Water infrastructure booms with shale
The US oilfield water-handling market is growing as shale production continues to rise, with the Permian Basin leading the way
The boom in US shale production is spurring the growth of supporting industries, with water-handling prominent among these. Oilfield water management is nothing new, as conventional oil and gas wells also produce water alongside hydrocarbons. But the emergence of shale drilling over the past decade has added a new dimension to this—with operators needing to source water for hydraulic fracturing as well as managing their produced water. The US is producing roughly four barrels of water for every barrel of crude, according to research from investment bank Raymond James. It projects that the amount of waste-water produced in the US will rise from about 50mn bl/d to roughly 55mn bl/d by 2025, an

Also in this section
2 April 2025
The often-hidden yet powerful hand maintains supply chain linkages and global flows amid disruptions
2 April 2025
At some point it is likely that $70/bl will be quietly accepted as the producer-consumer sweet spot for a US administration having to balance both sides of the ledger
1 April 2025
There is method to the US president’s apparent madness, and those seeking to understand need look no further than their local bookshop
1 April 2025
Strong economic growth targets are encouraging for the country’s energy demand growth, even if meeting those goals might be a tall order