Saudi Minister: 'Not Our Intent To Damage U.S. Shale.' Really?

 | Apr 14, 2020 05:17AM ET

You’d expect Donald Trump to say it, of course. The U.S. president wants to be seen as the savior of everything American, from jobs to oil. But to hear the Saudi Energy Minister state that he wishes to see the U.S. shale industry prosper and thrive — after starting a campaign just a month ago to destroy it — is like hearing a tiger roar that it’s gone vegetarian.

Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman’s well wishes for shale were made known on the same day that the U.S. Energy Information Administration made the somber deduction that the hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking,” industry — the engine behind America’s growth as the No. 1 oil producer — will suffer its biggest ever production loss this month.

According to the EIA, production from fracking in the seven major U.S. shale basins will drop by a record total of 194,000 barrels per day in April to reach around 8.7 million bpd as crude prices remain down more than 50% on the year.