U.S. Oil Production Plateauing? Watch Player Reactions To Forecasts To Know

 | Nov 14, 2019 10:24

One of the top questions plaguing oil forecasters right now is how much of the commodity the U.S. will produce in 2020. Since the fracking revolution began, U.S. production has climbed every year, recently reaching a high of 12.6 million bpd.

Nevertheless, there are indications that the incredible boom in the shale oil industry may be about to plateau and forecasters are struggling with how to quantify this.

h3 U.S. Crude Production Estimates Lifted As Shale Outlook Cut/h3

The latest controversial call comes from the EIA, which Scott Sheffield , the CEO of Pioneer Natural Resources (NYSE:PXD), called the EIA “way too optimistic” in terms of its estimations for U.S. oil production growth.

Goldman Sachs recently trimmed its growth projections for U.S. shale output in 2020. The investment bank now expects that shale oil production will increase by just 700,000 bpd in 2020, down from its previous forecast of 1 million bpd growth. IHS Markit has also wound back its forecast for U.S. oil production and now predicts gains of just 440,000 bpd in 2020.

OPEC Secretary Mohammed Barkindo weighed in on this subject and appears to agree with Scott Sheffield. Earlier this week, he told CNBC that after talking to “a number of producers, especially in the shale basin, there is a growing concern by themselves that the slowdown is almost graduating into a fast deceleration.” Barkindo added that these companies “are telling us that we are probably more optimistic than they are considering the variety of headwind challenges they are facing.”