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USA Expected to Produce Almost 1/4 of Global Oil Output in 2026
Posted on 2/5/26 at 10:46 am
Posted on 2/5/26 at 10:46 am
quote:
The U.S. is projected to produce almost a quarter of the world’s petroleum and other liquid fuels output in 2026 in the U.S. Energy Information Administration’s (EIA) latest short term energy outlook.
According to the EIA’s January STEO, which was published last month, the EIA sees U.S. petroleum and other liquid fuels production averaging 23.88 million barrels per day in 2026. The EIA forecasts in the STEO that global production this year will come in at 107.65 million barrels per day, putting the U.S. contribution at 22.18 percent of the overall figure.
A quarterly breakdown included in the EIA’s latest STEO outlined that the EIA sees U.S. petroleum and other liquid fuels production making up 22.18 percent of the world’s total petroleum and liquid fuels production in the first quarter of this year, 22.25 percent in the second quarter, 22.15 percent in the third quarter, and 22.14 percent in the fourth quarter.
The U.S. share of global petroleum and other liquid fuels production is projected to drop to 21.84 percent in 2027 in the EIA’s latest STEO, which forecasts that U.S. output will average 23.63 million barrels per day and that global production will average 108.18 million barrels per day.
quote:
OPEC+ is projected to contribute 44.93 million barrels per day, or 41.73 percent, to the 2026 total, and 45.07 million barrels per day, or 41.66 percent, to the 2027 total, the EIA pointed out in its STEO. OPEC+ contributed 43.80 million barrels per day, or 41.21 percent, to the 2025 total, the STEO showed.
Non-OPEC+ production, excluding the U.S., is projected to make up 38.84 million barrels per day, or 36.07 percent, of this year’s total petroleum and other liquid fuels production, and 39.47 million barrels per day, or 36.48 percent, of next year’s total, the STEO revealed.
LINK
Posted on 2/5/26 at 10:50 am to ragincajun03
Time for Tommy and Cooper to start digging some more.
Posted on 2/5/26 at 11:00 am to ragincajun03
Congrats O&B Baws. Trade in that 2025 F250 for a 2026 F350
Posted on 2/5/26 at 11:16 am to ragincajun03
Looks like we're way outpacing the required bbl production to maintain average daily fuel consumption by gallon in the US. Who do we export to the most would you say?
This post was edited on 2/5/26 at 11:17 am
Posted on 2/5/26 at 11:57 am to Shreve Perry
According to the most recent monthly data on EIA website, for Total Crude & Products by Destination, Top 5 recipients in order for October 2025 were:
Netherlands
Mexico
Japan
South Korea
Canada
China was 6th highest destination that month, though looking back at some historical numbers, there’s times China has been the top recipient for month periods. Looks like May of 2020, we shipped more to China than any other country in history over a 30/31 day period.
Netherlands
Mexico
Japan
South Korea
Canada
China was 6th highest destination that month, though looking back at some historical numbers, there’s times China has been the top recipient for month periods. Looks like May of 2020, we shipped more to China than any other country in history over a 30/31 day period.
This post was edited on 2/5/26 at 12:07 pm
Posted on 2/5/26 at 3:12 pm to ragincajun03
Just wait til we add Venezuela. We gonna be wearing gold plated diapers.
Posted on 2/5/26 at 3:30 pm to ragincajun03
quote:
The U.S. share of global petroleum and other liquid fuels production is projected to drop to 21.84 percent in 2027 in the EIA’s latest STEO, which forecasts that U.S. output will average 23.63 million barrels per day and that global production will average 108.18 million barrels per day.
At least 15 million of this is NOT crude oil. Your title is misleading.
It includes ethanol and other renewables such as renewable diesel and sustainable aviation fuel along biodiesel
Posted on 2/5/26 at 5:12 pm to ragincajun03
It’s crazy to think we are producing this much, while the oilfield seems to be slowing at a pretty decent clip offshore at least.
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