…Mark Haggerty, an economist with Headwaters Economics, a nonpartisan, nonprofit economic research group, studied the Bakken. “About one-third of all the gas there is just being flared off,” he said. “It’s just not what they’re after.”
Between the Eagle Ford and the Bakken, it’s estimated that five billion barrels of good oil will be produced before the wells either go dry or are no longer economically feasible. According to Hughes, that’s about a 10-month supply of oil for the United States — not exactly a game changer.
At first, Haggerty said, gas companies estimated that once the field was drilled out, “it would produce 3.5 million barrels of oil a day. The reality is that it will probably only reach one million barrels daily in the next two years, and then it will start dropping off.”
For Haggerty, the dropoff will not only affect the bottom lines of the companies invested in tight oil and shale gas but also the communities from which those resources are extracted.
“We’ve done a lot of work looking at tax revenues versus the costs to the community,” he said. “And the real issue is: How does a community cope with what happens after the boom goes bust? You want the drilling for the tax revenue and royalties and jobs it creates. But at some point the impacts generated by the industry — the industrial and social impacts — simply outstrip the benefits of drilling. And for some communities, in the long run, they can wind up worse than they might have been if there had been no drilling at all.”…