Yes, our current rig count is around 664 working down from 2,000. We peaked around 4,500 in 1981 and stayed on the 850-1,000 range until around the year 2000 then up from there. We're more efficient now and need fewer rigs on diminishing opportunity with the technology we have for unconventional pay (shale plays). Rig count graph in link below:
http://www.eia.gov/dnav/ng/hist/e_ertrr0_xr0_nus_cM.htmNo one responsible in the business, except the bankers and lawyers, ever wanted oil to shoot above $85 a barrel. That always causes problems with oversupply and lots of lost jobs. $60 to $85 and we can make do instead of over 300,000 people without jobs today. Problem is that so much money goes overseas and our "oversupply" of 5 million extra barrels a day over what would have been without "shale plays" has helped in propping up the Obummer administration.
When the price of bottled water is more than capital intensive oil that tells you something. People want to pay for what they want...not what they need....I get that. But it would helps to have a floor price for domestic oil...say $50...Congress could do that with tariffs. That would stick it to the Arabs because we would ramp our production up more and cause a real oversupply in the world. They's be selling it for $20/bbl all day and the government could scoop up $30/bbl on a tariff.
But we'll do what we've been doing. Remember, 42 gallons in a barrel so the stock for gasoline is only 80 cents/gallon, add maybe 20 cents for refining. Of that 80 cents 20 to 22 cents goes to the mineral owner and 7 cents to state severance taxes. Wonder who is making the big bucks on it without the huge capital investment when you pay $1.50/gallon at the pump?

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