Total U.S. crude oil production reached a record 13.513 MMb/d, with the EIA now reporting figures to the nearest 1 Mb/d. Gross refinery input increased by 515 Mb/d to 17.1 MMb/d, the highest since late August, while imports surged by 1.2 MMb/d to 7.3 MMb/d, and exports fell by 430 Mb/d to 4.2 MMb/d, resulting in a net import increase of 1.6 MMb/d. This imbalance helped soften a 5.1 MMbbl drop in commercial crude inventories, the largest weekly decline since August. With refinery input for December at its highest in years despite reduced capacity from plant closures, U.S. crude production continues to set records and imports are rising.

As OPEC+ prepares to meet and evaluate the continuation of voluntary production cuts, smaller members may show reluctance, especially as rising U.S. production threatens their market share. A fracture in OPEC+ solidarity could spark increased international competition against U.S. exports, potentially driving crude prices lower both domestically and globally.

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