By: The Texas Tribune – Attorneys for the city of Midland, the oil capital of Texas, made an unusual request to regulators...
By: S&P Global – Environmental scores indicate that the oil and gas industry’s path to net-zero greenhouse gas emissions is being blazed...
The acquisition from Paloma will add approximately 62,000 net acres spanning across Canadian, Grady, McClain, Caddo, Custer, Dewey, Blaine, and Kingfisher counties,...
Story By Patrick McGee|Hart Energy, via Yahoo News| Reserve-based lending (RBL) is expected to decline as a source of capital for independent...
By- Anastasia Hufham – The Salt Lake Tribune – A new lawsuit targeting Trump-era oil and gas leases in Utah takes aim...
Story By Jennifer A. Dlouhy |Bloomberg, via RigZone.com| A federal judge upheld the Biden administration’s approval of ConocoPhillips’ 600-million-barrel Willow oil development...
By: Erin Douglas – Texas Tribune – A 5.2 magnitude earthquake was recorded in West Texas early Wednesday near the border of...
Story from RigZone.com | These major energy companies are hiring right now for a range of roles in several different locations around...
Story Credit, David Wethe at Bloomberg, as reported on Business Insider.com | Shale industry legend Harold Hamm is looking ahead to the...
By: Reuters – Investors dumped crude oil futures and options for the second week running as the economic outlook worsened and the...
A London court will on Feb. 23 begin to hear a lawsuit launched by Nigeria against U.S. bank JP Morgan Chase, claiming more than $1.7 billion for its role in a disputed 2011 oilfield deal.
The civil suit filed in the English courts in 2017 relates to the purchase by energy majors Shell Plc and Eni SpA of the offshore OPL 245 oil field in Nigeria, which is also at the center of ongoing legal action in Milan.
In the court documents seen by Reuters, Nigeria alleges JP Morgan was “grossly negligent” in its decision to transfer funds paid by the energy majors into an escrow account to a company controlled by the country’s former oil minister Dan Etete instead of into government coffers.
U.S. shale oil producer Diamondback Energy Inc. on Feb. 22 reported higher-than-expected fourth-quarter profit and boosted its dividend to shareholders as fuel prices hit multi-year highs on stronger energy demand.
Global crude prices jumped more than 50% last year, rebounding from a pandemic-driven slump in demand. They averaged $80/bbl in the last three months of 2021, nearly double that of a year earlier.
Diamondback Energy said it would increase its annual dividend by 20% to $2.40 per share, mirroring rivals’ moves to increase shareholder returns as oil profits soar.
Whether the weakness persists will show up first in structure and stocks: if spreads...
Operators across the Lower 48 are entering a pivotal new phase of development, where...
Algeria has taken another major step to revitalize its oil and gas sector, signing...
In a rare win for both production and environmental performance, a new analysis by...
By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com | The amount of oil on tankers in transit...
Estate planning for mineral owners: how trusts secure oil & gas assets, speed inheritance,...
Vortexa’s figures exclude oil in floating storage, defined as oil stored on stationary vessels...
A high-stakes courtroom fight in Delaware has pitted bidders for the parent company of...
Story By Charles Kennedy |OilPrice.com| Texas’ inventory of orphaned oil and gas wells has...
Crews have begun construction on what will become Texas’s first end-to-end produced water lithium...
Have your oil & gas questions answered by industry experts.
