81%  of estimated oil and gas resources on federal lands both onshore and underlying federal waters offshore in the Outer Continental Shelf are available for
development or will be accessible pending the completion of land-use planning or environmental reviews.  The amount of oil and gas in these reserves is equal to 107
billion barrels of oil and 658 trillion cubic feet of natural gas.
 
• The amount of oil which could be produced from these reserves is 10 times the
amount that could be produced from opening up ANWR.
 
• The amount of oil which could be produced from these areas represents over 14
years of current U.S. oil consumption (7.5 billion barrels per year).
 
• The amount of gas which could be produced from these areas represents over
30 years of current U.S. gas consumption (21.8 trillion cubic feet of natural gas
per year).
 
• The production of these energy resources would provide the country with
additional time to develop alternatives to oil and gas and reduce our
dependency on energy imports.
 
68
 million acres of federal lands both onshore and underlying federal waters
offshore in the Outer Continental Shelf are currently being held by oil and gas
companies with no production occurring on these leases.
 
• That 68 million acres of leased but stockpiled federal oil and gas lands could
produce an additional 4.8 million barrels of oil and 44.7 billion cubic feet of
natural gas each day.
 
• That would nearly double total U.S. oil production and increase natural gas
production by 75%.
 
• It would cut U.S. oil imports by one-third.
 
• And it would be more than six times the estimated peak production from ANWR

by army193 on 07/14/2008 09:32:42 PM EST

Sometimes I rattle of a few stats here and there sans sources from memory.

But that's a long list of very specific information, so I'm hoping you have a link or two in support of it?

by Tom Hanc on 07/14/2008 10:00:54 PM EST

[ Parent ]
http://resourcescommittee.h ouse.gov/images/Documents/d rilling_facts.pdf

by army193 on 07/15/2008 08:52:49 AM EST

[ Parent ]
Ask and you shall...

what was I just saying about the so-called experts who are just as full of shit. They are always next at the party. Really they are there all along, just waiting for the right moment to pounce. But that makes them sound athletic and noble and savvy and sharp like cats. Really they are more like those black slimy small bugs you find in dank places under rocks who cower together for fear of being exposed. But hey, who said anything about name calling, right?

Why do we deserve to use 1/4th of the world's oil? Why is it our God given right to drive SUVs? Why don't we cut consumption in half? You seem very willing to want to solve the problem, how do you feel about CAFE standards and reduced consumption. Time to find alternatives, buddy, where have you been? We have the alternatives, that is the problem. No one wants to use them because we want to drive Hummers and SUVs and spend all the money on oil exploration.

Either we are at or past peak production, in which case there is nothing we can do about the price of gas, drilling or no. Or it is due to speculation, in which case drilling won't do any good, we need regulation. Drilling offshore is not the answer. How long will it take for it to effect the level of imports, 10 to 15 years. So, we're supposed to wait? 15 years? We could have had the problem solved already if GM made cars which get 50 mpg instead of hummers (which get what, 8 mpg).

Solar, wind, biofuels, the answers are all already there. Time to develop alternatives? You mean time to come up with some more lies while you and your buddies go off roading and take trips to the bank to unload the bundles of cash from your oil stocks.

Whatever you do, don't click this link (studies show you're more likely if you shouldn't)

by tiggerporn on 07/14/2008 10:38:39 PM EST

[ Parent ]
those numbers are based on old surveys and estimates...the actual amount offshore oil is just a guess...what is for certain is that any oil is years from reaching the gas pump if at all.

by MRFred on 07/15/2008 07:03:30 AM EST

[ Parent ]
http://resourcescommittee.h ouse.gov/images/Documents/d rilling_facts.pdf

by army193 on 07/15/2008 08:54:58 AM EST

[ Parent ]

"This is one crisis we cant drill our way out of" T Boone Pickens

 The United States has just 3 percent of the world's oil and gas reserves, but it consumes 25 percent of the world's supply.

___________________________ _____

 What the hell do you know about bringing in a well you dumbass goober?

 Apparently, more than you do JR.

"The president is going in the right direction here. But I would have gone even further and lifted the moratorium with a presidential order. But you also have to remember that the lag time between exploration and first production is still in the range of 8 to 10 years." David O'Reilly, the Chairman and CEO of Chevron

But wouldn't opening up additional areas off U.S. shores increase available crude supplies and, thus, help reduce or stabilize the prices Americans are paying at the pump?

 "access to the Pacific, Atlantic and eastern gulf regions would not have a significant impact on domestic crude oil and natural gas production, or prices, before 2030." U.S. Energy Information Administration

The more remote or technologically challenging plays require multi-year investments and have been subject to numerous delays and cost overruns. The cycle time from discovery to commercial production for large complex deepwater projects now averages in the area of eight years.  Moody’s Investors Service

 

 By the way...when  you quote something...you may want to read the rest of the article

full stable of 40 wells are drilled over the next three years, the field is expected to peak at up to 20,000 barrels per day in 2010, Pioneer said.

Ohhh , impressive! 20,000- barrels a day by 2010...for 40 wells....wow....thats about 4 minutes worth of daily supply for the US.

And your "royalties" and how they are going to balance the budget? , (the Republican gave big oil over 10 Billion dollars worth of deffer ed, forgotten or forgiven payments since Bush took office.)

The state also helped advance the new field by reducing the percentage share of oil it will take as a royalty.The state has made a similar concession to Eni, which has said it will develop another offshore oil field called Nikaitchuq.

Yep, even at 140 a barrel, oilmen are still looking for government handouts...

 The majors have repurchased almost $200 billion of shares since 2004, including almost $90 billion by ExxonMobil and $43 billion by BP. Large share repurchases are supportable without a negative credit impact because they can be managed flexibly and are tied to the evolving outlook for energy prices, alternative capital projects, and acquisition opportunities.

 So the majors can rebuy shares but no pay royalties or cant afford new exploration with out government help?

They built the entire Alaska Highway in months.

 Glad you finally recognize the genius of FDR. Just think, if we built the Alaskan higway in two years just think of what we could do with T Boone Picken energy proposal just for starters...

No matter:

May's total petroleum imports fell 11.7 percent from a year ago, the lowest May level since 2002.

Crude oil imports alone, at 9.5 million barrels per day, were also the lowest for May over that period, falling more than 8 percent from last May.

Gasoline imports fell nearly 25 percent from last May's all-time record.

Crude oil production in the U.S., though continuing to show year-to-year declines, jumped from April to May to a six-month high, though it lags year over year by about 1 percent.

In other words, beware of claims that America must increase domestic drilling and production in order to reduce its reliance on imported petroleum, oil and gas products.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration reports that domestic refineries are using less of their capacities.

 

By the way, are your the chairman of a major oil company? No

Are you a self made oil billionaire? No

 I dunno, I tend to believe the U.S. Energy Information Administration, CEO of Chevron and proven experts before I believe a JR Ewing wanna be.


 

by MRFred on 07/15/2008 09:27:07 AM EST

[ Parent ]