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Outlook 2026: Grand plan for offshore leasing should give boost to US Gulf
As activity in the US Gulf has stagnated at a lower level, the government is taking steps to encourage fresh exploration and bolster field development work
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Outlook 2026: US onshore holds steady at sluggish rate as shale stagnates
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US Upstream
Osama Rizvi
Paul Hickin,
Editor-in-chief
19 November 2025
Follow @PetroleumEcon
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The duality of US shale

A sector beset by pessimism and pain amid price weakness contrasts with data signalling production strength and resilience

US shale has been in a mature phase for some time, defined by slower production growth, declining well productivity, greater capital discipline and a focus on free cash flow and returns. But while this means the sector is better-placed to ride out a weak oil market, especially given the remarkable role of technology in generating efficiencies, lower prices have undoubtedly left producers reeling. The sector will likely be defined by this oxymoron of resilience and vulnerability for much of 2026. It is a concerning time, given falling rig counts, oil prices dropping below some operators’ break-evens and faster well depletions. The US Energy Information Administration’s (EIA’s) recent warning

Also in this section
Outlook 2026: Grand plan for offshore leasing should give boost to US Gulf
24 December 2025
As activity in the US Gulf has stagnated at a lower level, the government is taking steps to encourage fresh exploration and bolster field development work
Outlook 2026: Revitalising Syria’s oil and gas sector – A new chapter
Outlook 2026
23 December 2025
The new government has brought stability and security to the country, with the door now open to international investment
Outlook 2026: LNG markets and the overhang
Outlook 2026
23 December 2025
A third wave of LNG supply is coming, and with it a likely oversupply of the fuel by 2028
Outlook 2026: Energy realism regains the initiative from energy idealism
Outlook 2026
22 December 2025
Weakening climate resolve in the developed world and rapidly growing demand in developing countries means peak oil is still a long way away

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