By: EIA – Natural gas pipeline exports from the United States to Mexico surpassed 7 billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d) on...
WHERE IT BEGINS Just over a week before the presidential election, Mizuho Americas laid out what it saw as the likely shift...
By: Renée Jean – Williston Herald – The Bakken was the only shale play in America to improve production efficiency per well...
By: Reuters – Oil edged up towards $69 a barrel on Tuesday as a tight physical market offset some of the COVID-19...
By: Reuters – U.S. investment bank Goldman Sachs said the OPEC+ deal to boost oil supply supports its view on oil prices...
Greenland has ended its 50-year ambition to become an oil-producing nation after announcing on July 16 it would suspend a strategy of...
By: Judith Kohler – The Denver Post – Two of the biggest mergers in the oil and gas industry this year took...
By: Greg Avery – Denver Business Journal – A private equity-backed business has acquired a Denver-based oil and gas company with thousands...
By: Reuters Staff – Reuters – U.S. oil and gas mergers surged last quarter with the most $1 billion-plus deals since 2014,...
David Hasemyer, Inside Climate News – The Trans-Alaska Pipeline, one of the world’s largest oil pipelines, could be in danger due to...
Oil prices fell sharply Monday, setting the stage for U.S. average gasoline prices to potentially drop below $3 per gallon for the first time since 2021, with the U.S. presidential election approaching. According to GasBuddy data, regular unleaded gas averaged $3.08 per gallon Monday afternoon, down nearly 13 cents from a month ago and 40 cents below last year's prices.
With refinery maintenance season nearing its end and global supplies remaining plentiful, OPIS analyst Tom Kloza sees "no real catalyst" for gas prices to rise. CIBC Private Wealth's Rebecca Babin suggests prices should remain stable barring any disruptions from geopolitical or weather events, as long as crude prices stay low.
(Reuters) -Oil prices tumbled 6% on Monday, or more than $4 a barrel, after Saturday's retaliatory strike by Israel against Iran's military bypassed oil and nuclear facilities, not disrupting energy supplies.
Brent futures settled at $71.42 a barrel, down $4.63 or 6.09%. WTI U.S. crude futures finished at $67.38 a barrel, down $4.40 or 6.13%.
Both Brent and U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures hit their lowest since Oct. 1 at the open.
"This is a perfect example of a headline-driven market," said Phil Flynn, senior analyst at Price Futures Group. "We still have a lot of geopolitical risk."
Behind the rolling plains and rocky outcrops of southwestern Oklahoma, a quiet transformation is...
On June 3, Viper Energy (NASDAQ: VNOM), a subsidiary of Diamondback Energy, announced it...
A key hearing is set for this Friday in Big Spring, Texas, in a...
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A quiet energy revolution is unfolding in Appalachia, where natural gas from the Marcellus...
Mexico’s private oil producer Hokchi Energy is locked in a high-stakes standoff with Pemex...
By David O. Williams |RealVail.com| President Donald Trump is poised to issue an executive order...
The World Bank has made a landmark decision by lifting its long-standing ban on...
By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com| The 411,000 barrels daily that OPEC+ said it would...
Tensions between Israel and Iran have sparked a surge in oil prices this June,...
By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com | A total of 93 oil and gas firms...
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