Friday, July 17, 2026

Futures Turn Negative -- July 16 / 17, 2026

Locator: 51187B.  

Something spooked someone: early last evening (July 16, 2026), all major markets suddenly turned red -- upwards of 250 - 350 points. 

WTI: oil was back up about a dollar, but still under $80. Trading at $79.88.

Mideast: another night of Allied attacks on Iran. Iran hitting US-associated sites in neighboring Mideast countries. 

Iraq: as previously announced --- this is pretty amazing -- the leader of the country of Iraq visiting Houston, TX -- 


More on Iraq, link here -- 

More from the link:

Chevron is taking another step toward expanding its footprint in Iraq, and is set to sign two memoranda of understanding on Friday that will move the U.S. supermajor closer to developing the giant West Qurna 2 oilfield and the Nassiriya project. The agreements aren't binding, but they push negotiations forward on what could become one of Chevron's biggest upstream investments in years.

West Qurna 2 is no small prize. The southern Iraqi field currently produces about 460,000 barrels per day after Iraq nationalized the asset earlier this year following U.S. sanctions on Russia's Lukoil. Chevron entered exclusive talks for the field in February, and Friday's agreement advances negotiations on the commercial terms needed for a final deal.

Nassiriya is smaller today but comes with significant exploration upside. Chevron and Iraq also signed an agreement in principle last year covering the field and four surrounding exploration blocks, giving the company another potential long-term growth platform in one of OPEC's largest producers.

The oilfields aren't the only reason Chevron is talking to Baghdad. The company is also working with Iraq on technical studies for new export pipelines that would allow crude to reach the Mediterranean without passing through the Strait of Hormuz. Chevron is part of a consortium that signed an agreement earlier this month to evaluate possible routes, including options that could connect Iraq's producing fields with Syria or other regional export corridors.

Comments: This is pretty impressive -- ever since CVX acquired Hess, I've been very, very impressed with what CVX has done.

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Back to the Bakken

WTI: $79.88.

New wells reporting:

  • Sunday, July 19, 2026: 32 for the month, 32 for the quarter, 385 for the year, 
    • 42471, conf, Petro-Hunt, Hoiby 158-94-4C-3-3H, 
      • the parent Hoiby well (#19039) drilled in 10/10, has produced 210K bbls crude oil cumulative, and is currently producing 1,000 bbls/month; 
    • 42019, conf, Murfin Drilling, LC Rambousek 1-15H, 
    • 41984, conf, Murfin Drilling, LC Rambousek 1-16H
  • Saturday, July 18, 2026: 29 for the month, 29 for the quarter, 382 for the year, 
    • 41539, conf, Devon Energy, Stallion 33-28 XE 1H, 
  • Friday, July 17, 2026: 28 for the month, 28 for the quarter, 381 for the year, 
    • 42446, conf, Petro-Hunt, Hoiby 158-94-4C-3-4H, 
    • 22057, conf, Devon Energy, Wagenman 29-32 1H, 
    • 22056, conf, Devon Energy, Wagenman 29-32 2H, 

RBN Energy: for now at least, US LPG, ethane exports can't grow without it. Link here. Archived here.

Over the past 18 months, Gulf Coast dock capacity capable of handling either LPG or ethane has grown significantly. It’s something relatively new called “flex capacity,” and it’s a darned good thing it’s online. Without it, both LPG and ethane export capacity would already be maxed out. That would leave U.S. producers with no ability to increase exports — or production that depends on those exports — by another single molecule. As it is, flex capacity is allowing both the LPG and ethane export markets to continue growing, at least for now. But how that flex capacity is allocated between LPG and ethane will have an increasingly important influence on exports and ultimately on the flow dynamics of both markets. In today’s RBN blog, we’ll review how rapidly LPG and ethane exports have grown, how flex export facilities work, the impact of export capacity constraints we are seeing in the markets today, and what all of that means for the next phase of U.S. LPG and ethane export growth. 

LPG and Ethane Exports Soar

As shown in Figure 1 below, U.S. exports of LPG and ethane have expanded dramatically over the past several years, with almost all of that growth occurring on the Gulf Coast. The left graph shows U.S. LPG exports, with the green layer showing exports from PADD 3 (Gulf Coast) and the blue layer showing LPG exports from the other PADDs, mostly from Energy Transfer’s Marcus Hook terminal on the East Coast and AltaGas’s Ferndale facility on the West Coast. Similarly, the orange layer in the right graph shows ethane exports from the Gulf Coast and the purple layer shows ethane exports from elsewhere (again, from Marcus Hook). U.S. LPG exports have more than doubled from about 1.2 MMb/d in 2018 to 2.6 MMb/d so far in 2026 (for an 11% compound annual growth rate, or CAGR), while ethane exports have climbed even faster, from roughly 0.25 MMb/d to nearly 0.7 MMb/d (13% CAGR) over the same period. About 90% of that growth has come from PADD 3, underscoring the Gulf Coast's position as the epicenter of the world’s NGL export market.