The move gives some much-needed reassurance over the shale industry’s future after a dramatic contraction last year that came as virus shutdowns curtailed travel and sent the U.S. economy into a tailspin. The Permian, which produces more than a third of the crude oil and over a tenth of the natural gas in the U.S., is showing a modest recovery in production and jobs, even as other shale regions flat-line and U.S. oil and gas companies focus on returning capital to investors rather than raising output.
“Cultivating communities that are attractive to current and prospective employees is a key avenue to ensuring a thriving energy industry,” said Tracee Bentley, president and chief executive officer of the Permian Strategic Partnership.
Texas’s transportation department is providing $675 million for roads and related projects, while the State of New Mexico is contributing $13 million, according to figures provided by the partnership. Companies, which range from multinationals including Chevron and Royal Dutch Shell Plc to large independents such as EOG Resources Inc. and service providers like Halliburton, are spending $48.5 million.
Voters in Hobbs, New Mexico, approved a bond package that included $15 million that will be added to another $35 million from the partnership and others to launch the Hobbs Career and Technical Education Center. Some $28.5 million will be spent on a Texas Tech University program that will add more physician assistants in the region.
About $300,000 will go to SpaceX’s Starlink satellite network to provide free and year-round high-speed Internet service to students in the Odessa-based Ector County Independent School District.
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