Annual Energy Outlook 2012: U.S. dependence on imported petroleum declines U.S. liquid fuel supply million barrels per day ProjectionsHistory 2010 Consumption Domestic supply Net petroleum imports 49% 36% 60% 2005 Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Annual Energy Outlook 2012 14% Extended Policies High TRR Adam Sieminski September 27, 2012 18

19 Framing outcomes is an important consideration for forecasters Economic impact of greenhouse gas reduction between 2010 and 2025 Change in Real GDP (billion 2000 dollars) Real GDP (billion 2000 dollars) 19 Adam Sieminski September 27, 2012 Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration

20 For more information 20 U.S. Energy Information Administration home page | www.eia.govwww.eia.gov Short-Term Energy Outlook | www.eia.gov/steowww.eia.gov/steo Annual Energy Outlook | www.eia.gov/aeowww.eia.gov/aeo International Energy Outlook | www.eia.gov/ieowww.eia.gov/ieo Monthly Energy Review | www.eia.gov/merwww.eia.gov/mer EIA Information Center InfoCtr@eia.gov Our average response time is within three business days. (202) 586-8800 24-hour automated information line about EIA and frequently asked questions. Adam Sieminski September 27, 2012


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