The U.S. Department of Interior has set the date for the nation’s largest oil and gas lease sale. In support of President...
Leasing We have a new player in the top 25 lessees this week: EOG. They recently acquired more than 15,000 gross acres in McClain...
Oklahoma advances 5 up to 123; U.S. Rig Count remains flat The result of no change in the rig count to the...
LONDON/TOKYO (Reuters) – Oil prices stood near a one-week high on Friday as global equities headed for their biggest weekly gain in...
The broader upswing in the equities market also helped crude benchmarks. Russia and Saudi Arabia sign LNG deal. Russia and Saudi Arabia signed several energy...
“U.S. producers are enjoying a second wave of shale growth so extraordinary that in 2018 their increase in liquids production could equal...
The increase in the week to Feb. 9 was the biggest weekly rise since January 2017. More than half of those oil...
Chesapeake Energy (CHK) announced last week its exit from the Mississippian Lime, the play that the company helped to pioneer several years...
As we prepare for Valentine’s Day, our gift to you is not a bouquet of roses or a box of chocolates, but...
The Trump administration is aggressively sweeping aside regulations protecting public land to clear a path for expanded oil and gas drilling. A memorandum from...

U.S. stocks diverged sharply on Thursday as investors rotated out of high-flying tech stocks following disappointing Oracle earnings, while the Dow and S&P 500 hit new record highs.
Major Index Performance:
Market Drivers: The market action reflected a dramatic rotation from technology stocks into economically sensitive sectors following Oracle's disappointing results. Oracle stock tanked nearly 11% after the software giant missed on cloud sales and hiked its already aggressive data center spending by $15 billion, reviving concerns about AI overspending.
Despite tech weakness, investors remained encouraged by yesterday's Fed rate cut and Chair Powell's reassuring comments. Powell hinted that a rate hike would be off the table for January while talking up the US economy's strength
Energy sector executives convened at the Reuters Energy Live conference in Houston on December 9 identified regulatory unpredictability as the foremost obstacle to meeting America's surging electricity demand. Despite industry readiness to deploy natural gas, renewables, storage, and emerging technologies, inconsistent state regulations and shifting federal policies across administrations are significantly delaying project development.
Equinor's U.S. upstream and country manager, Chris Golden, emphasized that fragmented requirements and policy volatility substantially increase costs and timelines, hampering competitiveness for capital allocation. NRG Energy's Rob Gaudette underscored the challenge of financing multi-billion-dollar infrastructure with 30-year lifespans amid evolving regulatory frameworks across 50 states and changing federal administrations.
The uncertainty particularly affects large industrial customers and data center developers, driving demand growth. Variables, including tax incentive qualifications, carbon rule enforcement, and environmental review requirements, fluctuate with election cycles, complicating long-term investment decisions. Executives warned that without regulatory clarity, load development will migrate toward states with more stable business environments, potentially limiting deployment opportunities. Industry leaders stressed that all energy sources will be necessary to meet anticipated demand growth driven by electrification, manufacturing reshoring, and data center expansion.
by Andreas Exarheas|RigZone.com| In a statement sent to Rigzone late Wednesday, U.S. Geological Survey...
The history of the global oil and gas industry is inextricably linked to the...
Santa Fe, NM – New Mexico Attorney General Raúl Torrez filed a lawsuit 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,...
🎄The holiday season exposes how tight diesel markets really are. ⛽️Diesel demand during Christmas...
The Energy as a Service (EaaS) market is projected to double to over $55...
The oil and gas sector enters 2026 navigating a more turbulent trade and policy...
By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com | The Permian Basin is the largest contributor to U.S....
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