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U.S. oil output surging, seen outpacing Saudis, Russia

The Associated Press

PARIS – U.S. oil production is booming and is forecast to surge beyond the output from heavyweight Saudi Arabia and rival Russia this year, a global energy agency said Friday.

File photo taken in 2015 shows oil pumpjacks working in a field near Lovington, New Mexico.

U.S. oil production, which has already risen to its highest level in nearly 50 years, will push past 10 million barrels a day in 2018 as higher prices entice more producers to start pumping, the International Energy Agency said in its monthly market report.

“This year promises to be a record-setting one for the U.S.,” the report said.

Oil futures were lower in New York and seemed headed for a weekly decline after the report was issued. West Texas Intermediate for February delivery was down 0.8% at $68.73 early Friday.

The price of crude has risen about 50% since June, with the U.S. benchmark now trading around $63 a barrel, on evidence of strong global economic growth and a pact among OPEC countries and Russia to limit their production.

The OPEC-Russia deal worked for them: as prices rose they made more money despite pumping less crude, the IEA said. Russia is estimated to have earned an extra $117 million a day and Saudi Arabia $100 million daily by limiting their output and nudging up prices.

But the higher prices also brought back U.S. producers, particularly in shale oil, which requires higher prices in order to break even.

U.S. production rose last year to its highest since 1970 and is expected to keep growing, assuming OPEC and Russia don’t decide to increase their own production — a decision of which there is no sign, the IEA says.

Even the hurricanes of last year didn’t hinder the U.S. oil production boom.

For now, the extra crude from the U.S. is meeting growing demand as the world economy expands at a strong pace.

Global demand for oil is forecast to grow by 1.3 million barrels a day, the same as the year before. It’s not growing faster because some consumers are reducing spending on oil because of the higher prices and switching to other types of energy, like natural gas.

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