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President Barack Obama is firing back at criticism of his energy policies with a television campaign ad airing in Virginia and many other states. Under President Obama, domestic oil production is at an eight-year high, the announcer intones as charts appear on the screen. The commercial says Big Oil is against Obama because he wants to take away its tax breaks and supports development of alternative fuels. It says Mitt Romney, the frontrunner for the GOP presidential nomination, backs the oil companies’ positions. The ad makes a number of claims, but here we’ll focus on the assertion that, under Obama, American oil production is at an eight-year high. The PolitiFact national staff examined a similar statement in January, made in the president’s State of the Union address, and rated it Mostly True . We’ll update the assessment based on some new data. We turned to the Energy Information Administration, the federal government’s official office for energy statistics. Since Obama said oil production, we looked at crude oil extracted from U.S. territory. Here are the annual totals , in barrels produced, going back to 2003: 2003: 2,073,453,000 2004: 1,983,302,000 2005: 1,890,106,000 2006: 1,862,259,000 2007: 1,848,450,000 2008: 1,811,817,000 2009: 1,956,596,000 2010: 2,000,521,000 2011: 2,065,366,000 The data shows that domestic oil production is in fact at its highest level in eight years. Obama campaign claims. Only one month of statistics is available for 2012 . They show that in January, the U.S. produced 188.9 million barrels of oil, the largest monthly output since August 1998. Although the numbers are rising, production levels actually have remained pretty stable over the last nine years. Last year’s output was only 14 percent higher than the lowest year during that span. So the increase the Obama campaign cites is not particularly dramatic. In addition, levels of production were typically higher from the 1950s to the 1990s. Does Obama deserve credit for the recent increase? Federal lands, which the president controls, produced 31.8 percent of domestic oil last year, slightly below the nine-year average of 33.4 percent, according to an EIA report . The increase in production last year came on state and privately-owned lands, which yielded almost 150 million barrels more than 2010. In contrast, 2011 production on federal lands dropped by 83 million from a nine-year high mark achieved in 2010. Federal lands yielded 646 million barrels of oil in 2011, almost exactly the nine-year average. But production on federal land has remained steadily above the low-mark of 575 million barrels in 2008, the last year of the Bush administration. Our ruling Obama’s commercial is accurate in saying domestic oil production is at its highest level in eight years. The suggestion of the ad, however, overstates the administration’s role in achieving these results. Much of the increase in production during under Obama has come from state and private lands that the president does not control. So we rate the statement Mostly True.
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