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There’s one place where OPEC can’t broker an oil deal: The fracking heartland of Texas

Trucks serving the oil industry pass through the town of Cuero, Texas.

Saudi Arabia and Russia took the initial step to stem the slide in oil prices. There’s just one problem: If they are successful – and that is a large if – the wildcatters of Texas, Oklahoma and North Dakota are waiting to pounce.

With 4,000 wells drilled and just waiting for better prices to be triggered stream, the so-called fracklog could act as a cap to any oil rally, industry executives, traders and OPEC officials said.

Worse, a price recovery could effectively bail out dozens of shale companies now struggling with $30-a-barrel oil, letting them return to the main city market.

“If you think about creating a production cut as OPEC, prices rise and these producers can get oil online in 80 days,” Jeff Currie, Goldman Sachs Head of Commodities Research, said on Bloomberg TV.

“It makes any kind of price rally self-defeating.”

The look for a grand bargain among oil producers now use the Iranian capital Wednesday as Venezuela and Qatar energy ministers started talks with Iran and Iraq to try to expand an agreement to freeze crude production to shore up prices.

The chance of meaningful output cuts for Saudi Arabia, Russia yet others is they backfire. Slowly but surely, low prices happen to be bringing the U.S. shale industry to the knees. Bankruptcies have mounted while company after company slashed spending, laid off roughnecks and idled drilling rigs.

As many as 74 North American producers face significant difficulties in sustaining debt, according to credit score firm Moody’s Investors Service.

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