HomeNewsOpinionOPEC+ Faces a New Problem: A Texas gas pipeline

OPEC+ Faces a New Problem: A Texas gas pipeline

The new path to market for Permian Basin shale gas could could foil oil producers’ plan to curb output

September 17, 2024 / 13:13 IST
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The burst of activity would come at an awful time for OPEC+.

Now is the moment when common sense says the US shale industry should be slowing. With oil prices plunging 25% over the last year, you’d expect companies would surely react by cutting drilling. Yet American oil output growth is about to reaccelerate.

The burst of activity would come at an awful time for OPEC+. Saudi Arabia and Russia, which lead the oil cartel, are already wrestling with an oversupplied market, particularly in early 2025.

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The reason why US crude production would apparently defy the cyclical nature of the commodity market has little to do with supply or demand for oil itself. Instead, it’s all about natural gas. Let me explain.

When shale companies drill in the Permian, the energy-rich region that stretches from West Texas into southeast New Mexico, they typically pump some natural gas alongside the oil. The production of that so-called “associated” gas has more than tripled since 2018, overwhelming local demand and pipeline capacity.