Slowing US Shale Growth Has Fracking Companies Finding New Markets Abroad

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tenaris frack set in the vaca muerta formation in argentina 1200x810

A Tenaris frack set in the Vaca Muerta formation in Argentina, one of the world’s largest shale gas reservoirs. Source: Tenaris


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US fracking companies are increasingly sending their idle equipment overseas, finding new markets abroad as growth slows in the shale fields of Texas, New Mexico and elsewhere.

Over the past two years, hundreds of pumps the size of 18-wheelers have been sent to Argentina by providers including Halliburton Co., Calfrac Well Services Ltd. and Tenaris SA, and to Australia by Liberty Energy Inc. and Halliburton, according to estimates from analytics firm Primary Vision. The shipments also include sand towers, water tanks, industrial blenders and miles of hoses used to inject fluid and sand into rock layers more than a mile underground.

All this equipment amounts to nearly one-fifth of the fracking power deployed in the Permian Basin as recently as last year, and more could follow. Halliburton, the world’s largest fracking service provider, has said it sees incentives to move equipment abroad as its international business expands.

Sending underused diesel-powered fleets abroad could help oil-field service companies recover after years of squeezed profits and pressure from customers to lower costs. There is a downside, however, for the oil and gas producers that hire Halliburton and the others to frack their wells: less equipment in the US is apt to drive up costs when and if companies start ramping up production again.

Private operators may feel the squeeze first. These companies tend to ramp up drilling and fracking when oil and gas prices rise. If equipment becomes harder to secure, projects could stall, said Primary Vision CEO Matt Johnson.

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“It could take an independent guy and push him into a non-operational scenario, and then potentially put himself into an acquisition because he doesn’t have the availability or means to hire that pressure pumper or the equipment isn’t available, or they don’t want to get in a contract,” Johnson said.

us frack spreads fall as only best equipment stays active

Source: Primary Vision
Note: Data as of Friday, February 20, 2026

Frackers are among the strongest performers among oil-sector stocks this year. Liberty has advanced more than 50% and Halliburton is up 23%.

The heavy-duty frack pumps have been a ubiquitous symbol of the shale patch for decades — a necessary piece of equipment used to pump water, sand and chemicals underground to blast open tight, oil-bearing rock so the crude can flow.

Of roughly 18 million horsepower of US fracking capacity, about 8 million represents idle inventory held in reserve and available for reactivation should market demand shift, Johnson said. As much as a quarter of that inventory will be exported over the next year or two, he added.

Countries including Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates may deploy more sophisticated fracking machinery for the first time to boost natural gas production, with diesel-fueled equipment in high demand, according to Barclays Capital Inc. analyst Dave Anderson.

“We’ve been drilling shale for 20 years and know it inside and out, but we’ve never really seen this take off anywhere else,” Anderson said in an interview. “What’s really happening right now is international unconventional resources, which we’ve never seen before.”

To be sure, outside of Argentina, it’s uncertain shale work will be needed as much in other countries, Bobby Tudor, a Houston-based banker who helped finance the US shale revolution, said in an interview Tuesday.

“That’s not what you need in the Eastern Mediterranean, it’s not what you need in Vietnam, or Malaysia or West Africa, that’s more of an offshore business,” Tudor said. “I think the US onshore shale business will continue to be the swing supplier for the foreseeable future.”

oil pipes at a drilling rig in añelo, argentina

Oil pipes at a drilling rig in Añelo, Argentina.Photographer: Ricardo Ceppi/Getty Images

The success of the US shale revolution of the early 2000s — when hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling unlocked hard-to-reach energy reserves — prompted some companies to prioritize domestic resources over international exploration, said Josh Dixon, a Wood Mackenzie analyst.

Now, a growing number of countries are evaluating those unconventional methods, and a wider mix of players — including independent operators and national oil companies — is defining a new era of global exploration, Dixon said.

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“There isn’t anything obvious out there which is going to distract people from the second phase of unconventional exploration right now,” Dixon said. “The biggest question is going to remain on whether these plays can be proven to be successful.”

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