The US oil rig count rose by 11 to 758, according to oilfield-services company Baker Hughes. The oil-rig count has risen for...
Most American adults (51%) would be happy if their children chose a career in the oil and natural gas industry, but for...
Two oil and gas companies recently paid more than $1 million each for the right to drill on state-owned land. The payouts...
TULSA — ONEOK Inc. said Monday it will expand energy infrastructure in Oklahoma’s STACK play to serve growth from EnLink Midstream Partners...
June 16, 2017 by Tom Terrarosa U.S. oil and natural gas producers added six drilling rigs over the past week, bringing the...
When conveying real estate in Oklahoma, including any interest in minerals, there are numerous types of instruments of conveyance a landowner may...
U.S. exploration and production companies have added an extra 400+ rigs to target oil-bearing formations since the end of May 2016. The...
June 9 (UPI) — The economy in shale-rich Oklahoma has recovered from last year’s market downturn as gross tax receipts improve, the...
STACK pilot well performance so far in 2017 is mixed as one would expect in the early stages of assessing a new...
Times Record News, June 5, 2017 The Texas oil industry had no where to go but up after crashing down to about $28...
An analysis by S&P Global Commodity Insights shows that Permian Basin methane emissions dropped by 26% in 2023 as regulations tightened and drillers stepped up adoption of advanced leak-detection technologies. The reduction, amounting to over 34 Bcf, occurred despite higher oil and natural gas production.
Trump's changing tariff plans, meanwhile, pull U.S. oil prices down for a seventh straight week.
Oil futures settled higher on Friday, buoyed by reported U.S. plans to refill the nation's Strategic Petroleum Reserve to full capacity, which would lead to tighter global supplies.
Prices for crude also found support after a Russian deputy prime minister reportedly said OPEC+ could reverse its decision to begin increasing production next month if the market appears unbalanced.
Crude prices, however, ended lower for the week, with the U.S. benchmark notching a seventh straight weekly decline on concerns that tariffs will slow the economy and energy demand.
-- West Texas Intermediate crude for April delivery rose 68 cents, or 1%, to settle at $67.04 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, leaving the U.S. benchmark down 3.9% for the week, according to Dow Jones Market Data. That marked a seventh straight weekly loss, the longest such losing streak since December 2023.
-- May Brent crude, the global benchmark, climbed 90 cents, or 1.3%, to $70.36 a barrel on ICE Futures Europe, for a 3.4% weekly decline.
-- April gasoline RBJ25 added 0.4% to $2.11 a gallon but lost 5.1% for the week, while April heating oil HOJ25 lost nearly 0.4% to $2.22 a gallon, posting a weekly decline of 4.3%.
-- Natural gas for April delivery NGJ25 settled at $4.40 per million British thermal units, up 2.3% Friday to end 14.7% higher for the week.
In a surprising legal development, the New Mexico Court of Appeals has dismissed a...
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