The US should avoid repeating past mistakes
North America's storied oil history highlights lessons that need to be learned in the current economic crisis
There remains a strong folk memory in Texas oil country of the 1930s, when a possible price crash into single figures did not mean dollars, but cents. And that may have been on the mind of Ryan Sitton, a Republican Texas railroad commissioner, when he tweeted in late March, “Just got off the phone with Opec secretary-general Barkindo... We all agree an international deal must get done to ensure economic stability as we recover from Covid-19. He was kind enough to invite me to the next Opec meeting in June.” Back in the 1930s, the rush to produce from small licences in the giant East Texas oilfield combined with a demand collapse to plunge prices to 13¢/bl. Gas stations were reduced to offeri
Also in this section
16 February 2026
As the third wave of global LNG arrives, Wood Mackenzie’s director for Europe gas and LNG, Tom Marzec-Manser, discusses with Petroleum Economist the outlook for Europe’s gas market in 2026
13 February 2026
Artificial intelligence is pushing electricity demand beyond the limits of existing grids, increasing the role of gas and LNG in energy system planning as a fast, flexible solution
13 February 2026
Panellists at LNG2026 say demand growth will hinge less on the level of global supply and more on the pace of downstream buildout, policy clarity and bankable market frameworks
13 February 2026
The Middle Eastern gas giant and Asian energy heavyweight ink a 20-year landmark LNG agreement at LNG2026 in a significant step towards strengthening global energy partnership







