By Haley Zaremba for Oilprice.com | The United States electric vehicle industry is facing a rough road ahead. The Trump administration has...
Bill Armstrong isn’t following the industry playbook. As U.S. shale producers consolidate and shrink their drilling footprints, Armstrong is doing the opposite,...
The newly unveiled U.S.–EU energy framework, announced during the July 27–28 summit in Brussels, marks one of the most consequential energy declarations...
by Andreas Exarheas| RIGZONE.COM | Chevron will “consolidate or eliminate some positions” as part of its integration with Hess Corporation, a Chevron spokesperson...
The U.S. oil and gas industry is riding a line between productivity and paralysis. Crude oil prices have slipped into the mid...
Yuka Obayashi and Katya Golubkova | TOKYO (Reuters) -U.S. President Donald Trump said on Tuesday that Japan will form a joint venture...
Merger and acquisition activity in the U.S. upstream oil and gas sector slowed significantly in the second quarter of 2025, as heightened...
By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com | Shell and other major energy players have withdrawn from a high-profile effort to establish a global...
Baker Hughes, Hunt Energy, and Argent LNG are forming a partnership to create a master plan for rebuilding Syria’s oil, gas, and...
By Felicity Bradstock for Oilprice.com | The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the Government of Norway launched a $200 million initiative...
(Reuters) Excelerate Energy Inc (EE) jumped 17.5% in its market debut on Wednesday, riding on investor demand for companies with exposure to liquefied natural gas (LNG) amid the Russia-Ukraine conflict and ending a lull in U.S. capital markets since the invasion. By the close of the market Thursday, it was up $1.15 closing at $28.00 per share.
The company is a provider of floating LNG terminals and owned by Oklahoma-based energy tycoon George Kaiser. Excelerate is also the first LNG-related IPO in the United States since 2019, indicating a reversal in fortunes for fossil fuel companies as crude oil and natural gas prices bounced back from pandemic lows.
WASHINGTON — The Biden administration announced on Friday that it would resume selling leases for new oil and gas drilling on public lands, but would also raise the federal royalties that companies must pay to drill, which would be the first increase in those fees in more than a century.
The Interior Department said in a statement that it planned to open up 145,000 acres of public lands in nine states to oil and gas leasing next week, the first new fossil fuel permits to be offered on public lands since President Biden took office.
Whether the weakness persists will show up first in structure and stocks: if spreads...
Estate planning for mineral owners: how trusts secure oil & gas assets, speed inheritance,...
In a rare win for both production and environmental performance, a new analysis by...
A high-stakes courtroom fight in Delaware has pitted bidders for the parent company of...
Vortexa’s figures exclude oil in floating storage, defined as oil stored on stationary vessels...
Crews have begun construction on what will become Texas’s first end-to-end produced water lithium...
Story By Charles Kennedy |OilPrice.com| Texas’ inventory of orphaned oil and gas wells has...
One of the busiest refining and petrochemical clusters on the Gulf Coast is now...
By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com | U.S. oil and gas producers seek efficiencies and...
The once unstoppable Texas shale boom is showing clear signs of fatigue, but a...
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