It has been an eventful year for U.S. shale oil and gas. Low prices—at least in oil—a double down on capital discipline, and drilling efficiency gains that pushed the U.S. total to a record high again were the hallmarks of 2025. The next frontier? Recovery rates.

Recovery rates for shale oil wells are much lower than the rates for conventional wells. The average is around and below 10%, compared with 30% to 35% for conventional wells. Given the prominence of shale basins in the United States’ total oil production, it was only a matter of time before recovery rates came into the spotlight. With the Trump administration’s prioritization of energy, the time was right.

Wood Mackenzie recently reported on the administration’s signals to the energy industry that it is time to start paying closer attention to recovery rates and ways of boosting them. The report cited the assistant secretary of energy, Kyle Haustveit, who was appointed head of the new Hydrocarbons and Geothermal Energy Office at the Department of Energy, as saying the industry should strive to double recovery rates from shale wells.

“Today for oil reservoirs we recover roughly 10% of the oil in place,” Haustveit said at a recent industry event. “We can repeat the shale revolution with the resource we’ve already characterised, the wells we’ve already drilled, through the infrastructure that’s been built.”

Like Energy Secretary Chris Wright, assistant secretary Haustveit is an industry veteran. As Wood Mackenzie points out, Haustveit, formerly with Devon Energy, had been involved in developing drilling optimization techniques, which makes him a perfect choice for the effort to boost recovery rates—an effort, which the industry is already making.

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U.S. oil production topped 13.6 million barrels daily earlier this year. The continued growth came despite a decline in the number of active rigs and despite persistently low international oil prices. It also came despite the fact that, as Energy Intelligence noted in a recent industry report, drilling productivity is deteriorating.

The report cited KeyBanc Capital Markets analysts as reporting drilling productivity declines of between 8% in the Midland Basin to as much as 27% in the Eagle Ford. The analysts called the productivity decline “pervasive” and said it was a result of both field maturation, which is a natural process, and of what the report called efficiency tradeoffs. Specifically, the well productivity decline was attributed to the energy industry’s newfound focus on capital discipline and cost cuts, which, per Energy Intelligence, “means fewer opportunities to chase aggressive growth.”

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