U.S. natural gas rig count drops amid low prices, EIA data shows

U.S. natural gas rig count drops amid low prices, EIA data shows

Shorouk Express U.S. natural gas rig count drops amid low prices, EIA data shows

BAKU, Azerbaijan, March 7. The U.S. natural gas
drilling sector has seen a significant decline in rig activity over
the past two years, with a 32% drop in natural gas-directed rigs
between December 2022 and December 2024, Trend reports.

According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA),
the decrease, particularly in the Haynesville and Appalachia
regions, coincides with record-low natural gas prices throughout
2024 and the increased use of advanced drilling technologies.

In the Haynesville region, which spans Texas and Louisiana, rig
counts have fallen by 55% since December 2022 due to higher
drilling costs and lower natural gas prices. As a result, marketed
natural gas production in the region has decreased by 7%.
Similarly, the Appalachia region has seen a 37% reduction in rig
activity, limiting production growth to just 4% over the same
period.

The decline in drilling is linked to the sharp drop in natural
gas prices, with the U.S. benchmark Henry Hub price falling from a
14-year high of $6.95 per MMBtu in 2022 to $0.43 per MMBtu in 2024.
This price reduction has made drilling less economical,
particularly in higher-cost regions like Haynesville.

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