Reuters – Oil prices fell more than 2% on Wednesday as a market surplus forecast by the International Energy Agency (IEA) and...
John Kemp – Reuters – U.S. oil and gas production growth is slowing, as lower prices force shale firms to reduce new...
Victoria Advocate – People in the Eagle Ford Shale region who’ve signed leases with Equinor for the mineral rights beneath their land...
Greg Avery – Denver Business Journal – Colorado issued the fewest oil and gas well drilling permits in more than a decade...
Reuters – U.S. energy exports to China, mostly crude oil and natural gas, will climb as the world’s two largest economies struck...
Bloomberg – Such is the extent of the shakeout in the U.S. shale industry that Permian Basin oil production is closer to...
Reuters – U.S. crude exports from Corpus Christi, Texas, have surged to a record in recent weeks, often surpassing hubs such as...
David Blackmon – Forbes – Forty years ago, the conventional wisdom about oil was that we were running out of it and...
Jordan Blum – Houston Chronicle – Exxon Mobil led the way with new finds off the coasts of Guyana and Cyprus as...
Houston Chronicle – Apache Corp. is closing its San Antonio office and eliminating more than 270 jobs as part of a reorganization...
U.S. energy firms this week cut the number of oil rigs even as Russia's invasion of Ukraine drove crude prices to their highest since 2008.
U.S. oil rigs fell three to 519 in the week to March 4, their first weekly decline since January, while gas rigs rose three to 130, their highest since December 2019, energy services firm Baker Hughes Co said in its closely followed report on Friday.
Most of the decline in oil rigs was in the Woodford shale in Oklahoma, which offset an increase in the largest U.S. oilfield in the Permian Basin, the data showed. The Ardmore Woodford fell to no activity with the loss of its only rig while the Arkoma Woodford declined by one, leaving two active rigs. The Cana Woodford was unchanged at 28 rigs.
Reuters - U.S. natural gas futures gained about 6% to a one-month high on Friday as the U.S. market continued to follow massive price swings in global gas and oil trading with the Russia-Ukraine conflict stoking energy supply concerns.
Front-month gas futures rose 29.4 cents, or 6.2%, to settle at $5.016 per million British thermal units (mmBtu), their highest close since Feb. 2.
That put the contract up about 12% this week, the first time it rose for three weeks in a row since October 2021.
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Despite years of glossy sustainability campaigns and promises to lead the energy transition, the...
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