U.S. Energy Information Administration

U.S. Energy Information Administration Articles

The U.S. Energy Information Administration drilling productivity report forecasts March shale oil production to rise by 110,000 barrels a day with new wells added 657 barrels a day to the total.
A withdrawal of 119 billion cubic feet from the U.S. natural gas stockpile was near the high end of a consensus estimate and had little impact on the already-low price.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration reported Wednesday that stockpiles of crude oil, gasoline, and distillates like diesel fuel and heating oil rose sharply last week.
The number of rigs drilling for oil in the United States rose by 6 this week, on top of a gain of 12 in the previous week. Prices are showing the effects.
U.S. natural gas stockpiles fell less than expected last week, pushing prices of gas for March delivery down to the mid-$2.80s range. That's about $0.30 lower than just a few weeks ago.
U.S. commercial crude oil inventories increased by more than 6 million barrels last week as production continues to rise, more than offsetting increases in exports of both crude oil and refined...
The weekly report on U.S. natural gas storage showed a larger-than-expected withdrawal last week. That has pushed prices up slightly on the NYMEX.
Even though U.S. crude oil declined by a smaller-than-expected amount, prices rose to more than $65 a barrel for WTI.
The number of U.S. land-based rigs drilling for oil fell by 5 during the week, giving back half the rigs added in the prior week.
The U.S. crude oil inventory dipped by nearly 7 million barrels last week, but gasoline inventories, crude oil production and both crude oil and refined product exports rose sharply.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration reported Thursday morning that U.S. natural gas stocks decreased less than expected for the week ending January 12.
U.S. crude oil production from seven major onshore shale plays is expected to rise 111,000 barrels a day month over month to a year-over-year increase of 1.8 million barrels a day.
U.S. natural gas stockpiles posted their largest-ever weekly storage withdrawal last week as the nation responded to very cold temperatures along the east coast and into some parts of the South.
U.S. commercial crude oil inventories dropped by nearly 5 million barrels last week, but gains in both gasoline and distillates nearly offset the drop.
The U.S. crude oil stockpile fell again last week, but refineries were running at nearly 97% of capacity and stockpiles of gasoline, diesel, and heating oil soared.