The collapse of oil prices will have a slightly bigger impact on U.S. crude production this year and the next than previously estimated, the Energy Information Administration said. The agency reduced its output forecast for this year by 1.5 percent to 9.22 million barrels a day, according to its monthly Short-Term Energy Outlook. It cut the 2016 forecast to 8.82 million from 8.96 million last month. “U.S. monthly crude oil production is expected to decline through the middle of next year in response to low oil prices,” EIA Administrator Adam Sieminski said in an e-mailed statement. “Current low oil prices are making some U.S. oil production less profitable.” America’s shale drillers have sidelined more than half their rigs since October as they confront tumbling prices. The number of active oil rigs in the U.S. fell by 13 to 662 last week, according to data compiled by Baker […]