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United States crude output falls 6% in January due to severe cold, EIA says

U.S. crude oil production dropped in January to 12.5 million barrels each day (bpd), a 6% decrease from December's record high, following freezing weather condition, information from the Energy Info Administration showed on Friday.

Petroleum output in top oil state Texas fell in January to 5.4 million bpd, down about 5% from the previous month, the information revealed, while production in North Dakota fell nearly 13% to 1.1 million bpd.

A severe winter storm in January drastically slashed oil production and

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Texas refining capacity and as it disposed snow and rain across a broad swath of the nation.

U.S. crude oil production reached historic highs of 13.3 million bpd in and December. Texas, North Dakota and New Mexico, major oil producing states, all produced record amounts of crude oil in those months, the EIA data revealed.

Nevertheless, the winter in January caused North Dakota's oil production to be halved to between 600,000 bpd and 650,000 bpd, the state's pipeline authority stated at the time. Other major U.S. oil producing areas were also impacted.

The weather condition also hit intake of motor fuel in January, and gas product provided, a proxy for need, fell by about 600,000 bpd to 8.2 million bpd, its most affordable in 2 years, according to the EIA's month-to-month petroleum status report.

Gross natural gas production in the U.S. Lower 48 states fell about 3.6% to a record 114.1 billion cubic feet daily ( bcfd) in January, up from the previous record of 118.4 bcfd in December, the EIA stated.

Regular monthly output in January fell 4.6% in Texas to 33.5 bcfd, below a record 35.1 in December, while month-to-month output in Pennsylvania fell by 1.5% in Pennsylvania to 21.3 bcfd.

(source: Reuters)