RBN’s Daily Energy Blog and Insights sharpen your energy IQ through fundamentals-based analysis that makes sense of North America’s energy market dynamics.

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Q1 2026 Earnings Calls: BP Says Full Effect of Higher Crude Prices Won't Be Felt Until Q2

BP, which saw its earnings more than double to $3.2 billion in Q1 2026 due in large part to a spike in crude oil prices as a result of the war in Iran, said April 28 that the full effect of those higher prices on earnings and refinery margins won’t be felt until the second quarter.

RBN Energy Crude Oil Billboard

The Crude Oil Billboard keeps readers at the forefront of the U.S. crude oil market by offering access to data and information moments after its release. Say goodbye to PDF reports that come out after the market has already moved on. 

- Blog

Ship of Joules - A Propane-Laden VLGC Inaugurates the Expanded Panama Canal

Author Housley Carr

After the $5 billion-plus expansion of the Panama Canal is dedicated this Sunday, June 26, the first “New Panamax” vessel scheduled to pass through the canal’s new, longer, wider locks will be the Lycaste Peace, a Very Large Gas Carrier (VLGC) that is transporting propane from Enterprise Products Partners’ Houston Ship Channel export terminal to Tokyo Bay in Japan. What remains to be seen, though, is how many other supersized vessels carrying propane, liquefied natural gas (LNG) or other hydrocarbons will follow, and how soon. Today, we mark the formal opening of the newly enlarged Atlantic-Pacific short-cut with a look both at the game-changing potential of the expanded canal and the realities of today’s energy and shipping markets.

- Blog

The Great Wall – The Barriers to Shale Gas in China: & Why Shales Worked in the US

China has got a lot of shale gas.   To the tune of 1,275 Tcf of technically recoverable shale reserves, by some estimates.   But today it is all still sitting in the ground.  If that potential is tapped in any significant way, it will have a huge impact on global gas balances, with implications for LNG markets, economic competitiveness and geopolitical clout.  But a lot of obstacles must be removed before the promise of Chinese shale gas can be realized.  Last week I spoke at the Global Unconventional Gas Summit, held in Beijing.  After listening to two days of presentations on the issues, I came away with the view that while some of these barriers are inherent in the Chinese system, probably the biggest barrier is a general misunderstanding of why shale gas developed the way it did in the U.S. in the first place.  So today we will provide a small window into the Chinese shale gas initiative and in the process learn something about the real drivers of shale gas development here in the U.S.