* Rystad study includes yet to find oil
* Global reserves stand at 2.09 trillion barrels
* Venezuela reserves well below official data
The US holds the world's biggest recoverable reserves of oil putting
it ahead of OPEC giants Saudi Arabia and Venezuela as well as
Russia, according to an independent study by Norwegian research
group Rystad Energy.
In estimates which include potential reserves in recent discoveries
and in yet to be discovered fields, US reserves total 264 billion
barrels, ahead of 256 billion barrels in Russia and 212 billion
barrels in Saudi Arabia.
For the US, more than half of the remaining oil reserves are made up
of unconventional shale oil with Texas alone holding over 60 billion
barrels of shale oil, Rystad said Monday citing the new data.
Under a more conservative measure based on proven and probable
reserves in existing fields, however, the US holds 40 billion
barrels of oil, well below Saudi Arabia's 120 billion barrels but
almost double Venezuela's 22 billion barrels, the Rystad figures
show.
Rystad differentiates its estimates from those such as BP's
closely-watched Statistic Review, which are based on reporting from
national authorities often using an "opaque" set of reporting
standards.
Some OPEC countries like Venezuela, for example, report official
reserves apparently including yet undiscovered oil, Rystad noted,
while others like China and Brazil report conservative estimates
based only on existing fields. Rystad's own figures include just
crude and condensate, whereas BP's figures also include natural gas
liquids.
"An established standard approach for estimating reserves is applied
to all fields in all countries, so reserves can be compared apple to
apple across the world, both for OPEC and non-OPEC countries,"
Rystad said in a statement.
VENEZUELAN RESERVES HIT
Under the report, Venezuela sees the biggest impact from Rystad's
reserves criteria compared the country's official reported proven
oil reserves. Widely reported to hold the world's biggest oil
reserves ahead of Saudi Arabia, Venezuela only holds 95 billion
barrels of reserve under Rystad's widest measure, well below the
official estimates of 301 billion barrels.
Excluding estimates of yet to be discovered oil in Venezuela, the
OPEC member's oil reserves are on par with Brazil at 41 billion
barrels, making it OPEC's sixth largest reserves holder, the data
shows.
As a result, total OPEC oil reserves, excluding undiscovered fields,
make up just over half of the global total. By contrast, BP
estimates that more than than 70% of the world's reserves sits in
OPEC member countries.
Based on the widest measure, total global oil reserves currently
stand at 2.09 trillion barrels, Rystad said, compared to BP's latest
estimate of 1.69 trillion barrels at the end of 2015.
Based on current global crude and condensate production of 81.2
million b/d, or 30 billion barrels a year, the world's oil reserves
would last 71 years, Rystad said.
Unconventional oil recovery accounts for 30% of the global
recoverable oil reserves while offshore accounts for 33% of the
total.
The study confirms previous estimates by BP that the integrated oil
majors control a small fraction of the world's reserves. The world's
seven biggest oil companies hold less than 10% of the total
reserves, Rystad said.
--Robert Perkins,
robert.perkins@spglobal.com
--Edited by Jeremy Lovell,
jeremy.lovell@spglobal.com
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