The controversial practice of fracking - effectively squeezing the last drops of oil and natural gas out of the ground by pumping chemical solutions into the earth at high pressure - has rapidly restored the US as a fossil fuel superpower.
America has doubled its oil production in less than a decade and is not alone - Canada and Russia are using fracking to boost production.
There is plenty of bullishness about this in the US. Energy research group Platts speculated in October that the fracking revolution could see the US top Saudi Arabia as the world's largest oil producer by 2020.
Although the growth curve is that steep, it is a big call.
The Saudis and other Opec nations were prepared to bet against it last week in a move that pushed the price even lower. Rather than cut production now to prop up the plunging oil price, Opec has decided to keep pumping and take the financial hit in the hope that fracking's higher cost of production will render it uneconomic.
That's the long game. For now the net effect is that global oil prices have plunged. And that equals a massive stimulus for the US economy right when it needed it.
All of us are going to be reaping the benefit of fracked oil - regardless of how guilty we might feel about the environmental hypocrisy.
Opposition to fracking has been intense and high profile in the US. The oil industry will argue it's safe but the bottom line is that injecting highly toxic chemicals into the ground involves some risk. The industry is only ever one major environmental disaster away from tipping political support against it.
But for now the frackers are winning. There isn't a much more powerful influencer of US consumer sentiment than the price of filling up the car.
Meanwhile, lower oil prices are a mixed blessing for New Zealand. There is upside in anything that gets the US economy humming. A rising greenback will see our currency fall in relative terms, boosting export earnings.
The lower importing power of the Kiwi dollar will be offset as we experience the direct benefit from lower international oil prices. Oil is our single biggest import expense.
In the BNZ's latest Economy Watch report, economist Doug Steel crunches the numbers. Petroleum and products, at about $8 billion, account for around 16 per cent of New Zealand's annual merchandise import bill. So a sustained 25 per cent price drop would equate to a significant $2 billion annual saving.
You then have to weigh that against New Zealand's crude oil exports, Steel notes. These aren't insignificant at about $1.5 billion over the past year. But the difference still works out to an annual net saving of about $1.6 billion, or 0.7 per cent of GDP.
That is the good news. There's a down side.
Steel argues there appears to be a correlation between oil prices and dairy prices. Oil-producing nations are some of New Zealand's biggest dairy markets. They account for about 17 per cent of our dairy exports.
On balance, lower oil prices won't stop our current account deficit widening, he concludes. But still, in the short term savings will flow directly to the domestic economy as drivers spend less at the pump.
Of course this is all short-term stuff against a historic backdrop of global warming. You needn't be a hardcore greenie to see that this latest fossil fuel surge will cost us - or our children - eventually. You just have to read the science.
It is not just the enormous volume of extra carbon that fracked oil and gas will release. Low-cost oil and gas also send a price signal that risks seriously undermining the funding and development of green technologies.
In the end there will be a price to be paid for the savings we make at the pump this Christmas.