Weeks to re-balance:
Week
|
Date
|
Drawdown
|
Storage
|
Weeks to RB
|
Week 0
|
Apr 26, 2017
|
529.0
|
180
|
|
Week 1
|
May 3, 2017
|
0.9
|
528.0
|
198
|
Week 2
|
May 10, 2017
|
6
|
522.0
|
50
|
Week 3
|
May 17, 2017
|
1.8
|
520.2
|
59
|
Week 4
|
May 24, 2017
|
4.4
|
515.8
|
51
|
Week 5
|
May 31, 2017
|
6.4
|
509.9
|
41
|
Week 6
|
June 7, 2017
|
-3.3
|
513.2
|
60
|
Week 7
|
June 14, 2017
|
1.7
|
511.5
|
57
|
Week 8
|
June 21, 2017
|
2.5
|
509.0
|
62
|
Week 9
|
June 28, 2017
|
-0.2
|
509.2
|
71
|
Week 10
|
July 6, 2017
|
6.3
|
502.9
|
58
|
Week 11
|
July 12, 2017
|
7.6
|
495.3
|
47
|
Week 12
|
July 19, 2017
|
4.7
|
490.6
|
43
|
Week 13
|
July 26, 2017
|
7.2
|
483.4
|
38
|
Week 14
|
August 2, 2017
|
1.5
|
481.9
|
33
|
Week 15
|
August 9, 2017
|
6.5
|
475.4
|
35
|
Week 16
|
August 16, 2017
|
8.9
|
466.5
|
30
|
Week 17
|
August 23, 2017
|
3.3
|
463.2
|
29
|
Week 18
|
August 30, 2017
|
5.4
|
457.8
|
27
|
Notes: on the weeekly re-balancing report. US crude oil reserves declined by 5.4 million bbls this past week. My estimate for re-balancing, if the decline stays on pace (average over past 18 weeks): 27 weeks.
From my perspective, this is much more quickly than I would have predicted just a few months ago. This takes us to the end of the year. I had expected the re-balancing to take us well into 2018, if ever.
Again, for newbies: I define re-balancing as having 350 million bbls of US crude oil in storage (does not include the SPR), or about 22 days of storage.
Comments: some pundits have said that due to Hurricane Harvey, there is simply no more room for oil in the pipelines; they are all backed up because the Gulf coast refiners can't take any more.
Some data points:
- for the past 18 weeks, US crude oil inventories have decreased
- the largest US storage area: Cushing, OK -- last time I checked, not impacted by Hurricane Harvey
- pipelines from Eagle Ford, closed
- pipelines from the Permian, status?
- ships off-shore have not been able to download for the past several days (to the best of my knowledge, floating oil is not included in weekly US crude oil inventory numbers)
- California oil is not affected
- there are refineries in the northwest, midcontinent, and northeast that were not directly affected by Hurricane Harvey
- US gasoline demand near record highs
***********************************
Margaret Sanger: A Life Of Passion
Jean H. Baker
c. 2011
DDS: 363.9BAK
Chapter 1: Maggie Higgins: Daughter of Corning
- US Civil War
- Corning glassworks
- Erie Canal
- Maggie Higgins: born 1879
- family's relationship with their Catholic church
- poor upbringing
- Erie Railroad bridge that spanned the Chemung River
- 1895, 16 years old, boarding school
- failed to complete 8 grades by school, by two weeks
- enrolled at the Claverack College and Hudson River Institute in 1895/96?
- a coeducational boarding school near Hudson, NY
- originally a girls' school; then coeducational; good regional reputation
- family unable to finance her through graduation; she completed only three years; did not graduate
- 1899, mother dies; Maggie brought home to tend to her dying mother
- 1900: enters nursing school at the White Plains Hospital outside NYC
- her goal: medical school; Cornell University in nearby Ithaca, NY
- only 5% of US doctors female at that time
- many male suitors, despite being poor and uneducated
- new opportunity, coincidentally: nurses needed for the Spanish-American War, in the Philippines
- nursing schools increased in the US
- White Plains Hospital was one of the beneficiaries of this new phenomenon
- tuberculosis scare
- meets William Sanger, a handsome, freelance draftsman, an aspiring architect and artist; at a dance
- six months later, abruptly married
- no longer "Higgins"
- nurses forbidden to marry and she was expelled from nursing school
- again, did not graduate
- five months later, pregnant
- tuberculosis, national epidemic
- in a TB sanatorium while pregnant
- shortly after baby Stuart's birth, Maggie relapsed (TB)
- second son, born 1908; defiantly pregnant again 13 months later; Margaret (Peggy - born 1910)
- never pregnant again
- obviously the couple employed some form of birth control
- US declining birth rates: by 1900, typical American woman had 3.2 children compared to 7.4 one century earlier
- doctors saw birth control not as an opportunity to improve women's health, but rather as a hazard threatening their professional practices
- overwhelmingly, physicians opposed any form of artificial contraception
- Harvard graduate, president Teddy Roosevelt spoke of "race suicide"
- in 1910, tranquil life
- she joined a literary club, reading papers on George Eliot and Robert Browning
The rest of the notes are posted here.
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