U.S. to export more energy by 2020 than it imports, projects EIA

Tuesday, January 29, 2019

Federal energy analysts project that the United States will export more energy than it imports by 2020, making the nation a net energy exporter for the first time since the 1950s. Fossil fuels represent the largest volumes of this international trade.

Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration
The United States both exports and imports energy in a variety of forms, including natural gas, coal and coke, petroleum and other liquids, and electricity. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, the United States has long been a net exporter of coal and coke. In 2017, the nation began exporting more natural gas than it imports, primarily in the form of liquified natural gas or LNG. EIA notes that electricity trades with neighboring Canada and Mexico represent "a relatively small part of U.S. net energy trade flows."

The EIA projects that domestic production of crude oil, natural gas, and natural gas plant liquids will continue to grow at a faster rate than U.S. energy consumption over the next decade, meaning the balance of these fuels will be exported. EIA projects that due to "evolving trade flows of liquid fuels and natural gas," increasing exports of these fuels will tip the trade balance to where the U.S. is a net exporter of energy by 2020. When this shift occurs, it will represent the first time that the United States exports more energy than it imports on an annual basis since 1953.

Exactly how large the nation's net exports might be -- and how long the net-exporter status might last -- depend on a variety of assumptions about matters including oil and gas prices, resource extraction technologies, and possible changes to law. Under EIA's reference case which reflects current laws and regulations, the U.S. begins exporting more energy than it imports on an annual basis in 2020 and maintains that status through 2050. In other cases featuring lower prices or extraction rates for oil and gas, EIA projects that U.S. will return to net-importer status by the mid- to late-2030s.

Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration
Changes to laws and regulations could also affect the trade balance for energy products.

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