NEW YORK: US crude production fell marginally by 2,000 barrels per day (bpd) to 10.467 million bpd in April from the highest on record in March, the Energy Information Administration (EIA) said in a monthly report on Friday.
US monthly crude oil exports jumped to a record 1.76 million bpd in April compared with 1.67 million bpd in March, according to the data. Weekly US crude exports surged to a high of 3 million bpd last week.
Exports of crude oil from the United States have ramped up since Washington lifted a ban late in 2015, with shipments reaching more than 20 countries in April.
Production in Texas, the largest producing state in the United States, rose 30,000 bpd to 4.22 million bpd in April, a record high based on the data going back to 2005. Output in Texas has risen every month consecutively for at least one year on a year-over-year basis, the data showed.
New Mexico production jumped to 649,000 bpd compared with 624,000 bpd in March.
The Permian basin, which stretches across West Texas and eastern New Mexico, is the largest US oilfield.
North Dakota oil output rose 61,000 bpd in April to 1.21 million bpd versus March while output in the federal Gulf of Mexico declined 98,000 bpd to 1.58 million bpd.
The agency also revised March oil production down by 5,000 bpd to 10.469 million bpd.
Crude imports from Iraq surged to 830,000 bpd, the highest since February 2003.
The United States also imported 561,000 bpd from Venezuela, where oil output has declined amid political unrest. That was the highest since July 2017.
Gasoline demand in April was 9.19 million bpd, down about 0.7 percent, or 61,000 bpd, from a year earlier, according to the report. Gasoline exports also dropped to 886,000 bpd in April, the lowest since October, from 951,000 bpd in March.
Demand for distillate fuels, including diesel and heating oil was 4.15 million bpd, up 363,000 bpd from a year earlier. Distillate fuel exports jumped to 1.46 million bpd from 1.15 million bpd in March.
US natural gas production in the lower 48 states rose to 89.09 billion cubic feet per day (bcfd) in April, up from a revised 88.83 bcfd in March, according to the EIA's 914 production report.
Output in Texas, the nation's largest gas producer, increased 1 percent in April to 22.9 bcfd.
In Pennsylvania, the second biggest gas-producing state, production fell slightly to 16.4 bcfd in April, little-changed from March.
The United States has been the world's biggest producer of gas since 2009, ahead of Russia.
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