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US drillers cut three oil rigs, add three gas rigs, leaving weekly count unchanged, says Baker Hughes

ReutersFeb 13, 2026 7:04 PM
  • Total rig count unchanged at 551, down 6% from last year, says Baker Hughes
  • Oil rigs fall to 409, lowest since January; gas rigs rise to 133, highest since July 2023
  • EIA projects stable crude output, rising gas output and prices in 2026

By Scott DiSavino

- U.S. energy firms this week cut three oil rigs and added three natural gas rigs, keeping the overall rig count unchanged, energy services firm Baker Hughes BKR.O said in its closely followed report on Friday.

After rising for three weeks in a row, the oil and gas rig count, an early indicator of future output, held at 551 in the week to February 13. BHGUSWTT, BHGUSOILDRLW, BHGUSGASDRLW

Baker Hughes said that left the total count down 37 rigs, or 6% below this time last year.

Baker Hughes said oil rigs fell by three to 409 this week, their lowest since early January, while gas rigs rose by three to 133, their highest since July 2023.

In the Haynesville Shale in Louisiana and Texas, Baker Hughes said the rig count rose by two to 52, the highest since June 2023.

In the Marcellus Shale in Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Virginia, the rig count rose by one to 26, the highest since December 2024.

In the Permian Shale, the nation's biggest oil-producing shale basin in West Texas and eastern New Mexico, the rig count slid by three to 238, the lowest since July 2021.

In Pennsylvania, the rig count rose by one to 20, the highest since August 2024.

The oil and gas rig count declined by about 7% in 2025, 5% in 2024 and 20% in 2023 as lower U.S. oil CLc1 prices prompted energy firms to focus more on boosting shareholder returns and paying down debt rather than increasing output.

With U.S. spot crude prices expected to fall for a fourth year in a row in 2026, the U.S. Energy Information Administration projected crude output would hold at 13.6 million barrels per day this year, matching 2025's record high.

On the gas side, EIA projected output would rise from a record 107.6 billion cubic feet per day (bcfd) in 2025 to 110.0 bcfd in 2026, with spot prices at the Henry Hub NG-W-HH-SNL benchmark in Louisiana forecast to jump by about 22% in 2026. NGAS/POLL

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