Boosted by surging output, the United States is becoming a significant exporter of crude oil, a shift that is remaking American infrastructure...
THE U.S. OIL INDUSTRY is pumping at record levels, putting the country on track to surpass Russia as the world’s top oil producer...
The oil price collapse, which began in June 2014, triggered a wave of cost reduction among upstream businesses, including Cimarex Energy (NYSE:...
Oklahoma Leasing Activity The HOTSPOT over the last 60 days continues to be NW McClain/NE Grady cos. EOG has a nice position there and...
Crude oil prices are holding above $60 a barrel. Rising U.S. crude production combined with higher oil rig counts and shale operators’...
The data in this Oklahoma activity report is provided by Oseberg, a next-generation oil & gas information and data analytics company that...
Oil Rig Count Hits 800 Oklahoma gains 3 to 124; U.S. Rigs climb by 3 Bloomberg reported that U.S. oil explorers raised...
Gastar Exploration Inc. (NYSE American: GST) (“Gastar”) announced today that it has completed the previously announced sale of its interest in the...
The oil and gas industry regulator has raised its forecast of how many barrels of oil can be recovered from the waters...
From the Harvard Business Review: In November, the United States crude oil production exceeded 10 million barrels per day for the first...
U.S. stocks pulled back sharply on Friday as a rotation out of high-flying technology stocks accelerated, with investors reassessing AI valuations following disappointing earnings from Broadcom and continued weakness from Oracle.
Market Drivers: The selloff was driven by growing concerns about AI overvaluation and margin compression. Broadcom dropped 11%, even after the company beat fourth-quarter expectations and gave a strong forecast, saying artificial intelligence chip sales look to double. Analysts attributed the decline to concerns about margin compression.
Oracle was on track for a 12% drop, extending Thursday's losses as investors continued to worry about aggressive AI spending that hasn't yet translated to clear returns.
Tailwater Capital LLC has acquired a majority interest in Central Midstream Partners LLC, expanding the private equity firm’s portfolio of natural gas infrastructure across the Gulf Coast and Utica regions. Financial terms were not disclosed in the Dec. 11 announcement.
Central Midstream, originally founded as Central Crude more than 50 years ago, provides liquids transportation, storage and terminal services. Its asset footprint includes more than 100 miles of pipeline, about 350,000 bbl of storage capacity and a multi-modal terminal in Ohio that links Utica condensate production to waterborne and rail markets. The Houston-based company also has operations on the Gulf Coast.
The Permian Basin is approaching a defining arithmetic milestone in December 2025. According to...
Story by Andreas Exarheas | RigZone.com | In its latest short-term energy outlook (STEO),...
China’s first national-level shale oil demonstration zone, located in Jimsar County in Northwest China’s...
Story By Alexander C. Kaufman |Canary Media| Geothermal energy is undergoing a renaissance, thanks...
🔲 Regime change in Venezuela could reshape global oil flows, giving the U.S. renewed...
Baker Hughes and Hunt Oil Company have signed a joint framework agreement aimed at...
WASHINGTON (AP) — Oil companies offered $300 million for drilling rights in the Gulf...
Mella McEwen | Midland Reporter-Telegram | ExxonMobil has released its updated corporate plan through...
Two authoritative outlooks are shaping the 2026 oil narrative, pointing in different directions. On...
(Reuters) Activist investment firm Kimmeridge Energy Management has submitted a $6 billion offer to...
Japan Petroleum Exploration Co Ltd has spent decades quietly building an international upstream portfolio,...
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