The latest monthly update of estimated crude oil production in the Bakken region of North Dakota and Montana
shows total wellhead output topping 1 million barrels of oil per day (bbl/d)
next month. The update appears in the most recent issue of the U.S. Energy
Information Administration's Drilling Productivity Report
(DPR).
The Bakken region now accounts for a little over 10% of total U.S. oil
production and is expected to be the fourth region (along with the Gulf of
Mexico, Eagle Ford, and Permian basins) producing more than 1 million bbl/d in
the nation in December.
Infrastructure improvements in the central part of the nation carried more of
this oil to refineries in recent months, helping to narrow the price
difference between the Bakken region and West Texas Intermediate, which is
priced at Cushing, Oklahoma.
The growth of crude oil production in the Bakken region is part of a
longer-term trend in drilling efficiency gains (see graph below) and has led
North Dakota to rank second in crude oil production in the United States, behind
only Texas. These production gains have led to increases in gross domestic
product in the state as well as increased demand for
electricity. (DOE-EIA)
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