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Trump’s LNG metamorphosis
Fast-tracking US project approvals and increased trade pressures have already changed the LNG landscape since Trump came to office, with further transformation ahead
Letter from the US: Oil and gas producers face tax threat
Capping state corporate income tax deductions would reduce energy supplies and raise prices
Letter from Saudi Arabia: Energy, diplomacy and the art of the deal
Saudi Arabia is growing as a geopolitical and diplomatic force amid an increasingly fractured world
Trump’s energy policy paradox
US consumers are not likely to see gasoline prices fall to Trump’s ‘beautiful number’, at least if the president also wants to encourage more drilling
OPEC compliance improves amid market share threat
The surprise decision to bring on extra supply has coincided with better quota conformity from laggards in the group, Petroleum Economist analysis shows
Letter from the US: Houston has a problem with Trump’s energy policy
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
On tariffs, Trump is an open book
There is method to the US president’s apparent madness, and those seeking to understand need look no further than their local bookshop
Letter from the US: Trumpism threatens oil producers’ survival
Well-functioning democracies are required for healthier economies and a thriving oil industry
Aramco keeps on spending
As cash-strapped Western governments commit to substantially raising defence expenditure, a similar dynamic is playing out in Saudi Arabia’s oil and gas sector, as Saudi Aramco maintains it heavy capex push despite reduced revenues
US upstream reasserts strategic importance
The country’s renewed focus on energy security has seen it move closer to Russia and Saudi Arabia on supply
Shale US Opec Russia Saudi Arabia
Charles Waine
23 April 2020
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Texas searches for oil industry salvation

Record low oil prices are compelling the state to consider proration. But greater measures may be needed to stave off financial ruin

Economic conditions across the Texan oil patch are dire. Unemployment rates have skyrocketed in recent weeks, while the rig count is in freefall. Oil contracts plummeted into negative territory for the first time in US history on 20 April, scarcely believable when, just a few months prior, WTI topped $50/bl. Fears of industry collapse across the shale patch have become so severe that a host of independent producers, headed by Parsley Energy and Pioneer Natural Resources, are pleading with Texas to enforce state-wide proration of output—much to the chagrin of larger operators such as ExxonMobil and the newly-enlarged Occidental. “Producers think an orderly reduction in oil supply will protect

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