Latest News

EIA data show that US oil production fell to its lowest level in two years during the January winter storm.

EIA data show that US oil production fell to its lowest level in two years during the January winter storm.
EIA data show that US oil production fell to its lowest level in two years during the January winter storm.

The Energy Information Administration reported on Tuesday that U.S. crude oil production fell the most in two years last month following a'severe winterstorm' which knocked production offline?in large parts of the country.

The EIA data showed that U.S. crude output dropped 410,000 barrels a day in January, compared to the previous month, to 13,25 million barrels a day, the lowest level since February 2025.

The EIA reported that the total U.S. crude and petroleum product consumption fell by 201,000 barrels per day in January to 20.7 millions bpd, which is the lowest level since November '2025.

The demand for gasoline dropped'sharply' during the winter storms of January. The EIA's measure for demand for motor gasoline finished fell by 501,000 bpd in a month. This is the lowest level since January 2022. Retail gasoline prices topped $4 per gallon on Monday, as the Iran War upended the global oil markets. This could put more pressure on fuel demand in the U.S.

In January, the demand for distillate fuels (diesel and heating oil) increased due to unusually cold temperatures.

The EIA data revealed that the average amount of distillate fuel products supplied in January was 4.03 million bpd, an increase of 213,000 bpd from month to month. This is the largest increase in over a year. (Reporting and editing by Chris Reese, Will Dunham, and Shariq Khan from New York)

(source: Reuters)