American Shale Chief Tells Peers to Stop Drilling ‘Right Away”

Shale boss Bryan Sheffield, the son of Pioneer Natural Resources founder Scott Sheffield, appears to have called on America’s shale drillers to cut drilling immediately, as Brent crude flirts with prices below $60 and WTI falls to $57/barrel.

Sheffield, who controls Formentera Partners LP, told Bloomberg he is planning to delay drilling in some cases, shift focus to existing short-term drilling contracts, and return to expanding the company’s uncompleted wells once the market stabilizes, given the chaos and oil price plunge caused in part by Trump’s tariff warfare.

Sheffield reportedly told Bloomberg that the situation right now is a “blood bath”.

“The industry needs to cut immediately and hunker down to let the tariff war play out,” Sheffield was quoted as saying.

Earlier this week, during a Permian basin golf tournament, American shale drillers let their frustrations with the Trump administration be known, according to a Bloomberg report. The industry is frustrated over its high level of support for the new administration, which has since caused a severe oil price plunge despite promises of a future where shale drillers could “drill baby, drill”.

Shale drillers contributed significantly to Trump’s election campaign and were responsible essentially for “making America great again” by catapulting the country to the status of top crude producer in the world. The betrayal is now being felt as prices continue to tank.

On April 2, Trump announced a sweeping 10% tariff on all imports, effective April 5, with further tariffs targeting specific countries to take effect on April 9. This move reverberated across the global economy, leading to an unprecedented market reaction. In just two days—Thursday and Friday—U.S. stock markets suffered their largest losses ever, erasing a staggering $6.6 trillion in value before the weekend break. Bloomberg puts total global equity value losses at $10 trillion, equivalent to 10% of global GDP. For shale drillers, this translates into a dangerous loss of demand for crude oil that will not be able to support current drilling, let alone any expansion.

By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com

‘;
document.write(write_html);
}

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com

 

  • Related Posts

    Analyst Outlines 2 Potential Scenarios for Conflict

    In a statement sent to Rigzone on Tuesday, EY-Parthenon Chief Economist Gregory Daco outlined two potential scenarios for the ongoing Middle East conflict, with oil prices rising in both. Daco’s…

    US Crude Oil Inventories Continue to Build While Gasoline Draws Down

    The American Petroleum Institute (API) estimated that crude oil inventories in the United States rose by 5.6 million barrels in the week ending February 27, after adding 11.4 million barrels…

    Have You Seen?

    Analyst Outlines 2 Potential Scenarios for Conflict

    • March 4, 2026
    Analyst Outlines 2 Potential Scenarios for Conflict

    Shipping and trade lawyers’ workloads rise as Gulf crisis disputes soar

    • March 4, 2026
    Shipping and trade lawyers’ workloads rise as Gulf crisis disputes soar

    Nasa resolves helium flow issue on Artemis II rocket

    • March 4, 2026
    Nasa resolves helium flow issue on Artemis II rocket

    Canada’s Heavy Crude Tightens as Hormuz Risk Ripples Through Global Markets

    • March 4, 2026
    Canada’s Heavy Crude Tightens as Hormuz Risk Ripples Through Global Markets

    Sanctioned Russian LNG Tanker Explodes in Mediterranean — A First of Its Kind?

    • March 4, 2026
    Sanctioned Russian LNG Tanker Explodes in Mediterranean — A First of Its Kind?

    US Crude Oil Inventories Continue to Build While Gasoline Draws Down

    • March 4, 2026
    US Crude Oil Inventories Continue to Build While Gasoline Draws Down

    Trump Says US to Provide Insurance to All Maritime Trade in Gulf

    • March 4, 2026
    Trump Says US to Provide Insurance to All Maritime Trade in Gulf

    Investors, US Crude Producers Scramble to Lock in Oil Price Spike 

    • March 4, 2026
    Investors, US Crude Producers Scramble to Lock in Oil Price Spike 

    Oil Prices Leap Higher as Iraq Shuts Down Production At Giant Oil Fields

    • March 4, 2026
    Oil Prices Leap Higher as Iraq Shuts Down Production At Giant Oil Fields

    Hormuz Freeze Sends Brent-Dubai Spread to Multi-Year High

    • March 3, 2026
    Hormuz Freeze Sends Brent-Dubai Spread to Multi-Year High