Oil price gift boosts US shale
Further production cuts led by Saudi Arabia could signal the start of a US oil sector recovery, but potential headwinds remain
Saudi Arabia’s decision to withhold another 1mn bl/d from the market may transform what looked set to be another bleak year for US shale into an opportunity to return barrels and boost spending. This would be welcome relief for a sector that racked up the most bankruptcies last year since the crash of 2016. Most onshore US shale producers need a WTI price of more than $50/bl to make drilling and completing wells economically viable again. For most of 2020, the depressed oil price environment encouraged firms to keep output flat by drawing from their drilled-but-uncompleted (Duc) well backlog rather than putting capex into new bores. But WTI has now risen above $50/bl for the first time sinc
Also in this section
12 December 2025
The latest edition of our annual Outlook publication, titled 'The shape of energy to come: Creating unique pathways and managing shifting alliances', is available now
12 December 2025
The federal government is working with Alberta to improve the country’s access to Asian markets and reduce dependence on the US, but there are challenges to their plans
11 December 2025
The removal of the ban on oil and gas exploration and an overhaul of the system sends all the right messages for energy security, affordability and sustainability
10 December 2025
The economic and environmental cost of the seven-year exploration ban will be felt long after its removal






