United States of America has become the largest producer of oil and gas
in the world overtaking Saudi Arabia and Russia in last six months
according to a research from Bank of America Merrill Lynch, BoAML.
The
research showed that US oil production rose by 70 per cent since it
dipped in 2008, while its liquefied natural gas output has jumped by 40
per cent since 2005.
Rising U.S. oil supplies come as an Islamist
insurgency threatens output in Iraq, the second-largest producer in the
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, OPEC after Saudi Arabia.
Territorial
gains in northern Iraq by a group calling itself the Islamic State has
spurred concerns that oil flows from the south could be disrupted.
Exports from Libya have been disrupted by protests, while Nigeria’s production is threatened by oil theft and sabotage.
Nonetheless,
examining the data on a state-by-state basis, BoAML also found a strong
relationship between US employment growth and the production of oil and
gas over the last five years.
Furthermore, wage rises have been strongest in those states with increasing oil output over the same period.
Energy
intensive industries like chemicals have been particular beneficiaries
of the jump in shale production. But the service sector has also had a
taste of the action.
BoAML pointed out that most of the jobs
waiting tables and building houses in North Dakota, the fastest growing
state last year, can be traced to the boom in shale oil.
Cash has
been pouring into the oil and natural gas sector, reaching close to 20
per cent of total us private fixed structure investment, the highest
level ever in US history at $200bn a year and almost as much as
residential investment.
However, despite America’s stellar
performance, it has also been the case that crude production outside the
world’s largest economy has been lacklustre in recent months.
source: Nairaland

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