By: Cifford Kraus – The New York Times – Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s promise that he would “transition” the country away from...
By: Adrian Hedden – Carlsbad Current-Argus – Economic analysts are warning that New Mexico could be unable to rely on its oil...
By: Valerie Volcovici & Jessica Resnick-Ault – Reuters – The addition of Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court, moving it further...
By: Bill Holland – S&P Global Platts – Driven by low crude oil prices, U.S. independent shale oil drillers are consolidating at...
By: Myles McCormick – Financial Times – Pioneer Natural Resources has agreed to buy rival Parsley Energy for $7.6bn including debt, marking...
By: Paul Takahashi – Houston Chronicle – ConocoPhillips has long eschewed mergers and acquisitions in favor of disciplined spending and steady, organic...
By: Scott DiSavino – Reuters – Spot natural gas prices at the Waha Hub in the Permian basin in West Texas turned...
By: Adrian Hedden – Carlsbad Current-Argus – New Mexico state oil and gas regulators released the final version of proposed emissions regulations...
By: Harry Weber – S&P Global Platts – An unusually active Atlantic hurricane season has tested the resilience of US liquefaction infrastructure...
By: Erwin Seba – Reuters – U.S. energy companies were returning workers and restarting operations at storm-swept production facilities along the U.S....
U.S. stocks finished with moderate gains on Tuesday afternoon, with megacap technology names leading the equities market higher.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 185.13 points, or 0.4%, to end at 47,474.46, according to FactSet data.
The S&P 500 was up 16.74 points, or nearly 0.3%, ending at 6,829.37.
The Nasdaq Composite gained 137.75 points, or 0.6%, to finish at 23,413.67.
Tuesday’s market action reversed Monday’s slide, which hit both growth stocks and crypto. Bitcoin was surging 5.5% on Tuesday to trade above $91,000 at last check, according to FactSet data.
Oil prices declined 1% on Tuesday as markets weighed faltering Russia-Ukraine peace hopes against fears of oversupply.
Brent crude futures settled 72 cents lower, or 1.14%, at $62.45 a barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude was down 68 cents, or 1.15%, at $58.64 a barrel.
Both benchmarks advanced more than 1% on Monday.
Investors turned their focus to the Russia-Ukraine peace talks as Russian President Vladimir Putin met with U.S. President Donald Trump's special envoy Steve Witkoff and son-in-law Jared Kushner in the Kremlin on Tuesday.
“Oil prices are in check on expectations for a breakthrough in Ukraine peace talks that could lift restrictions on Russian supplies,” said Clayton Seigle, senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “But those hopes are likely to be dashed, and the market will be facing even more disruption risks as energy remains under fire by both sides.”
Texas’ long-standing rule of capture for groundwater is under renewed scrutiny as urban demand collides with rural water security, in a conflict that will feel familiar to anyone used to mineral and surface rights disputes.
In East Texas’ Neches Trinity Valleys Groundwater Conservation District, residents are fighting permits sought by entities controlled by Dallas hedge fund manager Kyle Bass. Bass aims to pump roughly 15 billion gallons per year from the Carrizo Wilcox aquifer via two large ranch properties. Under current Texas law, landowners can withdraw groundwater beneath their land even if neighboring wells are impaired, which effectively turns water into a tradable asset decoupled from proximity or historic use.
Courts have so far slowed Bass’ plans, but the financial incentives virtually guarantee continued litigation. Local farmers and ranchers fear declining well performance, reduced irrigation reliability and ultimately the erosion of their agricultural base. Their concern is amplified by existing projects such as the 140-mile Vista Pipeline, which already exports about 16 billion gallons annually to San Antonio, and by Austin's pursuit of similar import strategies.
With mega transfer schemes from the Mississippi or Pacific Northwest politically and technically unrealistic, the likely trajectory is more aggressive local extraction and conservation mandates. The open question is whether urban consumers will recognize that squeezing rural aquifers ultimately feeds back into food prices, land values, and the broader regional economy's health.
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By Myra P. Saefong |MarketWatch.com| With U.S. crude-oil prices hovering below the often critical $60...
Black Stone Minerals has signed a major natural gas development agreement with Caturus Energy,...
Energy experts say the full value of China’s October 29 agreement with President Trump...
⚡️Surging U.S. electricity prices—driven by AI and data-center demand—are pushing major corporations to act...
Commodity trading giant Gunvor Group is exploring fresh investments in U.S. oil and gas...
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China’s first national-level shale oil demonstration zone, located in Jimsar County in Northwest China’s...
The Permian Basin is approaching a defining arithmetic milestone in December 2025. According to...
Mella McEwen | Midland Reporter-Telegram | ExxonMobil has released its updated corporate plan through...
WASHINGTON (AP) — Oil companies offered $300 million for drilling rights in the Gulf...
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