US oil production suffers largest annual drop amid COVID-19

The United States crude oil production averaged 11.3 million barrels per day in 2020, down 935,000 b/d (8 percent) from the record annual average high of 12.2 million b/d in 2019.

The 2020 decrease in production was the largest annual decline in the US Energy Information Administration’s records.

The EIA said on Tuesday that the production decline resulted from reduced drilling activity related to low oil prices in 2020.

In January 2020, US crude oil production reached a peak of 12.8 million b/d. In March 2020, crude oil prices decreased because of the sudden drop in petroleum demand that resulted from the global response to the coronavirus pandemic.

The agency said the declining prices led crude oil operators to shut in wells and limit the number of wells brought online, lowering the output for the major oil-producing regions.

It said in May, US crude oil production reached its lowest average monthly volume for the year at 10.0 million b/d.

According to the EIA, in 2020, more crude oil was produced in Texas than in any other state or region of the country, accounting for 43 percent of the national total.

It said crude oil production in Texas averaged 4.87 million b/d in 2020, a decrease of 205,000 b/d (4 percent) from the record high of 5.07 million b/d set in 2019.

The Federal Offshore Gulf of Mexico saw the largest decrease in crude oil production, falling by 245,000 b/d (13 percent) to an annual average of 1.65 million b/d in 2020.

The EIA said several hurricanes and tropical storms struck the Gulf of Mexico last year, causing operators to evacuate platforms and shut in production.

North Dakota had the second-largest decrease at 242,000 b/d (17 percent) to an annual average of 1.18 million b/d. Oklahoma had the largest percentage decrease at 19 percent, falling to an annual average of 469,000 b/d.

The largest statewide increase in crude oil production in 2020 was in New Mexico, where it increased by 133,000 b/d (15 percent) to a record annual average high of 1.04 million b/d.

The growth in New Mexico came from the Permian Basin, which spans parts of western Texas and eastern New Mexico, according to the EIA.

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