"The U.S. drilling frenzy is over. What’s not is the boom in oil production.
While companies have idled 151 rigs in five shale formations since reaching a peak of 1,157 in October, they’ll need to park another 200 for growth to stall, according to data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration. Output there will reach a record 5.47 million barrels a day in March even though the number of rigs exploring for oil is the lowest since 2013.
The spending cuts led to speculation that U.S. gains would slow, eroding a global supply glut that sent prices tumbling last year. Oil has jumped 19 percent since closing at a six-year low of $44.45 a barrel on Jan. 28. Improving technology and a focus on the most promising acreage has made the rig count, a closely watched barometer of drilling activity, a less reliable indicator of future output."
Asjylyn Loder reports for Bloomberg News February 12, 2015.
"U.S. Rigs Are Being Idled, but the Oil Boom Is Not Ending"
Source: Bloomberg, 02/16/2015