Petroleum industry’s total economic value for California—larger than 15 U.S. state economies
A new economic study released today by The Los Angeles County Economic Development Corporation (LAEDC) details the oil and gas industry’s sizable economic and fiscal impacts on California’s economy and also identifies the user industries of refined products and quantifying their economic activity today.
The Western States Petroleum Association (WSPA) commissioned the LAEDC to study the economic contribution of the oil and gas industry in California for the year 2015, as well as identifying user industries of refined products most vulnerable to cost increases, supply restrictions and competitive pressures from outside the state.
Oil & Gas is major employer, leading economic driver
The report shows the oil and gas industry as a major employer and leading economic driver in California, responsible for 368,100 jobs in 2015, or 1.6 percent of California’s employment, with almost $66 billion in total value-added, contributing 2.7 percent of California’s state GDP.
The oil and gas industry also makes significant fiscal contributions to California’s state and local governments, including more than $26.4 billion in state and local tax revenues and $28.5 billion in sales and excise taxes.
Vulnerable industries of refined petroleum products like transportation/warehousing, manufacturing and agriculture represent 1.7 million jobs in California with an associated $111 billion in labor income and contributing 8.4 percent to the state’s GDP.
“The oil and gas industry supports 77,846 jobs in Los Angeles County alone,” said Dr. Somjita Mitra of the LAEDC. “Industry activities in the county generate more than $6.9 billion in tax revenues.”
By Oil and Gas 360
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Currently the average carbon intensity (CI) of California crude oil is 14gCO2e/MJ, while imported Saudi oil is only 7g. Environmental regulations place increasing costs on the industry, and refiners may simply decide it's cheaper to import more and more low-CI crudes, a serious threat to California's upstream oil production and jobs.
The solution is as simple as it is elegant. Most the CI comes from the massive amounts of CO2 burnt for steam in EOR. Large-scale turn-key solar EOR systems can be deployed today (for example Solarlite's), which provide the same steam at the same gas price as today: $3-3.50/mmbtu
This will dramatically lower CO2 emissions, improve local air quality, and not only preserve 1000s of current oil jobs, but also create 1000s of new ones in industries of the future like solar.