Casper Oil Firms Spark Construction Boom in Wyoming
CASPER, Wyo. (AP) — Casper's commercial real estate market is booming, propelled by heavy investments from local oil and gas support companies, according to reports from the Casper Star-Tribune. Firms such as Cactus Wellhead, with its Casper operations, Prairie Field Services, and Panhandle Oilfield Services are expanding facilities and offices, spurring construction projects across Natrona County. This surge mirrors the 2013-2014 oil boom when Wyoming produced a record 100 million barrels, driven by fracking in the Powder River Basin, which boosted local employment and housing demand.
The current wave builds on Casper's legacy as the Rocky Mountain hub for oil refining, dating back to the 1920s when the Standard Refinery became the world's largest, churning out 615,000 barrels of gasoline monthly. Boomtowns like Salt Creek, Midwest, Teapot, Edgerton and Snyder sprang up around the Salt Creek Oil Field, piping crude to Casper for processing. Today's oilfield services—well plugging by Continental Services, field operations by Prairie, and wellhead services by Cactus—are now channeling profits into brick-and-mortar growth, with new commercial builds addressing demand from an influx of energy workers.
Natrona County's oil and gas sector remains pivotal, supporting thousands of jobs despite past downturns like the 1980s bust and 2014-2015 price crash. County data highlights ongoing production in areas like the Powder River Basin, where fracking unlocked shale reserves. These investments signal cautious optimism in Casper, though residents recall the volatility that followed earlier booms, including job losses from the COVID-19 downturn.
Related Topics
Article Ratings
0 ratings submitted
How do you feel about this story?
National Desk
Sign in to follow this author from their profile.


Discussion (0)
Join the Conversation
No comments yet. Be the first to comment!