Some 394,000 to 859,000 U.S. jobs could be created annually from
2016 to 2030 by lifting the ban, according to the IHS report,
titled: "Unleashing the Supply Chain: Assessing the Economic Impact
of a U.S. crude oil free trade policy."
Only 10 percent of the jobs would be created in actual oil
production, while 30 percent would come from the supply chain, and
60 percent would come from the broader economy, the report said. The
supply chain jobs would be created in industries that support
drilling, such as oil field trucks, construction, information
technology and rail.
Many of the jobs would be created in Florida, Washington, New York,
Massachusetts, and other states that are not known as oil producers.
"The jobs story extends across the supply chain, right across the
United States," said Daniel Yergin, a vice chairman at IHS and an
oil historian. "It's not just an oil patch story, it's a U.S.
story."
Record spare U.S. crude oil supplies caused by the drilling boom of
the last five years have put pressure on the Obama administration
and Congress to lift the country's ban on oil exports. Congress put
the ban in place after the 1970s Arab oil embargo led to fears of
energy shortages, and only a few lawmakers including Republicans
Senator Lisa Murkowski and U.S. Representative Joe Barton support
lifting the restriction.
Many other lawmakers have been hesitant to support relaxing the ban,
fearing they could be blamed for any unrelated rise in gas prices.
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In New York, a state that maintains a ban on hydraulic fracturing,
or fracking, for natural gas, jobs for the drilling business have
been created in big data analytics and database management. The
number of those jobs would rise if the ban was lifted, said the
report. In Illinois, jobs would be created in durable manufacturing
of engines and machine tools and mining for fracking sand.
The report, sponsored by energy companies including ConocoPhillips
<COP.N>, Exxon Mobil <XOM.N> and Pioneer Natural Resources <PXD.N>,
assumed there would be no slowdown in drilling due to campaigns by
environmental or other groups.
(Reporting by Timothy Gardner; Editing by Ken Wills)
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