自 2020 年以来,二叠纪盆地十个县占美国石油产量增长的 93%

2025年9月2日

根据美国能源信息署(EIA)的最新报告,2020年至2024年间,美国原油和租赁凝析油总产量将增长190万桶/日,其中93%仅来自德克萨斯州和新墨西哥州的10个县。美国其他地区(包括近海州或联邦水域的产区)的产量仅增长13万桶/日。 

这10个县均位于二叠纪盆地内,该盆地是新墨西哥州和德克萨斯州66个县的地壳下一个巨大的地质构造。其中两个县,新墨西哥州的利县和埃迪县,在2020年至2024年期间贡献了近100万桶/日的美国产量增长(52%)。德克萨斯州的马丁县和米德兰县贡献了额外的40万桶/日产量(21%)。根据Enverus的县级产量数据,德克萨斯州的另外六个县——安德鲁斯县、格拉斯科克县、霍华德县、洛文县、里根县和沃德县——共计增长了36万桶/日(19%)。

2024年,这10个县的原油和凝析油平均产量为480万桶/日,占美国总产量的37%。在这10个县中,贡献这一增长的主要地质单元是Bone Spring、Spraberry和Wolfcamp地层。

自 2020 年以来,这些地质单元一直是二叠纪盆地乃至整个美国石油产量增长的主要来源。美国致密油和页岩气层的原油和天然气产量可在《短期能源展望》表 10b 中找到。

 

原文链接/WorldOil

Ten Permian counties account for 93% of U.S. oil production growth since 2020

September 02, 2025

Between 2020 and 2024, total crude oil and lease condensate production in the United States grew by 1.9 million barrels per day (bpd), 93% of which was produced from just 10 counties in Texas and New Mexico, according to a new report from the Energy Information Administration (EIA). Production from the rest of the U.S., including producing areas in offshore state or federal waters, grew by just 130,000 bpd. 

The 10 counties are all within the Permian basin, a large geologic feature underlying 66 counties in New Mexico and Texas. Two of these counties, Lea and Eddy in New Mexico, accounted for nearly 1.0 million bpd of U.S. production growth (52%) between 2020 and 2024. Martin and Midland in Texas accounted for an additional 0.40 million bpd (21%). Six additional counties in Texas—Andrews, Glasscock, Howard, Loving, Reagan, and Ward—together grew by 0.36 million bpd (19%), based on county-level production data from Enverus.

Crude oil and lease condensate production in these 10 counties averaged 4.8 million bpd in 2024, 37% of the U.S. total. Within these 10 counties, the primary geologic units responsible for this growth are the Bone Spring, Spraberry, and Wolfcamp formations.

These geologic units have been the main sources of oil production growth across the Permian basin and the United States at large since 2020. Crude oil and natural gas production from U.S. tight oil and shale gas formations can be found in Table 10b in the Short-Term Energy Outlook.