Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumDrill Baby Drill - Oh, Wait. Us Rig Count Down From 580 To 542 Since 1/20/25, With World Awash In Oil
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The White House is discovering, perhaps the hard way, that energy markets arent easily managed from the Oval Officeeven as it moves to roll back regulations on the oil and gas sector, offers up more public lands for drilling at reduced royalty rates, and axes Biden-era incentives for wind and solar. The industry is going to do what the industry is going to do, said Jenny Rowland-Shea, director for public lands at the Center for American Progress, a progressive policy think tank.
Thats because the price of oil, the worlds most-traded commodity, is more responsive to global demand and supply dynamics than to domestic policy and posturing. The market is flush with supplies at the moment, as the Saudi Arabia-led cartel of oil-producing nations known as OPEC+ allows more barrels to flow while China, the worlds top oil consumer, curbs its consumption. Within the U.S., a boom in energy demand driven by rapid electrification and AI-serving data centers is boosting power costs for homes and businesses, yet fossil fuel producers are not rushing to ramp up drilling.
There is one key indicator of drilling levels that the industry has watched closely for more than 80 years: a weekly census of active oil and gas rigs published by Baker Hughes. When Trump came into office Jan. 20, the U.S. rig count was 580. Last week, the most recent figure, it was down to 542hovering just above a four-year low reached earlier in the month. The most glaring factor behind this stagnant rig count is the current level of crude oil prices. Take the U.S. benchmark grade: West Texas Intermediate crude. Its prices were near $66 a barrel on July 28, after hitting a four-year low of $62 in May. The break-even level for drilling new wells is somewhere close to $60 per barrel, according to oil and gas experts.
Thats before you account for the fallout of elevated tariffs on steel and other imports for the many companies that get their pipes and drilling equipment from overseas, said Robert Rapier, editor-in-chief of Shale Magazine, who has two decades of experience as a chemical engineer. The Federal Reserve Bank of Dallass quarterly survey of over 130 oil and gas producers based in Texas, Louisiana and New Mexico, conducted in June, suggests the industrys outlook is pessimistic. Nearly half of the 38 firms that responded to this question saw their firms drilling fewer wells this year than they had earlier expected.
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https://insideclimatenews.org/news/29072025/trump-drilling-boom-promise-stagnant/

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Vogon_Glory
(9,989 posts)Dropping oil prices and discouraging wanna-be Alaskan North Slope drillers!