Texas energy regulators on Tuesday said they will not mandate oil production cuts, ending a month-long debate about whether they would wade into global oil politics for the first time in 50 years as crude prices crater to historic lows.
Global energy demand has tumbled amid coronavirus-related travel and business restrictions and a glut of oil from shale. U.S. crude collapsed to minus $37 a barrel on April 20. Even with recent increases in futures to $24, local prices are still below the cost of production for some oil companies.
The turmoil prompted State Railroad Commissioner Ryan Sitton last month to push the idea after Parsley Energy Inc
But a motion to consider widespread production curbs, called proration, was dismissed on Tuesday by a 2-1 vote.
"The industry and the market move a lot faster than we can as a regulatory body," Commissioner Christi Craddick said.
Other states and countries have not acted to cut additional output, which would have Texas "on our own with this," Commission Chairman Wayne Christian said.
Pioneer was disappointed, said Chief Executive Scott Sheffield.
"Pioneer continues to believe that proration offered important benefits to the Texas energy industry, given the unprecedented combination of demand destruction due to Covid-19 and market oversupply," Sheffield said.
Many companies, including Chevron Corp
Texas is the largest U.S. oil-producing state, pumping about 5.4 million bpd of crude. Last year, its output rose by 600,000 bpd, to about 41 per cent of the nation's total.