Devon Energy Corporation is an American company engaged in hydrocarbon exploration. It is organized in Delaware with operational headquarters in the 50-story Devon Energy Center in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Its operations are in the Delaware Basin, Eagle Ford Group, and the Rocky Mountains (Williston Basin and Powder River Basin).

The company is ranked 267th on the Fortune 500 and 607th on the Forbes Global 2000.

As of December 31, 2025, the company had proved reserves of 2,428 million barrels of oil equivalent (1.485×1010 GJ), of which 40% was petroleum, 30% was natural gas liquids, and 30% was natural gas.

History

Devon was founded in 1971 by John Nichols (1914-2008) and his son, J. Larry Nichols. In 1988, the company became a public company via an initial public offering.

In October 2012, the company completed construction of its current headquarters, the 50-story Devon Energy Center in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma and closed its office in the Allen Center in Downtown Houston.

In February 2016, Devon announced plans to lay off 1,000 employees, including 700 in Oklahoma City, and cut its quarterly dividend to $0.06 per share due to low prices of its products. In 2021, it instituted a fixed plus variable dividend structure that resulted in a record high dividend.

Acquisitions

#YearCompanyPriceDescription of AssetsRef(s).
1February 1992Hondo Oil and Gas$122 millionOil and gas reserves and seven natural gas processing plants
2January 1996Kerr-McGee$250 millionNorth American onshore oil and gas properties; 370,000 net acres of undeveloped drilling rights
3July 1998Northstar Energy$750 millionOil and gas properties in Canada
4August 1999PennzEnergy$2.2 billionOil and gas properties in the Gulf of Mexico
5May 2000Santa Fe Snyder$3.35 billionOil and gas properties in the Permian Basin, Rocky Mountains, and the Gulf of Mexico
6September 2001Anderson Exploration$4.6 billionOil and gas properties in Canada
7August 2002Mitchell Energy$3.1 billionOil and gas properties in the Barnett Shale of Texas
8April 2003Ocean Energy$5.3 billionDeepwater sites in the Gulf of Mexico
9May 2006Chief Oil & Gas$2.2 billionBarnett Shale leaseholds
10February 2014GeoSouthern Energy$6.1 billionEagle Ford assets
11March 2014Crosstex EnergyMerger of midstream assets to form EnLink Midstream, LLC
12December 2015Felix Energy$2.5 billionOil and gas properties in the Powder River Basin and Anadarko Basin
13January 2021WPX Energy$2.56 billionOil and gas properties in the Williston Basin and the Permian Basin
14July 2022RimRock Oil and Gas$865 millionWilliston Basin assets
15September 2022Validus Energy$1.8 billionEagle Ford assets
16October 2024Grayson Mill Energy$5 billionWilliston Basin assets

Divestitures

#YearBuyerPriceDescription of AssetsRef(s).
1March 2010BP$7 billionAssets in Brazil, Azerbaijan, and the Gulf of Mexico
2April 2014Canadian Natural ResourcesC$3.125 billionConventional assets in Canada
3June 2014Linn Energy$2.3 billion900,000 net acres in the Rockies, Mid-Continent, east Texas, north Louisiana, and south Texas
4July 2017Penn Virginia$340 millionLavaca County assets in the Eagle Ford
5June 2019Canadian Natural ResourcesC$3.8 billionAssets in Canada
6October 2020Banpu Kalnin Ventures (BKV)$770 millionAssets in the Barnett Shale

CEOs

  • J. Larry Nichols (1980-2010)
  • John Richels (2010-2015)
  • Dave Hager (2015-2021)
  • Rick Muncrief (2021-2025)
  • Clay Gaspar (2025-)

Political activity

The Devon Energy Center in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, the headquarters of Devon Energy.

Devon has contributed millions of dollars to politicians and political organizations, almost entirely to organizations and individuals affiliated with the Republican Party.

After agreeing with the Obama administration to install systems to control the illegal emission of hazardous chemicals, Devon backed out of such agreements during the first presidency of Donald Trump due to rollbacks of environmental regulations.

In 2014, an investigation by The New York Times uncovered that a three-page letter signed by Scott Pruitt, then the Attorney General of Oklahoma, to the United States Environmental Protection Agency advocating for a relaxing of laws related to hydraulic fracturing was actually written by lobbyists for Devon Energy and not by Pruitt.

Environmental and legal issues

In November 2019, a blowout at a Devon natural gas well prompted authorities to seal off thousands of acres of land near the Eagle Ford Shale towns of Yorktown, Texas and Nordheim, Texas until the well was capped. It took 35 hours to get the issue under control. The company paid $48,750 in fines for the incident.

In September 2021, the company agreed to pay $6.15 million to resolve allegations that it violated the False Claims Act of 1863 by underpaying and underreporting royalties for natural gas from federal lands in Wyoming and New Mexico.

External links

  • Business data for Devon Energy Corporation: