Fueling a Clean Transportation Future (2016)

lweb.es/f856

iconOEF REVIEW:This report points the way to a cleaner transportation future by describing key ways we can clean up our transportation fuels. This report builds on the Union of Concerned Scientists Half the Oil plan by explaining how our major transportation fuels are changing and what we can do to reduce emissions from fuel production. Our clean fuels—electricity and biofuels—are already cutting oil use and emissions from transportation, but more work is required to deliver on their potential. Oil is getting steadily more polluting, but by holding oil companies accountable to reduce avoidable emissions and avoid the dirtiest sources, we can check that mounting climate damage and make sure that the oil we continue to use has the lowest global warming emissions possible.

Oil production freeze clouded by conditions, history

lweb.es/f838

iconOEF REVIEW:Although countries saying they’ll freeze oil production account for 25% of global supply, conditions of their Feb. 16 agreement and history offer little reason to expect much change in an oversupplied market. Of four countries agreeing not to raise production beyond January levels, Saudi Arabia, Russia, Qatar, and Venezuela, only one has enough spare capacity to do so meaningfully. Saudi Arabia produced at an average rate of 10.19 million barrels a day in January, according to the International Energy Agency.

American Petroleum Institute: The State of American Energy report 2016

lweb.es/f834

iconOEF REVIEW:“2016 State of American Energy report details the economic, job creation, energy security and global leadership opportunities created by our nation’s 21st century energy revolution and the policy challenges we must overcome to ensure that these benefits extend for generations to come. To give a sense of the reach and scope of the industry, each chapter of this report examines the distinctive policy challenges and opportunities through highlights of these issues in seven regions that include all 50 states. The report makes clear that the economic benefits and opportunities provided by the oil and natural gas industry aren’t confined to energy producing states and that the industry could do more with the right energy policies based on market principles and sound science.” Jack N. Gerard, President and CEO, API

EIA: Initial production rates in U.S. shale oil formations continue to rise

lweb.es/f828

iconOEF REVIEW:Tight oil production in the United States increased from 2007 through April 2015, based on estimates in Energy Information Agency’s (EIA) Drilling Productivity Report, and accounted for more than half of total U.S. oil production in 2015. Tight oil growth has been driven by increasing initial production rates from tight wells in regions analyzed in the report. As drilling techniques and technology improve, producers are able to extract more oil during the initial months of production from new wells.

OPEC oil market report: Negative effects of oil price drop has outweighed benefits

lweb.es/f814

iconOEF REVIEW:The February 2016 OPEC Monthly Oil Market Report indicates the following, on page 17, with regard to “Recent Interactions Between the Oil Market and the Global Economy”: It seems that the overall negative effect from the sharp decline in oil prices since mid-2014 has outweighed benefits in the short-term and there seems to be a ‘contagious’ effect taking place across many aspects of the global economy…more