Surging shale oil volumes should allow the US to dethrone Russia and Saudi Arabia as the planet's leading crude oil producer.
The US hasn't been the global leader, nor ahead of both Russia and Saudi Arabia, since 1975.
"The market has completely changed due to the US shale machine," said Nadia Martin Wiggen, Rystad's vice president of markets.
The prediction shows how the fracking revolution has turned America into an energy powerhouse -- a transformation that President Donald Trump has vowed to accelerate by cutting regulation. This long-term shift has allowed the US to be less reliant on foreign oil, including from the turbulent Middle East, CNN Money reported citing research firm Rystad Energy.
Cheap prices forced shale companies in Texas, North Dakota and elsewhere to dial back. Domestic output bottomed at 8.55 million barrels per day in September 2016, down 11 per cent from the recent peak in April 2015, according to the US Energy Information Administration.
But the resilient oil industry, led by the shale hotbed of the Permian Basin of Western Texas, rebounded nicely last year. The comeback was driven by higher crude prices as well as new technology that makes it cheaper and easier to frack.
Rystad Energy is even bullish on American oil. The Norwegian firm sees US crude output hitting 11 million barrels per day by December, narrowly surpassing global leader Russia and OPEC kingpin Saudi Arabia.
Crude climbed above USD 61 a barrel yesterday for the first time over two years. The recent bump in prices has been driven by a pipeline explosion in Libya and protests in Iran.
In late November, OPEC and Russia agreed to extend oil production cuts until the end of 2018. The production cuts have helped stabilise oil prices, paving the way for US shale output to ramp up.
By contrast, Trump has vowed to usher in an era of "American energy dominance," in part by reducing red tape around oil drilling.
"I don't think it's had a significant impact," Rystad's Martin Wiggen said of Trump's efforts to roll back environmental regulations.
She added though that there is "not a fear under the Trump administration that he will suddenly outlaw shale."
Regardless of the driver, the ramp-up in oil pumping has lessened the need for the US to rely on oil from unstable places like Venezuela and the Middle East.
"The fact that the US produces more oil is a fantastic development in terms of security," said Martin Wiggen.
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