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Shale Drilling Expands First Time This Year as Oil Rebounds

Crude Drilling Expands in American Fields as Oil Prices Recover

(Bloomberg) -- Oil explorers expanded drilling in U.S. fields for the first time this year as rising crude prices buoyed optimism.

The number of rigs targeting oil in the country rose by 10 this week to 862, according to data released Friday by oilfield-services provider Baker Hughes. The hike only partially reversed the worst setback for American exploration in almost three years.

Crude has climbed about 25 percent since Christmas Eve, restoring some confidence among management teams and wildcatters rattled by a steep, fourth-quarter collapse. Halliburton Co., the world’s biggest fracker, earlier this week forecast a modest increase in demand for its services during the current quarter, although the Houston-based company warned it probably won’t be able to raise its prices.

Shale Drilling Expands First Time This Year as Oil Rebounds

“As our customer budgets reload in the first quarter, they are going back to work,” Halliburton CEO Jeff Miller told analysts and investors during a Jan. 22 conference call. “Despite a slow start, 2019 will be another year where we continue to build the foundation for a longer-term recovery.”

The oil rig count in the Permian Basin, the U.S.’s biggest shale play, rose by 3 this week after falling by 7 the week prior.

Selected Basins

Total oil rigs

Change

Permian484+3
Eagle Ford72-1
DJ Niobrara310
Williston58+2
Cana Woodford620
Other138+6

U.S. crude producers are pumping a record 11.9 million barrels a day, according to the Energy Information Administration.

--With assistance from David Wethe.

To contact the reporter on this story: Austin Weinstein in New York at aweinstein18@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Simon Casey at scasey4@bloomberg.net, Carlos Caminada, Christine Buurma

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