By: Bozorgmehr Sharafedin – Reuters – Almost one in three workers in the oil and gas industry faced pay cuts in 2020,...
HART ENERGY, by Emily Patsy. Northern Oil and Gas Inc. expanded its footprint in the Permian Basin during fourth-quarter 2020, the company...
By: Janet McGurty – S&P Global Platts – Phillips 66 is moving its emerging energy operations to a separate segment, which will...
By: Dan Eberhart – Forbes – Saudi Arabia’s decision Tuesday to cut an additional 1 million barrels a day of production in February...
By: Brandon Evans and Rachel Wiser – S&P Global Platts – Despite rig counts in the Bakken Shale remaining low due to...
DAYTON, Ohio (WKEF/WRGT) — While many people are hoping that 2021 will change a lot of what happened during 2020, but one...
LONDON (Bloomberg) by Grant Smith. As one of the most tumultuous years in oil’s history ends, a delicate task now confronts OPEC+....
Casper Star-Tribune. By Camille Erickson Via Wyoming News Exchange. CASPER – Rigs and the ubiquitous heads of pumpjacks, usually faithfully bobbing up...
S&P Global – After years of punishment as the shale gas boom imploded, many shale gas stocks outperformed major indexes and their...
RigZone.com. By Andreas Exarheas – Pacific Drilling S.A. (OTC: PACDQ) has announced that the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District...
The recent dip in oil prices, attributed to demand concerns arising from economic updates from Germany and China, highlights the ever-changing dynamics in the global energy market. With Brent and WTI crude prices falling to their lowest in a week, this movement underscores the sensitivity of oil markets to geopolitical and economic signals.
Brent Crude February futures fell 1% to $73.19 a barrel, the lowest since December 10. US crude futures due in January fell 0.9%, or 63 cents to $70.08 a barrel.
That puts both crude benchmarks on track for their lowest closes since Dec. 10 and cut the premium of Brent over WTI to a 12-week low of $3.56 a barrel, based on the February contracts.
U.S. stocks finished lower on Tuesday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average posting its longest losing streak since February 1978, as investors digested the strong retail-sales data and awaited the Federal Reserve's policy decision, due out on Wednesday afternoon.
The Dow fell 0.6% to end near 43,450, according to preliminary data from FactSet.
The S&P 500 was off 0.4% to finish around 6,050.
The Nasdaq Composite dropped 0.3%, ending around 20,109.
A long-overlooked shale play in South Texas might finally be showing signs of promise,...
By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com | Oil prices have been on the mend this...
In a stark reminder of the volatile energy landscape and the relentless drive for...
Over the past two decades, the U.S. shale revolution has dramatically transformed the global...
(UPI) — The Department of Interior on Thursday released an analysis of fossil fuel...
By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com | The average price of India’s crude oil imports...
CBS News | Ukraine and Russia blamed each other on Sunday for breaking the one-day Easter...
by Andreas Exarheas | RigZone.com | In an EBW Analytics Group report sent to Rigzone...
Houston, long regarded as the epicenter of the U.S. energy industry, is currently navigating...
On April 8, 2025, the Keystone Pipeline experienced a significant rupture near Fort Ransom,...
By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com | In January, China’s National Energy Administration said it was eyeing...
By Georgina McCartney | (Reuters) -The U.S. upstream oil and gas M&A market is...
Have your oil & gas questions answered by industry experts.