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Monday, June 29, 2015

Active Rigs Remain At Post-Boom Low; Huge National Natural Gas Story -- June 29, 2015

See this post for explanation why blogging has slowed down (I'm on vacation). For the family I will post a journal of sorts here, but it is not intended for the general public. You won't miss anything by not going to that site.

Active rigs:


6/29/201506/29/201406/29/201306/29/201206/29/2011
Active Rigs75191189215173


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News

The only headlines I am aware --
  • Greek banks are closed through Thursday
  • The second New York prisoner captured; not sure if the state trooper who shot him will be charged with any crime for shooting the escaped prisoner; all lives matter, I suppose
  • Supreme Court upholds use of "controversial" lethal injection drug; I wonder if Chief Justice Roberts dissented on that one? I guess it depends on whether he followed the law as written or made it up as he went along
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RBN Energy


RBN Energy updates the Marcellus: Big Deal! REX to Open the Floodgates: 5.2 Bcf/d of Marcellus/Utica Natural Gas Receipt Capacity. (Archived)
One of the most significant events to occur in the U.S. natural gas market this year will be the full-scale reversal of flows in Zone 3 of the Rockies Express Pipeline (REX), and it is right around the corner.
The Zone 3 East-to-West Project (E2W) will bring on an incremental 1.2 Bcf/d of westbound capacity, opening the floodgates for Marcellus and Utica producers. As REX touches nearly every part of the US gas market, the expansion will reconfigure continental gas flows and price relationships across multiple regions as it comes online.
Based on conversations last week with our good friends at Tallgrass Energy, the operator of REX, today we bring you the up-to-the-minute scoop on the E2W expansion and other forthcoming changes on the pipeline.
Tallgrass is targeting completion of construction on the required facilities for the E2W expansion by early July and expects to bring the new capacity into service August 1, 2015 once downstream parties complete the necessary work. The project is expanding westbound firm transportation capacity by 1.2 Bcf/d from REX’s eastern terminus point in Clarington, OH to Moultrie County, IL, and will bring the total westbound firm capacity to 1.8 Bcf/d for that stretch of REX. This new E2W capacity will be in addition to the 1.8 Bcf/d of eastbound firm capacity still available from the Rockies to Clarington, OH.
The E2W capacity in-service will mark a significant increase in outbound capacity for natural gas producers in the Marcellus and Utica shale plays and will be a game changer for the US Northeast supply-demand balance.  We’ve been talking about the reversal of REX for a couple of years going back to our 2013 series.  
More recently, we laid out why outbound pipeline capacity is especially critical for the Northeast natural gas market to balance this summer and beyond. Local production has pushed out nearly all of the inbound supply flows from other regions. With little to no inbound supply to push out this summer and barring the unlikely scenario of massive production declines, increased outflows from the Northeast to other markets will be an essential outlet for the production growth that has already occurred in the region compared to last year, as well as future supply growth.
Thus, one of the biggest shifts occurring in the natural gas market today is the expansion of gas pipeline take-away capacity out of the Northeast, whether through backhaul capacity, whole-scale pipeline reversals, pipelines creating bi-directional capabilities, or brand new pipelines. Volume wise, E2W is the biggest such deal so far.  In addition, REX connects to about a dozen major north-south pipelines within Zone 3, which presents the likelihood of a ripple effect on flows as well as price relationships as more westbound capacity becomes available.
Great graphics at the link.

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Other News

The AP is reportingUS pending home sales climb to 9-year high. Signed contracts to buy US homes rose 0.9 percent in May, as summer buying season gets hot.

These guys are fast. By legalizing marriage between any two (?) consenting adults, the Supreme Court used language that, if the court remains consistent, will mean that any laws restricting guns will be nullified. The vast majority of states have open carry, few restrictions. The only problem with the argument at the link is the suggestion/assumption/fallacy that the Court will be consistent in its ruling.

The court won't take the case in which Google is appealing its adverse ruling involved Oracle. That is the right decision by the court. There would be no end to such cases.

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Note to the Granddaughters

The trip to the Grand Canyon was a wonderful opportunity for me to catch up on reading and journaling.

I went back to This Side of Paradise. I had to re-read the last 50 pages or so. I had finished the book a few weeks ago. I had read some parts closely; skimmed through some parts. I read the introduction and the commentaries and comments at the end of this particular edition closely. At the end of the first reading I was not sure whether I liked this book or appreciated it or understood why it was "so important."

After re-reading the last 50 pages, and then re-reading the introduction, my thoughts are changed completely. This is an incredible book on so many levels. It is clearly not a book to be read by high school students. This is a book that should be introduced to high school students by a really good English or literature teacher, and then students should be asked to delay reading the entire book until late in their second or third year of college. At the time it was published, every American male over the age of 35 should have read it. I doubt many (> 35 year white males in 1920) read this book when it first came out. It should have terrified them.

Near the end of the book, TSOP takes a surprising twist, and I start to understand why this book is so important, why it is what it is.

This novel was begun in 1917 and published in 1920. Reviewers at the time said it was the work of a 23-year-old. In fact, the novel was begun when the author was 21 years old and he probably had the idea for the novel some time before then. He knew exactly what he wanted to do, and he succeeded: write The Great American Novel.

It was noted that most authors, in such novels, write about the past. In this case, F Scott Fitzgerald was "just fractionally" ahead of his time. It is amazing. In TSOP he described the Jazz Age, a phrase he coined. Later in life, he defined the Jazz Age as that time in America from May Day, 1919, to October, 1929.

In that respect, "just fractionally" ahead of his time, exactly describes one of my favorite personalities, Hunter S Thompson. He, too, was "just fractionally" ahead of his time, when he wrote on the Vietnam War, Richard Nixon, and drugs. I think he was wrong on Nixon, but I'm probably wrong that he was wrong. He was correct on so many other subjects, I find it unlikely he was wrong on Nixon, but it seems he had a personal grudge with Nixon and that may have "colored" his thoughts on Nixon. As incredible as it sounds, HST may have had a blind spot when it came to American politics. 

But I digress.

Fitzgerald started TSOP in 1917, two years before the beginning of the Jazz Age, and had it published not more than a year after the Jazz Age began. Other than The Great Gatsby I have not read any of Fitzgerald's other works, but Amory Blaine in TSOP was the young Jay Gatsby. Absolutely brilliant.

Once one has read TSOP from beginning to end, it is the perfect book to go back to and read different parts, or sections. It's not an easy book to read from start to finish. But once completed, it is rewarding to go back and read particular sections.

Among the many, many topics touched on in TSOP, one question the editor left for the reader was the issue of feminism, equal rights for women, etc. It dawned on me that men cannot answer that question; it can only be answered by women. I don't think men can even comment on the subject with any credibility. All they can do is read about the subject in all its forms: feminist literature, letters to editors, essays, etc. It is what it is.

On another note, I was blown away by Fitzgerald's (Amory's) discussion (monologue?) on American capitalism. Amory's views, and I assume, by extension, Fitzgerald's views on socialism (he did not use the word communism, but certainly could have) could have been written today.

The Jazz Age was an age of transition between the American Victorian age and the age of modernism, as applied to culture and literature. I'm beginning to re-think the most important event or decade for American in the 20th century. I'm wondering if it might not have been WWI.

TSOP, WWI, and the Jazz Age put the recent Supreme Court rulings (ObamaCare and same-sex marriage) in perspective. It helps explain why my thoughts that Obama will go down in history as one of the worst presidents ever may be completely wrong.

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