nationalinterest.org 
<https://nationalinterest.org/blog/buzz/russia-just-bankrupted-one-americas-biggest-natural-gas-companies-140867>
  


Russia Just Bankrupted One Of America's Biggest Natural Gas Companies


by Chris White

4-5 minutes

  _____  

One of the largest shale drillers in the country filed for bankruptcy recently 
as the natural gas industry deals with a one-two punch of coronavirus fears and 
Russia’s continued war against U.S. energy producers.

Whiting Petroleum became the first giant natural gas company to slide into 
bankruptcy Wednesday as many energy producers meet debt obligations and an oil 
war between the world’s largest energy producers. Whiting sought chapter 11 
protection in Texas amid the strife.

Prices fell into the $30s as the Saudis pushed for a cut in output 
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2020/03/08/saudi-arabia-flooding-market-with-oil-prompting-predictions-further-decline-monday/?utm_campaign=wp_the_energy_202&utm_medium=email&utm_source=newsletter&wpisrc=nl_energy202>
  to prop up prices, while Russia is working to infuse the market with hundreds 
of thousands of barrels of oil. Moscow is worried that the U.S. will use shale 
oil to take advantage if Saudi Arabia ease off production. 

Bankruptcies are expected 
<https://dailycaller.com/2020/03/09/saudi-arabia-russia-oil-prices-coronavirus/>
  to increase as crude production increases while demand plummets, according to 
Buddy Clark, a co-chair at international corporate law firm Haynes & Boone. 

“It’s a dire situation for everyone,” Clark told the Wall Street Journal 
Thursday, noting that even bankruptcy courts are under pressure as bankruptcy 
cases explode. “It’s a weird dynamic, but people will want to get into 
bankruptcy quickly in order to beat the rush.”

Other energy companies will likely experience similar problems. 

U.S. drillers could default on $32 billion of debt throughout 2020 if the virus 
and Russia continue walloping the industry. The default rate is projected to 
come in at 17%, according to credit-ratings firm Fitch Ratings. Fitch 
forecasted a 7% default rate before the virus pandemic.



Meanwhile, oil prices rallied Thursday after President Donald Trump hinted that 
his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman 
told him they might reduce crude production. 

Trump said in a tweet 
<https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/1245720677660925952?s=20>  that day 
that he “spoke to my friend MBS (Crown Prince), who spoke with President Putin 
of Russia, & I expect & hope that they will be cutting back approximately 10 
Million Barrels.”

Oil prices pitched upward shortly thereafter. The Dow Jones industrial average 
jumped more than 500 points after Trump’s remarks. The president’s bold talk 
provides 
<https://dailycaller.com/2020/03/09/saudi-arabia-russia-oil-prices-coronavirus/>
  a reprieve to a beleaguered oil industry, which saw the price of oil fall 
roughly 60% over the past month. 

Natural gas production was on the incline 
<https://dailycaller.com/2019/12/31/oil-prices-climate-change-fracking/>  for 
more than a decade before this most recent hiccup.

The Energy Information Administration (EIA) projected 
<https://www.eia.gov/outlooks/archive/aeo10/pdf/0383(2010).pdf>  in 2010 that 
the U.S. would be producing about six million barrels of oil a day by 2019, not 
the 12 million barrels of oil a day it actually produced. The EIA made other 
forecasts that year that did not ultimately come to fruition. 

The EIA projected oil prices would hover around $100 a barrel in 2019 instead 
of $60 a barrel, where oil prices are pegged. The agency was also apparently 
unable to see into the future and observe how hydraulic fracturing would affect 
gas production over the past decade.

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Image: Excess natural gas is being flared, or burnt off, at a flare stack at 
the refinery in Tula November 21, 2013. REUTERS/Henry Romer. 

 

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