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...
By: Amy R. Sisk – The Bismark Tribune – North Dakota has ranked as the nation’s second-biggest oil producer for nine years,...
By: Ron Bousso, Jessica Resnick-Ault, David French – Reuters – The sale could be for part or all of Shell’s position in...
The energy sector is off to a lower start, pressured by weakness in the crude complex. U.S stocks are expected to open slightly higher ahead of minutes from the Federal Reserve’s November policy meeting.
WTI and Brent crude oil futures are down this morning as the Group of Seven Nations considers a price cap on Russian oil and on demand concerns amid growing COVID-19 cases in China. According to European officials, the group is looking to cap Russian oil at a range of $65-70/bbl. A U.S Treasury official said the price cap will most likely be adjusted a few times a year. As of late Tuesday, China ramped up their COVID-19 containment measures in an effort to control the outbreaks. Today’s losses have been limited by a fall in U.S crude inventories which were down by 4.8 million barrels last week.
Natural gas futures are sharply higher after ending mostly unchanged yesterday amid worries of a possible rail strike and delays in the restart of the Freeport LNG export plant which outweighed forecasts for milder weather than previously expected.
Billionaire Harold Hamm’s takeover of Continental Resources, Inc. and return to private ownership is for all practical purposes complete.
The Oklahoma City company he founded in the 1960s announced Tuesday it was initiating the final steps in closing its previously announced merger with Omega Acquisition, Inc. Omega is the company created by Hamm and his family to launch the takeover that was started last June.
The announcement stated that shares of Continental common stock are expected to cease trading on the New York Stock Exchange prior to the market open on Wednesday, Nov. 23, and will no longer be listed for trading on the exchange.
The Trump administration is once again turning its attention to Alaska, sending three Cabinet...
In a surprising legal development, the New Mexico Court of Appeals has dismissed a...
On June 3, Viper Energy (NASDAQ: VNOM), a subsidiary of Diamondback Energy, announced it...
by Andreas Exarheas|RigZone.com| A statement posted on OPEC’s website on Saturday announced that Saudi Arabia,...
Story By Alex Kimani for Oilprice.com | Saudi Arabia is getting ready to engage...
A quiet energy revolution is unfolding in Appalachia, where natural gas from the Marcellus...
Published by Kristian Ilasko, Digital Content Coordinator | Hydrocarbon Engineering | Although global oil demand...
By David O. Williams |RealVail.com| President Donald Trump is poised to issue an executive order...
Mexico’s private oil producer Hokchi Energy is locked in a high-stakes standoff with Pemex...
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...
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