The "Don't Drill Democrats" now have a "Don't Drill President-Elect" who is already examining Presidential Executive Orders with a view to shrinking, not expanding, drilling. And Democrats have vowed to reinstitute drilling prohibitions that expired on October 1 to prevent off-shore and other new drilling.
Meanwhile, our sensible neighbor to the south Brazil is having fantastic success in its off-shore drilling. A new report from the Financial Times (subscription may be required) indicates the new finds may lift Brazil's reserves from about 14 billion barrels (the U.S. figure is 22 billion barrels) to over 100 billion barrels, putting it about equal to Kuwait, ahead of Russia and only trailing Saudi Arabia. Canada is ahead of the U.S. and is growing its reserves as it continues exploration. (Add in Rocky Mountains shale potential oil reserves, also a Democratic blockage target, and the U.S. could be far ahead of all countries, including Saudia Arabia.)
The U.S. is the only major oil producing country that is denying itself access to its oil and gas resources. As a consequence, high oil and gasoline prices will be inflicted on the American people unnecessarily. Insofar as environmental concerns are argued as reasons for not drilling, they are bogus. American companies are the most technologically advanced and the most environmentally sensitive in their drilling operations. Drilling will go on all over the world, since oil will continue to be the most important energy fuel for many years, probably decades, to come.
So not only much higher taxes will be coming from the Obama administration but also high prices for energy, both of which will be a drag on the economy.
But Saudi Arabia will be grateful to the Obama administration.
Brazil oilfield may house ‘100bn barrels’Jonathan Wheatley in São Paulo
Published: November 7 2008 23:55 | Last updated: November 7 2008 23:55
Brazil’s newly discovered “pre-salt” oilfields may contain more than 100bn barrels, Haroldo Lima, head of the industry regulatory, said on Friday.
Mr Lima said just the pre-salt oilfields already under concession may contain between 50bn and 80bn barrels and that the total area could surpass 100bn barrels.
If so, the new fields would propel Brazil up the world league table of oil producing nations. Brazil currently has reserves of about 12.6bn barrels (or 14.4bn barrels of oil equivalent if natural gas is included), according to a statistical review produced by BP of the UK, a standard industry reference.
That compares with 79.4bn barrels of oil in Russia, for example, or 101.5bn in Kuwait, according to BP.
“Dimensions are so big that we still don’t have a good vision of what this means for Brazil,” Mr Lima told reporters in Rio de Janeiro.
The pre-salt oilfields – as their name suggests – are trapped beneath a layer of salt under about 7,000 metres of sea water and rock and are among the most inaccessible on earth.
The geological formation of which they are part is about 800 km long and 200 km wide, running up the southern Brazilian coast from the Santos Basin, about 200 km offshore.
The deposits were discovered in 2007 and since then the government has suspended its annual auctions of concessions of geographical “blocks”, in which oil companies accept exploratory risk in return for rights over any oil and gas they may discover.
Every well so far sunk into the pre-salt fields has struck oil – a hit rate of 100 per cent compared with about 15 per cent common in new areas in Brazil. Ministers have likened selling concessions in pre-salt fields to selling winning lottery tickets and the government is preparing a new regulatory framework for the pre-salt fields.
But 10 concessions in the Santos Basin had been sold before the government realised the potential of the new fields.
The areas under concession form a minority of the total pre-salt area, suggesting Mr Lima’s estimate may be very conservative.
