Source: Energy Information Administration Website According to the Energy Information Administration, otherwise known as the EIA, oil output from the Bakken, Eagle Ford, and Niobrara regions will fall by 31,000 bo/d, 47,000 bo/d, and 16,000 bo/d, respectively, in June 2015 compared to May 2015. Crude oil production from the Permian Basin and the Utica regions is expected to rise by 7,000 bo/d and 1,000 bo/d, respectively, slightly offsetting the decline that will cause oil production from the seven areas mentioned in the report [which also includes the Marcellus and the Haynesville, which will see crude output stay flat over this period] to decline by 86,000 bo/d in one month. This is a sign of the market stabilizing itself, which is good news in the long term. America's shale boom hit a small hiccup, but higher oil prices combined with lower third-party costs and more productive wells will eventually result in growth returning [timing heavily dependent on where WTI goes]. Some of these are natural gas oriented plays, like the Marcellus, kind of the Utica, and the Haynesville. Natural gas production is expected to fall from all of these areas expect the Marcellus and the Utica [while Haynesville natural gas output will stay flat month-over-month].