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position: > Home > News > Industrial News >
Drillers boost rig activity again as crude production soars
Pubdate:2018-04-08 13:57
Source: DAVID WETHE
Click: times
HOUSTON (Bloomberg) -- Shale drillers boosted drilling activity in the U.S. oil patch to the highest in three years even as American crude output touched unprecedented levels.
U.S. working oil rigs rose by 11 this week to 808, the highest since March 2015, according to data from Baker Hughes. It’s the ninth increase in the past 11 weeks.
Oil explorers are expected to crank up spending in the U.S. by 37% to $134 billion this year, assuming an underlying average oil price of $65/bbl, according to Raymond James & Associates Inc. That would follow a 77% hike in 2017, analysts including Pavel Molchanov and Marshall Adkins wrote this week in a note to investors.
“U.S. spending will still likely be up sharply, even as public E&Ps become more returns driven,” the analysts wrote. “If oil prices remain in the mid-$60s, there is clearly room to flex up spending as the year progresses, since many of these budgets were set on the assumption of mid-$50s oil.”
Crude output in the U.S. rose by 27,000 bpd last week to 10.5 million, according to the Energy Information Administration.
U.S. working oil rigs rose by 11 this week to 808, the highest since March 2015, according to data from Baker Hughes. It’s the ninth increase in the past 11 weeks.
Oil explorers are expected to crank up spending in the U.S. by 37% to $134 billion this year, assuming an underlying average oil price of $65/bbl, according to Raymond James & Associates Inc. That would follow a 77% hike in 2017, analysts including Pavel Molchanov and Marshall Adkins wrote this week in a note to investors.
“U.S. spending will still likely be up sharply, even as public E&Ps become more returns driven,” the analysts wrote. “If oil prices remain in the mid-$60s, there is clearly room to flex up spending as the year progresses, since many of these budgets were set on the assumption of mid-$50s oil.”
Crude output in the U.S. rose by 27,000 bpd last week to 10.5 million, according to the Energy Information Administration.