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Peter Zeihan Geopolitical Strategist
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The third shale revolution: Reshoring and deglobalization

Peter Zeihan Geopolitical Strategist
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The shale revolution has unlocked massive new energy reserves and spurred economic growth and development in the United States and worldwide. The first and second phases of the shale revolution pioneered and then scaled up new industries and technologies. The third and final component involves reshoring these industries back to the United States in the wake of deglobalization.

Straight Arrow News contributor Peter Zeihan reviews the range of products and industries that have been transformed by this final stretch of the shale revolution and explains how those transformations strengthen the broader American economy as a whole.

An excerpt from Zeihan’s Oct. 23 “Zeihan on Geopolitics” newsletter:

The third piece of the shale revolution is all about timing. As the world shifts from globalized supply chains to more localized and secure means of production, utilizing cheaper energy sources and products will be essential.

The U.S. has become the lowest-cost-highest-quality producer of intermediate materials, meaning much of the leg work to reshore supply chains and manufacturing has already been done. So what do we have to show for it?

Between agriculture, wiring, textiles, and refined products, the U.S. has shaken up dozens of industries and ramped up reshoring efforts. While industrial construction spending has grown significantly, we must maintain that growth to retain this newly added competitive advantage.

Reshaping the U.S. manufacturing landscape is no easy feat, but access to cheap power and materials surely doesn’t hurt. With the foundation already laid, the U.S. has a considerable leg up on other potential sources like China and the Persian Gulf.

Hi, everyone, Peter Zion coming to you from Colorado where fall has firmly set in. Today we’re gonna do the third part of a three part series on the shale revolution, the third shale revolution. Phase One was the production side. Phase two is processing and turning things into fuels and intermediate materials that we use in pretty much everything. And the third revolution is the everything. One of the truisms of the last 70 years of globalization has been that material production and manufacturing moves to wherever the competitive advantage happens to be, regardless of national identity. And that means that a lot of energy intensive industries moved out of the United States, particularly after 1973. Because oil prices were cheaper or electricity cut prices were cheaper, natural gas prices were cheaper.

 

Or the processing process was less expensive, usually due to things like labor and environmental restrictions that we might have here that we don’t have in places like say, China or Egypt.

 

That is in the process of unwinding that. Between D globalization and a new appreciation for national security as a component of economic activity, more and more things are being reshot. And the shale revolution has gotten us a jump on this because the shale revolution has provided the United States with cheaper oil, cheaper natural gas, cheaper electricity and cheaper chemical products than anywhere else on the planet. In part, that’s because natural gas is largely a byproduct here. But mostly, it’s because the breakeven price and a lot of shale fields is now very, very low. And in fact, in the Permian Basin, which is the largest one of the United States, which is responsible for over a third of our overall energy production. It’s less than $11 a barrel on average, compared to say places like Saudi Arabia, where it’s really cheap, but still more than 20, or places like Russia, where with all of their Siberian work, you’re talking 3040, and even $50 a barrel. So huge price advantage, in addition to the changing understandings of security. And what that means is the United States already, this isn’t something that’s in the future already is the lowest cost highest quality, lowest pollution indexed producer of every one of the intermediate industrial materials that can come from energy products. And what we’re seeing now in this third phase of the shale revolution, is those are being turned into manufactured goods. And it’s really difficult to find manufacturing sub sector, where this is not a game changer. Let me just hit a few of the highlights. First of all agriculture, natural gas has turned into nitrogen based fertilizers. So with where the US is now the world’s largest producer, and we’re seeing more and more of that value add chain come back. Even when the United States became the largest producer of natural gas and ethane, we were still shipping the intermediate products abroad primarily to places like the Middle East or China, for processing to finish fertilizer that is changing day by day. For those of you think we should go organic, oh God, you are so bad at math. Organic fertilizers require multiple applications over the course of the year, which requires a lot more carbon input. In addition, they require about an order of magnitude more energy to produce in the first place. And if you’re going to be moving 678 10 times as much of the stuff you can imagine what the carbon footprint is for transport. The same goes for pesticides, most pesticides in the United States now are a once or twice and done for the season, as opposed to something you have to put on every few weeks, in case you want to go organic. Another industry that’s seen a lightning change is wiring, which I know doesn’t sound very sexy until you realize all these just go through your life. And look at everything that uses electricity that includes your car, even if it’s not a an electric car, anything with a wire has to have a co team. And those coatings are almost exclusively produced with some sort of petroleum derivative. Normally the wires are pulled from the metal close to the point of manufacture. So every industry that reassures is going to do more and more of that at home. And since the coatings coming from a petroleum derivative, the United States now has a huge economic advantage in addition to the security advantage over almost every other player.

 

This means that whether it is automotive or electronics or semiconductors, there’s a fairly large petroleum footprint that has nothing to do with energy. One of the things that folks forget is that we use petroleum for a lot more things than just burning. And before 2015 About 1/5 of the oil that the United States use was used and refined products that were not fuels. As we doubled the size of the industrial plant over the next several years. That number is probably going to at least double especially if we continue down this path of Evermore fuel efficient vehicles. More and more of the petroleum we use will be used for things where it’s not burned, which means that the carbon footprint is an order of magnitude less than it is for say gasoline. Okay, what’s another one? Textiles. Not everything is cotton anymore. Any type of synthetic fabric like you know what I’m

 

what I’m wearing right here, that is 100% of natural gas and petroleum derivative. And as such, that is the front

 

You’re in low carbon clothes making because you don’t have to grow this. It’s just a byproduct of a natural, natural, but an industrial process, where very little is actually emitted polymers are all like that. Let’s see what else semiconductors I mean, obviously, the silicon is important. And obviously you need dopey materials. But those doping materials as a rule involve a lot of petroleum materials. And there’s wiring throughout the entire process. In fact, it’s difficult to find a manufacturing sector, where a petroleum derivative is not one of the top three or four components in it. That’s true for automotive, that’s true for aerospace. That’s true for white goods. That’s true for heavy equipment. And now that all of these materials are already being produced here, it’s really easing the pace at which the United States is reshoring industry from the rest of the world. So we’ve seen industrial construction spending spending in the United States expand by roughly a factor of eight, since just five years ago. And it’s almost tripled in just the last 18 months. This is a good start, we need to do a lot more, because we need to expand what we’ve done in these last five years by at least a factor of four and hold it there for at least another five years, and that will be inflationary, and that will lead to labor disputes. And there’s a fierce competition among the American states as to where this stuff is going to go. But the fact that the shale revolution has given us cheap power and cheap materials to do it at whatever scale we want.

 

From a certain point of view, a lot of the hard stuff is already done. Everything else is a known quantity. Anyone else who wants to do this ultimately is going to have to import those materials. And there are only three real sources afford them at scale, China, the Persian Gulf in here

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