September 15, 2025 Edition
At Valor, our goal is to keep you informed of the latest news and updates from the oil and gas industry. We are committed to sharing the insights and knowledge that our team gathers to help you stay ahead in this dynamic sector. From mergers and acquisitions to regulatory changes and technological advancements, we cover all the key developments that impact the industry. Stay tuned for weekly updates to keep you well-informed.
- ConocoPhillips to procure LNG from NextDecade’s Rio Grande project
- Summary: ConocoPhillips has signed a 20-year sales and purchase agreement to procure one million tonnes per annum (mtpa) of liquefied natural gas (LNG) from NextDecide’s Rio Grande LNG project in Texas. The LNG will be offtaken on a free-on-board basis with pricing indexed to the Henry Hub benchmark, a deal that advances ConocoPhillips’ global strategy and 10 to 15 mtpa offtake ambition. This deal makes ConocoPhillips a key foundation customer for Train 5, which is now fully commercialized, with a final investment decision expected in Q4 2025.
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- California Resources to buy Berry Corp in $717 million deal
- Summary: California Resources will buy Berry Corp in an all-stock deal valued at about $717 million, including debt, a move which sent Berry’s shares up 14.8% to $3.80 in early trading. Berry shareholders will receive 0.0718 California Resources shares for each share they own, with California Resources shareholders set to own about 94% of the combined company. On a pro forma basis, the new entity would have produced about 161,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day in Q2 and held about 652 million boe of proved reserves as of year-end 2024.
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- U.S. rig count holds steady as Texas, Permian Basin hit 2021 lows
- Summary: According to the Baker Hughes report for the week ending August 15, the U.S. rig count held steady at 539, though this total remains down 8% from a year ago. The steady total was due to oil rigs rising by one to 412, offsetting a one-rig drop in gas rigs to 122, while both Texas and the Permian rig counts fell to their lowest levels since September 2021. Meanwhile, Enverus data showed Permian drilling permits at 606, down from 699 a year ago, while active frac crews in the basin fell to 82 from 100 a year earlier.
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- Renewed concerns over Russian crude supplies
- Summary: The oil market weighed oversupply concerns against geopolitical risks on Friday, with October WTI settling up 32 cents at $62.69 and November Brent up 62 cents at $66.99. The market rallied from a low of $61.69 after a drone attack on Russia’s Primorsk oil port suspended loading, and the Kremlin announced a pause in peace negotiations with Ukraine. In the U.S., the total rig count rose for a second straight week to 539, and refinery offline capacity is expected to increase to 585,000 bpd for the week ending September 12.
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- Another week of indecision for oil prices
- Summary: Crude oil prices were indecisive this week, trading in a tight range with WTI between $61.70-$64.10 and Brent between $65.50-$68.15, before settling higher for the week. Bearish fundamentals, including an OPEC+ output hike of 137,000 b/d and a U.S. inventory build, were pitted against bullish geopolitical events like an Israeli attack in Qatar and a drone strike on a Russian oil port. U.S. economic data added to the market’s uncertainty, with August’s CPI rising to 2.9% while jobless claims hit their highest level since October of 2021.
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- Natural gas struggles below $3.00 as storage surplus weighs on prices
- Summary: U.S. natural gas futures are under pressure, with the October contract settling at $2.941/MMBtu and struggling below the $3.00 psychological barrier due to a growing storage surplus. A recent EIA storage injection of 71 billion cubic feet (Bcf), well above the 56 Bcf five-year average, has lifted total inventories to 3,343 Bcf, now 6% above the seasonal norm. With U.S. production at 112.3 Bcf/d outpacing demand of 99.5 Bcf/d, the market faces the risk of ending the injection season with its inventories near 4.0 trillion cubic feet.
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- Big oil cuts spending as $60 oil bites
- Summary: With Brent crude in the $60-$70 range, the U.S. shale patch has seen a 1.7% job loss, its fastest pace since 2022, while ConocoPhillips plans to cut up to 25% of its workforce. In response, 22 U.S. oil companies have cut a combined $2 billion in spending, and Wood Mackenzie forecasts a 4.3% decline in global capex this year, the first such drop since 2020. U.S. shale production has reversed, with late August output at 13.4 million bpd (down from 13.6 million in Dec), as the industry enters a “wait-and-see” mode.
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