Production of Crude Oil (Thousand Barrels Per Day), 2006-Feb.2011
Rank
|
State
|
Feb 2011
|
Jan 2011
|
Full Year 2010
|
Full Year 2009
|
Full Year 2008
|
Full Year 2007
|
Full Year 2006
|
1.
|
Texas
|
1,224
|
1,250
|
1,141
|
1,106
|
1,087
|
1,087
|
1,088
|
2.
|
Alaska
|
611
|
464
|
599
|
645
|
683
|
722
|
741
|
3.
|
California
|
555
|
550
|
558
|
567
|
586
|
594
|
612
|
4.
|
North Dakota
|
360
|
341
|
307
|
218
|
172
|
123
|
109
|
5.
|
Oklahoma
|
188
|
197
|
186
|
184
|
175
|
167
|
172
|
6.
|
Louisiana
|
187
|
185
|
182
|
189
|
199
|
210
|
202
|
7.
|
New Mexico
|
178
|
185
|
171
|
168
|
162
|
161
|
164
|
8.
|
Wyoming
|
143
|
146
|
142
|
141
|
145
|
148
|
145
|
Top 8 States
|
3,446
|
3,318
|
3,286
|
3,218
|
3,209
|
3,212
|
3,233
| |
U.S. Total
|
5,612
|
5,483
|
5,512
|
5,361
|
4,950
|
5,064
|
5,102
|
Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), June 29, 2011, here and here.
(In 2010, almost 60% of U.S. crude oil production came from eight States: Texas - 20.7%; Alaska - 10.9%; California - 10.1%; North Dakota - 5.6%; Oklahoma - 3.4%; Louisiana - 3.3%; New Mexico - 3.1%; and Wyoming - 2.6%. About 30% of U.S. crude oil was produced from wells located offshore in federally administered waters of the Gulf of Mexico. Update: please see my post "Five States Accounted for about 56% of Total U.S. Crude Oil Production in 2011." Update 2: North Dakota passed Alaska in March 2012 to become the second-leading state in
crude oil production, trailing only Texas---please see my post "North Dakota Tops Alaska in Oil Production, Trailing Only
Texas." Also, please see our post "U.S. Crude Oil Production, 1970-2010." -- D.R.)
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