Mills: Energy industry surges as demand rises

Demand for energy continues to increase from coast to coast, and record production continues to grow from a variety of sources.

Crude oil and natural gas, which account for 80% of the nation’s energy, almost set a new record for monthly production in February, according to data released by the Energy Information Administration this week.

U.S. oil production was 13.2 million barrels per day in February just short of the 13.3 million b/d record set in December 2023. Natural gas production totaled 128,058 million cubic feet per day in February — also just short of the December 2023 record of 128,883 MMcf/d.

The increase in production has helped the bottom line of many companies, too. The two largest integrated petroleum companies based in the U.S., ExxonMobil and Chevron, reported healthy financials this week.

ExxonMobil reported $8.2 billion in net profit, and Chevron said it had a net profit of $5.5 billion during the first quarter, January-March.

Oil prices averaged $80 per barrel, but natural gas has been fighting a large oversupply and unusually low prices just below $2 MMcf. EIA estimated natural gas consumption in February 2024 was 102.4 Bcf/d — a 2.8% decrease compared with February 2023, 105.3 Bcf/d.

It was the lowest daily rate of natural gas consumption for the month since 2018, according to EIA.

U.S. electricity generation from wind turbines decreased for the first time since the mid-1990s in 2023 despite the addition of 6.2 gigawatts of new wind capacity last year, according to EIA. U.S. wind generation in 2023 totaled 425,235 gigawatt hours, 2.1% less than the 434,297 GWh generated in 2022.

U.S. wind capacity increased steadily over the last several years, more than tripling from 47.0 GW in 2010 to 147.5 GW at the end of 2023, the EIA said.

“The 2023 decline in wind generation indicates that wind as a generation source is maturing after decades of rapid growth,” the EIA stated.

Nuclear power got a boost this week with the announced completion of a nuclear power reactor in Georgia.

Georgia Power said Unit 4 of the reactor at Plant Vogtle has entered commercial operation, which completes the 11-year expansion project.

Vogtle Unit 3 began commercial operation in July 2023. The plant’s first two reactors, with a combined 2,430 megawatts of nameplate capacity, began operations in 1987 and 1989.

The two new reactors bring Plant Vogtle’s total generating capacity to nearly 5 gigawatts, surpassing the 4,210-MW Palo Verde plant in Arizona and making Vogtle’s four units the largest nuclear power plant in the United States.

Construction at the two new reactor sites began in 2009. Originally expected to cost $14 billion and begin commercial operation in 2016, Vogtle 3, and in 2017, Vogtle 4, the project ran into significant construction delays and cost overruns.

Georgia Power now estimates the total cost of the project to be more than $30 billion, the EIA said.

No nuclear reactors are under construction now in the United States, the EIA said.

Alex Mills is the former President of the Texas Alliance of Energy Producers.

This article originally appeared on Wichita Falls Times Record News: Mills: Energy industry surges as demand rises

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