News

President Trump has given Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and his team of negotiators leeway to lift export controls on ethane, software and jet engines and related components in trade talks with ...
U.S. crude-oil production is likely to decline over the next 18 months as producers cut back on drilling activity in response to lower oil prices, the U.S. Energy Information Administration said ...
In EIA’s forecast, increasing oil production outpaces annual oil demand growth. Rising inventories globally will result in Brent averaging $62/bbl in second-half 2025 and falling ...
The wave of departures comes as officials in the Trump administration have joined congressional Republicans and fossil fuel groups in an effort to shift EIA’s mission away from tracking clean ...
EIA cuts under the Trump administration could compromise U.S. energy data reliability, jeopardizing planning for the clean energy transition.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) projects U.S. crude oil production will peak around 14 million bpd in 2027.
The EIA’s analysis isn’t wrong. If you only look at monthly averages of certain hubs throughout the U.S., then price volatility has decreased.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration expects U.S. natural gas, petroleum, and renewables consumption to rise in 2025, according to figures sent to Rigzone by the EIA this week.
Renewables increased their output by almost 10% and powered nearly a quarter of US electricity in 2024, according to newly released EIA data.
The US Energy Information Administration (EIA) has forecast 63GW of new utility-scale additions in 2025, led by solar PV.
Renewable capacity additions will continue to drive the growth of US power generation over the next two years, according to the EIA.
According to its January STEO, the EIA sees the diesel price averaging $3.66 per gallon in 2025.