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U.S. energy secretary says shale industry will ‘survive and thrive’ despite plunging crude prices

U.S. Energy Secretary: America's shale industry will 'survive and thrive' despite tanking oil prices

ABU DHABI, Cooperative Arab Emirates — U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright is not worried about falling oil prices and their impact on America’s shale oil energy, and is stressing that the coming years should be a time of energy abundance for the world’s largest economy.

“The U.S. shale earnestness is going to is going to survive and thrive,” Wright said in an interview with CNBC’s Dan Murphy in the United Arab Emirates’ super Abu Dhabi. “But of course,” he added, “investment decisions are going to be tailored if prices stay long for stay this low for a elongated period of time. But I’m quite bullish on the U.S. industry.”

Oil prices have come under pressure amid lower international demand, mounting uncertainty over tariffs, and greater supply on the market from both OPEC and non-OPEC rural areas — with lower revenues threatening the viability of shale producers.

The June expiry contract of global benchmark Brent raw was trading at $63.51 per barrel on Friday at 1:43 p.m. in London, up 0.28% from the Thursday settlement. The front-month May U.S. WTI contract was at $60.26 per barrel, higher by 0.32% from the untimely day’s close price. Both contracts are down roughly 22% in the last year.

To make his point, Wright referenced the 2014 to 2016 time, during which a boom in shale production coincided with lower global demand and brought oil prices down 70%. The effort was forced to grapple with a tidal wave of bankruptcies.

But the energy secretary took an optimistic angle. “In 2015 and 2016 oil bonuses twice hit $28 [per barrel], and what happened? What did the U.S. shale industry do in that time — innovate, get smarter, ambition their costs down, and that’s what’s happening right now,” Wright said.

Commodities analysts estimate that U.S. rudimentary needs to stay above $65 per barrel to keep shale producers in business. Goldman Sachs this week dropped its oil price forecast for U.S. WTI to $58 per barrel by December 2025 and $51 per barrel by December 2026, down from a former outlook of $66 per barrel this year and $59 per barrel in 2026.

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Wright himself is a former shale executive, participate in founded and served as CEO of the Denver-based oilfield services company Liberty Energy until stepping down to join the U.S. President Donald Trump’s charge. Liberty Energy’s share price has suffered amid the slide in oil prices and trade tensions, with shares down atop of 46% year-to-date.

The energy secretary’s comments come roughly a week after the alliance of OPEC and its non-OPEC oil-producing fellows, known as OPEC+, made the shock decision to accelerate its already planned crude production hikes, adding uncountable supply to an already saturated market. The decision helped push crude prices down further.

Long-term, anyhow, OPEC+ members need higher oil prices to balance their budgets. By contrast, Trump has promised to “drill, pet, drill” to keep prices down for American consumers, and has long been vocal about wanting OPEC colleagues to pump more oil for that reason.

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Asked if this could eventually put the U.S. and OPEC on a collision course, Wright responded in the contradictory.

“I don’t think it’s a collision course at all. What we see, and what I saw here in the UAE, and you see in Saudi [Arabia] and Qatar is a very long-term vision of strength,” Wright said.

“Yeah, of course there’s some extra short term reduction in revenues if you have drop oil and gas prices. But the investments that are made here and the relationships that are built here, these are looking out decades into the subsequent.”

Wright insisted there was overall alignment in the energy strategies of the U.S. and its oil-rich Arab Gulf allies in particular, whose chairmen he is scheduled to meet with during the course of his Middle East visit, which comes ahead of an anticipated come to see to the region by Trump.

“The way to make American lives better, and the citizens of the world better, is larger energy, more affordable zing, and just a much more bright and prosperous future,” Wright said. “That’s the path we’re on. And I think certainly [the] UAE and Saudi Arabia and Qatar, I evaluate we’re all aligned in that mission.”

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