Trends in Economic Activity
Strong Economic Growth Is Expected To Continue Through 2030
AEO2007 presents three views of economic growth for the projection period
from 2005 through 2030. In the reference case, the Nations economic growth,
measured in terms of real GDP, is projected to average 2.9 percent per
year (Figure 24). The labor force is projected to grow by 0.8 percent per
year on average; labor productivity growth in the nonfarm business sector
is projected to average 2.3 percent per year; and investment growth is
projected to average 3.8 percent per year. Disposable income grows by 3.1
percent per year in the reference case and disposable income per capita
by 2.3 percent per year. Nonfarm employment grows by 1.0 percent per year,
while employment in manufacturing shrinks by 0.5 percent per year.
The high and low economic growth cases show the effects of alternative
economic growth assumptions on the energy market projections. In the high
growth case, real GDP growth is projected to average 3.4 percent per year
as a result of higher assumed growth rates for the labor force (1.0 percent
per year), nonfarm employment (1.3 percent), and productivity (2.8 percent).
With higher productivity gains and employment growth, projected inflation
and interest rates are lower than in the reference case. In the low growth
case, slower growth in real GDP growth is projected, averaging 2.2 percent
per year, as a result of lower assumed growth rates for the labor force
(0.5 percent per year), nonfarm employment (0.6 percent per year), and
productivity (1.9 percent per year). Consequently, the low growth case
projects higher inflation and interest rates and slower growth in industrial
output.
Inflation, Interest, and Jobless Rates Fall Below Historical Averages
Common indicators for inflation, interest rates and employment are, respectively,
the all-urban consumer price index (CPI-U), the interest rate (yield) on
10-year U.S. Treasury notes, and the unemployment rate, which are widely
viewed as barometers of conditions in the markets for goods and services,
credit, and labor, respectively. In AEO2007, the projected average annual
inflation rate over the 2005-2030 period, as measured by the all-urban
CPI, is 2 percent in the reference case, 1.5 percent in the high economic
growth case, and 2.5 percent in the low growth case (Figure 25). Annual
yields on the 10-year Treasury note are projected to average 5.6 percent
in the reference case, 5.1 percent in the high growth case, and 6.1 percent
in the low growth case. The projections for average unemployment rates
are 4.7 percent in the reference case, 4.6 percent in the high growth case,
and 4.9 percent in the low growth case. Relative to the reference case,
the higher inflation, interest, and unemployment rates in the low growth
case and the lower rates in the high growth case depend on different assumptions
about labor productivity and population growth rates.
Historically, from 1980 to 2005, inflation has averaged 3.5 percent per
year, the average yield on 10-year Treasury notes has been 7.7 percent
per year, and the unemployment rate has averaged 6.2 percent. In the reference
case and also in the high and low economic growth cases for AEO2007, projected
gains in labor productivity are generally higher than the historical averages
of the 1980s, leading to more optimistic projections for inflation, interest,
and unemployment rates.
Output Growth for Energy-Intensive Industries Is Expected To Slow
The industrial sector (all non-service industries) has shown slower output
growth than the economy as a whole in recent decades, with imports meeting
a growing share of demand for industrial goods. That trend is expected
to continue in the AEO2007 reference case. The average annual growth rate
for real GDP from 2005 to 2030 is 2.9 percent in the reference case, whereas
the industrial sector averages 2.0 percent. Within the industrial sector,
manufacturing output is projected to grow more rapidly than nonmanufacturing
output (which includes agriculture, mining, and construction). With higher
energy prices and more foreign competition expected, the energy-intensive
manufacturing sectors are projected to grow by only 1.4 percent per year
from 2005 through 2030, compared with a projected 2.6-percent average annual
rate of growth for the non-energy-intensive manufacturing sectors (Figure
26). The energy-intensive manufacturing sectors include food, paper, bulk
chemicals, petroleum refining, glass, cement, steel, and aluminum.
In the high economic growth case, output from the industrial sector as
a whole is projected to grow by an average of 2.8 percent per year, still
below the projected average of 3.4 percent for real GDP. In the low economic
growth case, with real GDP growth projected to average 2.2 percent per
year from 2005 through 2030, industrial output averages 1.2 percent annual
growth. In both cases, the highest growth rates are expected for the non-energy-intensive
manufacturing segment of the industrial sector, with lower rates projected
for the energy-intensive manufacturing and nonmanufacturing segments.
Energy Expenditures Relative to GDP Are Projected To Decline
Total expenditures for energy services in the U.S. economy were $1.0 trillion
in 2005. In the AEO2007 projections, energy expenditures in 2030 rise to
$1.3 trillion (2005 dollars) in the reference case and $1.5 trillion in
the high economic growth case (Figure 27). For the economy as a whole,
ratios of energy expenditures to GDP in 2005 were 8.4 percent for all energy,
4.8 percent for petroleum, and 1.6 percent for natural gas. Although recent
developments in the world oil market have pushed the expenditure shares
upward, in the reference case they are expected to decline from current
levels as the energy intensity of the U.S. economymeasured as energy consumption
(thousand Btu) per dollar of real GDPcontinues to decline and world oil
prices return to a relatively lower price path. Total energy expenditures
are projected to equal 5.3 percent of GDP in 2030, petroleum expenditures
3.0 percent, and natural gas expenditures less than 1 percent (Figure 28).
Oil Price Cases Show Uncertainty in Prospects for World Oil Markets
World oil price projections in the AEO2007, in terms of the average price
of imported low-sulfur, light crude oil to U.S. refiners, are higher for
2006-2014 than those presented in the AEO2006. The higher price path reflects
lower estimates of oil consumers sensitivity to higher prices (given that
the demand for oil has continued to grow despite the high prices of 2005-2006),
an anticipation of lower levels of future investment in production capacity
in key resource-rich regions due to political instability, access restrictions,
and a reassessment of OPEC producers ability to influence prices during
periods of volatility.
The historical record shows substantial variability in world oil prices,
and there is arguably even more uncertainty about future prices in the
long term. AEO2007 considers three price cases to illustrate the uncertainty
of prospects for future world oil resources and economics. In the reference
case, world oil prices moderate from current levels to about $50 per barrel
in 2014, before rising to $59 per barrel in 2030 (2005 dollars). The low
and high price cases reflect a wide range of potential world oil price
paths, ranging from $36 to $100 per barrel in 2030 (Figure 29), but they
do not bound the set of all possible future outcomes.
In all three price cases, non-OPEC suppliers produce at maximum capacity
based on world oil price levels. Thus, the variation in price paths has
the greatest impact on the need for OPEC supply in the long term. In 2030,
OPEC is expected to supply 47.6 million barrels per day in the reference
case and 54.7 million barrels per day in the low price case, but only 33.3
million barrels per day in the high price caseless than current OPEC production
levels.
Oil Imports in 2030 Approach
18 Million Barrels per Day
Total U.S. gross petroleum imports increase in the reference case from
13.7 million barrels per day in 2005 to 17.7 million in 2030 (Figure 30),
deepening U.S. reliance on imported oil in the long term. In 2030, gross
petroleum imports account for 66 percent of total U.S. petroleum supply
in the reference case, up from 60 percent in 2005.
U.S. gross petroleum imports in the high world oil price case are 25 percent
lower in 2030 than projected in the reference case, at 13.4 million barrels
per day. The higher price assumptions lead to increased profitability from
domestic production and reduced demand. In the low world oil price case,
imports increase to 20.8 million barrels per day in 2030. The projected
import shares of total U.S. petroleum supply in 2030 are 54 percent in
the high price case and 72 percent in the low price case.
Of the increase in gross imports in the reference case, 37 percent comes
from OPEC suppliers. West Coast refiners increase their imports of crude
oil from the Far East, to replace a decline in Alaskan oil supplies. Canada
and Mexico continue to be important sources of U.S. petroleum supply. Much
of the Canadian contribution comes from the development of its enormous
oil sands resource base.
Across the three price cases, U.S. gross petroleum imports shift toward
heavier crude oil and fewer refined petroleum products. Vigorous growth
in demand for lighter, low-sulfur petroleum in developing countries means
that U.S. refiners are likely to import smaller volumes of low-sulfur,
light crude oil and to increase the technical complexity of their refining
operations.
Unconventional Resources Gain Market Share as Prices Rise
The worlds total production of liquid fuels from unconventional resources
in 2005 was 2.8 million barrels per day, equal to about 3 percent of total
liquids production. Production from unconventional sources included 1.1
million barrels per day from oil sands in Canada, 600,000 barrels per day
from very heavy oils in Venezuela, and 260,000 barrels per day of ethanol
(172,000 barrels per day oil equivalent) in the United States. In the AEO2007 reference case, unconventional production is projected to make up 9 percent
of total liquids production (10.9 million barrels per day) in 2030.
Unconventional liquids production grows twice as fast in the high price
case as in the reference case (Figure 31), because unconventional supplies
are more competitive with conventional sources when market prices are higher.
In the high price case, unconventional production increases to about 20.1
million barrels per day worldwide in 2030, representing 20 percent of total
liquids production around the world. In the low price case, unconventional
production totals only 6.4 million barrels per day in 2030, or 5 percent
of total production.
More than 80 percent of the worlds unconventional resources are controlled
by non-OPEC nations. The total volumes of liquids production in non-OPEC
countries are fairly constant across the three world oil price cases in AEO2007, but non-OPEC unconventional production is significantly higher
in the high price case.
World Liquids Supply Is Projected To Remain Diversified in All Cases
In 2005, OPEC producers in the Persian Gulf accounted for 27 percent of
the worlds total oil supply, and other OPEC producers accounted for 13
percent. Europe and Eurasia produced 21 percent of the total supply, North
America 18 percent, and the rest of the world 20 percent (Figure 32). In
the reference case projections, those regional shares remain relatively
constant though 2030.
The largest change in regional production share is projected for non-OPEC
suppliers in Africa and the Middle East, which increase their share of
the world total from 6 percent in 2005 to 11 percent in 2030 in the reference
case. OPEC producers in the Persian Gulf are projected to increase their
share of the total by 2 percentage points from 2005 to 2030, and the share
of OPEC producers in other regions is projected to fall by 2 percentage
points.
In the low and high oil price cases, the OPEC Persian Gulf share in 2030
varies from 31 percent to 22 percent, respectively, as compared with 29
percent in the reference case. The changes across the three cases reflect
an expectation that OPEC suppliers will vary their production levels in
attempts to influence world oil prices. In the projections, OPEC revenues
and profits from oil exports vary by less than export volumes across the
cases.
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