石油价格


美国第二大产油州新墨西哥州近年来在美国顶级页岩油田二叠纪盆地蓬勃发展的带动下,石油和天然气产量和收入创下了历史新高。

 过去两年, 新墨西哥州 推动了二叠纪盆地石油产量的增长。例如,美国能源信息署 去年援引 Enverus 的数据称,该州东南角的两个县 Lea 和 Eddy 占二叠纪盆地所有原油产量的 29%。

随着新墨西哥州石油和天然气产量的激增,该行业为州库带来的收入也随之增加。

然而,立法者和分析人士表示,新墨西哥州需要为该州石油和天然气产量以及州收入的下降做好准备,预计这种下降将在 2030 年代初开始出现。

此外,如果该州要实现其雄心勃勃的减排和气候目标,还需要付出更多努力来减少温室气体排放。

美国环境保护基金会 (EDF) 2023 年的一项 分析 显示,新墨西哥州还远未实现其 2025 年和 2030 年的减排目标。该州承诺到 2030 年将温室气体排放量在 2005 年的基础上减少至少 45%,随后又承诺到 2025 年至少减少 26%,到 ​​2030 年减少 50%。

但 EDF 的分析发现,截至 2023 年 9 月,预计新墨西哥州到 2025 年的排放量将仅比 2005 年的水平减少 1%,到 2030 年将减少 13%。

这表明,该州的减排目标还不到  民主党州长米歇尔·卢汉·格里沙姆 (Michelle Lujan Grisham) 所作的 2030 年承诺所需减排量的三分之一。

美国电力公司表示,“除非新墨西哥州领导人迅速采取行动,制定全面的政策,对气候污染设定可执行的限制,并允许新墨西哥州充分利用联邦气候和清洁能源资金”,否则新墨西哥州将无法实现其减排目标。”

“当前的政策并没有持续地减少总体排放量,预计该州在未来十年的气候污染排放量将比按照最新科学稳步减少排放量时多出 21%。”

但造成大量排放的石油和天然气行业却为新墨西哥州带来了巨额收入。

新墨西哥州石油和天然气协会 (NMOGA)表示, 2023 年,该行业为新墨西哥州提供了 139 亿美元的州和地方收入,其中 75 亿美元进入普通基金,另有 64 亿美元进入非普通基金 

新墨西哥州立法财务委员会 (LFC) 上周报告称,  2023 财年采掘业收入为 152 亿美元 ,因为该州的石油和天然气收入在过去五年中增长了四倍多。

新墨西哥州预计未来几年将继续从石油和天然气中获得高额收入。立法者和经济学家上周表示,该州已采取措施确保其普通基金中有足够的储备,以防石油行业再次出现衰退,但需要减少对该行业向地方政府提供的房产税收入的依赖。

《阿尔伯克基日报》刊登了立法经济学家詹妮弗·福比恩 (Jennifer Faubion) 的言论,“我们有足够的储备资金,这是非常好的,因为石油和天然气永远是一个不稳定的行业。”

新墨西哥州 去年年底表示,创纪录的石油收入可能到 2030 年开始下降 。经济学家制定的《普通基金共识收入估计》强调,石油和天然气的强劲增长推动了当前收入,但随着全球需求的减弱,它们后来成为收入增长的拖累因素。

上周,新墨西哥州地方法院作出裁决,允许  对州长、立法机构和机构提起诉讼,指控他们未能履行宪法赋予的防止石油和天然气钻探污染的义务,这也凸显了新墨西哥州的困境。

 

作者:Tsvetana Paraskova,来自 Oilprice.com


原文链接/OilandGas360

Oil Price


The second-largest oil-producing U.S. state, New Mexico, has seen record oil and gas output and revenues in recent years on the back of the booming activity in the Permian, the top U.S. shale field.

New Mexico has driven the Permian’s oil production growth over the past two years. For example, two counties in the southeastern corner of the state, Lea and Eddy, accounted for 29% of all crude oil production in the Permian Basin in the first half of 2023, the EIA said last year, citing data from Enverus.

As New Mexico’s oil and gas production surges, so is the revenue from the industry for the state coffers.

New Mexico, however, needs to prepare for a decline in the state’s oil and gas production—and state revenues—expected to begin in the early 2030s, legislators and analysts say.

Additionally, the state needs to do a lot more to cut greenhouse gas emissions if it is going to meet its ambitious emission reduction and climate goals.

A 2023 analysis from the Environmental Defense Fund (EDF) showed that New Mexico is nowhere near reaching its 2025 and 2030 emission reduction goals. The state has committed to reducing GHG emissions by at least 45% by 2030, from 2005 levels, and has subsequently pledged to make at least a 26% reduction by 2025 and a 50% reduction by 2030.

But as of September 2023, New Mexico was projected to reduce emissions by just 1% by 2025 and 13% by 2030 from 2005 levels, the EDF analysis found.

This suggests that the state is on track to reduce emissions by less than one-third of what is necessary to meet 2030 commitments made by Democratic Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham.

New Mexico will miss by a mile its emission reduction targets “unless the state leaders act quickly to adopt comprehensive policies that set an enforceable limit on climate pollution and allow New Mexico to take full advantage of federal climate and clean energy funding,” EDF said.

“Current policies are not reducing overall emissions in a persistent manner, leaving the state projected to emit 21% more climate pollution over the course of the decade than if it were steadily reducing emissions in line with the latest science.”

But the oil and gas sector, responsible for a lot of these emissions, is creating a bonanza for New Mexico’s state revenues.

In 2023, the industry provided $13.9 billion in state and local revenues for New Mexico, with $7.5 billion going to the general fund and another $6.4 billion to the non-general fund, the New Mexico Oil and Gas Association (NMOGA) says.

New Mexico’s Legislative Finance Committee (LFC) reported last week a revenue of $15.2 billion from the extractive industry for the fiscal year 2023, as oil and gas revenue to the state has more than quadrupled over the past five years.

New Mexico expects the coming years to continue bringing high revenues from oil and gas. The state has taken steps to ensure it has enough reserves in the General Fund in case of another oil industry bust, but needs to rely less on the sector for property tax income that goes to local governments, lawmakers and economists said last week.

“We have enough money in reserves, which is a great place to be, because oil and gas will always be a volatile industry,” legislative economist Jennifer Faubion said, as carried by the Albuquerque Journal.

The record revenues from oil could start to decline by 2030, New Mexico said at the end of last year. The General Fund Consensus Revenue Estimate drawn by economists “highlights oil and gas strength as driving current revenues while later becoming a drag on revenue growth as global demand wanes.”

Highlighting New Mexico’s dilemma is also last week’s decision by a district court to allow a lawsuit to proceed against the state’s governor, legislature, and agencies for failing to uphold their state constitutional duty to protect against pollution from oil and gas drilling.

 

By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com