Updates
October 20, 2014: in the original post, I said, "Alaska isn't coming back." The Alaska Dispatch provides an update:
The price for Alaska oil dipped to $82.80 on Tuesday and $82.16 on Wednesday.
The oil price slide, triggered by more supply, less demand and a move by Saudi Arabia to compete for market share, holds major implications for Alaska if it lasts. As always, that’s a big “if.”
In June, the threat of a disruption on the world market by continued unrest in the Middle East sent prices climbing to $113, but in four months the world view has changed again. Oil is $30 cheaper and the gaping hole in the Alaska budget is potentially hundreds of millions deeper.The article talks about taxes on oil in Alaska. Two data points:
With the most recent decline, Alaska oil prices are close to what they were in 2010, but oil production is down by more than 100,000 barrels per day, the continuation of the long-term decline of the largest oil field ever found in North America.
At $80 per barrel, the effective net tax rate on most oil production is about 15 percent under the current system, rising to 25 percent at $100 per barrel and 30 percent at $120 per barrel, the Department of Revenue says.
The Legislature adjourned and the governor signed the budget knowing it would take an annual average oil price of $117 to balance it, expecting prices below that level but above $100.
Original Post
Forbes is reporting: shale rail means cheaper gas for California. This is really, really cool. I haven't read the article, but the headline is intriguing. I started opining about this about a month ago based on RBN Energy posts. Remember three data points:
1) California has no crude oil pipelines into the state (and never will be)Now add in a couple of more data points:
2) California source for crude oil: Alaska and OPEC
3) there are three on-shore oil plays in the states: the Permian, the Eagle Ford, and the Bakken
- Alaska isn't coming back in a long time
- OPEC oil is way more expensive than Bakken oil
- rail to Vancouver to ocean-going tanker to San Francisco
- with gasoline well below historic highs, the end of "demand destruction," which will generate more demand
- Permian and Eagle Ford are "wired" to deliver oil to the Gulf Coast
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A Note to the Granddaughters
This is really quite a story. Some years ago I posted a fairly extensive biography of my dad as part of the collection of "Million Dollar Way" stories. During WWII my dad had joined the US Coast Guard which during the war operated as a service in the US Navy. For almost the entire time he was in the US Coast Guard / US Navy dad served as an enlisted man on the USS Wakefield, a cruise ship before the war that had been converted to a troop carrier, carrying US troops to Europe; US Marines to China; and, POWs back to the states.
At one point Dad talked about Jack Dempsey being on the USS Wakefield. I noted it, and inserted a short biography of Dempsey and the USS Wakefield into dad's biography. I did not give it much thought a the time.
Break, break.
I am currently reading Donald L. Miller's Supreme City, c. 2014, the history of Lower Manhattan, New York City, during the Jazz Age, pretty much the 1920s and the early 1930s. It is most enjoyable and I highly recommend it to anyone at all interested in that history, and who simply enjoys really good writing. It's one of the few books I have paid full price for, seeing it featured at Books On Broadway in Williston during my last trip to the Bakken.
Chapters 18, 19, and 20, relate the big sports stories of the Jazz Age, notably the sluggers, Babe Ruth and Jack Dempsey.
Dempsey had avoided WWI; he was considered unpatriotic by most, and perhaps a traitor by many, for doing what another boxer would do some decades later, but for very different reasons. I don't know the "whys" and "wherefores" but Jack Dempsey redeemed himself in WWII. According to USCG history:
During World War II Dempsey joined New York State National Guard and was given a commission as a first lieutenant. He resigned that commission to accept a commission as a lieutenant in the Coast Guard Reserve.
He reported for active duty on 12 June 1942 at Coast Guard Training Station, Manhattan Beach, Brooklyn, New York, where he was assigned as "Director of Physical Education." He also made many personal appearances at fights, camps, hospitals and War Bond drives. He was promoted to lieutenant commander (temporary) in December 1942 and commander (temporary) in March of 1944.
In 1944 he was assigned to the transport USS Wakefield.
In 1945 he was on the attack transport USS Arthur Middleton for the invasion of Okinawa. In July of 1945 he assigned to the Commander, 11th Naval District for assignment to Military Morale Duty. He was released from active duty in September 1945.According to dad's bio:
“After boot camp, I went by train to Boston, Massachusetts. From Boston, the assignments were made. I was assigned to Rockland, Maine. I spent about a year in Maine and then was assigned to the USS Wakefield (AP-21). The USS Wakefield was a former liner called The SS Manhattan. In 1942 it had burned to the water line and was rebuilt and recommissioned the USS Wakefield, a troop transport, on February 10, 1943. The ship was harbored in Hartford, Connecticut. I was there living in barracks waiting to go to sea. I was on the shake-down cruise and then went to Boston, Massachusetts. The USS Wakefield home port was Pier 13, Boston Harbor, until February 1945.”While assigned to the USS Wakefield, Dad logged:
- 17 round trips to Liverpool;
- England 3 round trips to France, including one to Marseilles;
- 2 round trips to Naples, Italy;
- 6 trips in the Mediterranean; and,
- 4 round trips across the Pacific, including China
For the archives. Just some idle meandering.
By the way, speaking of POWs that were brought back to the states. While assigned to the USAF many years ago, and while stationed in Germany, I ran into a German who had been a POW and brought to the states for "incarceration." He was said he was very, very fortunate to have gotten out of the war that way and had appreciated the Americans ever since. His POW camp/prison was somewhere in Louisiana. I don't recall what his "job" was during the day, but in the evening the German POWs were allowed to leave the camp/prison as long as they returned back to the camp sometime before midnight. And they always did. I guess the punishment for failing to return was a threat to be returned to the fighting front in Germany when caught after going AWOL from prison.
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