(Reuters) – Royal Dutch Shell Plc plans to leave Aera, its California-based oil and gas-producing joint venture with Exxon Mobil Corp, four...
By: Joshua Mann – Houston Business Journal – Private equity investment in the oil and gas business could begin to pick up...
By: Matthew Brown and Felicia Fonseca – Associated Press – On oil well pads carved from the wheat fields around Lake Sakakawea,...
As banks pull back from energy lending, a variety of funds, including some of the world’s biggest, are rushing in to fill...
By: Bill Holland – S&P Global Market Intelligence – Designed with input from the financial and regulatory communities, the largest oil and...
By: Corina Ricker – EIA – In our June 2021 Short-Term Energy Outlook (STEO), we forecast U.S. natural gas prices to increase during...
By: Stephen Cunningham – Rystad Energy – Private equity is finally seeing some upside from shale investments, after treading water for the...
By: Michael Lynch – Forbes – Production of oil and gas from shale has been a modern marvel, and one that has...
By: Robert Tuttle – Bloomberg – Maine became the first U.S. state to enact a law requiring divestment from fossil fuels, after...
By: Jack Money – The Oklahoman – An oil and gas company claims in a lawsuit filed last week that a representative...
Pressure-pumper Liberty Energy Inc. has followed rig operator Helmerich & Payne (H&P) in U.S. wildcatters Bryan Sheffield and Dick Stoneburner’s development of Australian shale.
Liberty invested US$10 million in Australia-brd Tamboran Resources and plans to send a frac fleet to the play in the Beetaloo Basin next year in northern Australia south of Darwin, Tamboran reported.
Liberty’s entry rounds out the upstream portion of Tamboran’s plan to develop the basin’s Marcellus-like rock—the Mid-Velkerri B—providing frac services in well completion post-H&P drilling.
The frac fleet is expected to arrive in 2024. H&P sent a modern rig, a FlexRig 3, to the play earlier this year.
First responders, the Midland Police Department and the Midland Fire Department were called to a fire located inside the historic Petroleum Building in downtown Midland during the evening hours on Monday.
According to reports, the fire was on the ninth floor of the building. The building owner, David Arrington, said that there were no injuries reported during the incident.
T. S. Hogan, a Montana attorney, rancher and oilman, came to the Permian Basin in 1925 and became active in the oil business. In 1927, Hogan announced the construction of the Petroleum Building.
The Petroleum Building was designed by the Fort Worth architect Wyatt C. Hendrick and completed in 1929. The building has long played a significant role in the history of Midland, as well as casting a significant role in the development of the city.
It sounds like something out of a Netflix crime drama, but this one’s all...
In a move that is raising eyebrows across the global oil industry, ConocoPhillips has...
According to sources cited by Bloomberg, Shell is quietly exploring a potential takeover of...
A Houston-based fuel company says Tesla still hasn’t paid for millions of dollars’ worth...
Gavin Maguire| LITTLETON, Colorado-(Reuters) | U.S. exports of LNG so far this year have...
Source: EIA | Higher oil prices, increased drilling efficiency, and structurally lower debt needs...
by Bloomberg|David Wethe, Alix Steel | Energy Secretary Chris Wright sought to reassure US...
After months of tough negotiations and political tension, the United States and Ukraine have...
The global oil market is facing one of its most complex periods in recent...
By Starr Spencer | S&P Global | Chevron, one of the biggest producers in the...
Russia and Iran have cemented a preliminary energy pact that could dramatically reshape regional...
Bloomberg Wire | Gulf News | Saudi Arabia’s progress in securing investment in two...
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