Western oil workers in Saudi Arabia may be the target of militant attacks, the U.S. embassy warned on Friday.
"The U.S. Embassy has information stating that, as of early March, individuals associated with a terrorist organization could be targeting Western oil workers, possibly to include those U.S. citizens working for oil companies in the Eastern Province, for an attack(s) and/or kidnapping(s)," it said.
Disclaimer: this is not a "spy site." Do not make any cybersecurity or travel plans to Muslim countries based on what you read here. If this is important to you, fax a FOIA request to the White House or e-mail General Petraeus.
Apple is in talks with programmers including CBS, 21st Century Fox and
Walt Disney to launch a subscription-based streaming TV service this
fall, according to The Wall Street Journal.
The report, citing sources familiar with the matter, claims that the
service would have about 25 channels, cost between $30 to $40 per month
and be available on iPad, iPhone and Apple TV. The service is said to
debut at Apple's annual Worldwide Developers Conference in June ahead of
a September launch in the United States.
Compare that with three channels I actually watch and 22 channels that are a) in Spanish; b) televangelists; or, c) shopping networks and getting charged $125/month for the privilege.
The Iraqi force is the US-trained varsity team in the Mideast. It is taking on the JV's and it has turned out to be a bit rougher than expected. The Washington Post is reporting:
Iraqi forces’ operation to retake the city of Tikrit has stalled as
troops suffer heavy casualties at the hands of Islamic State militants,
raising concerns about whether the [American-trained varsity team is] ready for
major offensives.
After two days of little activity on the
battlefield, Iraq’s interior minister, Mohammed al-Ghabban, confirmed
Monday that the offensive has “temporarily stopped.” The steady flow of
caskets arriving in Iraq’s Shiite holy city of Najaf suggests a reason
for the pause; cemetery workers say as many as 60 war dead have been
arriving each day.
Since last week, Iraqi forces have hemmed in the Sunni militants in Tikrit,
claiming control of the majority of the former Islamic State
stronghold. But the operation has come at a cost, with soldiers saying
the fight has been tougher than expected. As the momentum has slowed,
some Iraqi officials have begun to publicly call for U.S.-led air
support. [Why isn't the Iraqi Air Force or the Jordanians providing air support?]
While Iraqi officials still express confidence that
they can retake the city, the stuttering offensive does not bode well
for the more complex battles for the city of Mosul and for militant-held areas of Anbar province that were expected to begin in coming months.
AMERICA is a country built by immigration, but nothing in its history compares to the rise in its Hispanic population.
Changes to immigration law in the 1960s triggered a decades-long surge in arrivals, taking the Hispanic population from just 7 million in 1970 to 57 million today, a number that is set to double by mid-century.
At that point one in four Americans will be of Latino descent.
In relation to the population of the day, there have been proportionally larger surges in the past, notably involving European migrations in the 19th and early 20th centuries.
Two factors make the rise of Hispanic America different. Never before has such a large group of new arrivals lived so close to their ancestral homelands, linked to grandparents in the same time zone by cheap flights and Skype. Secondly, America is entering an era of white decline.
For almost two centuries, from the time of George Washington's presidency to the election of Ronald Reagan, whites of European descent made up at least 80% of the population. That share is below two-thirds now, and the white majority is set to become a minority by 2044.
That brings both challenges and opportunities. Today's Hispanics lag behind whites when it comes to education and wealth. But they are strikingly young, lowering America's median age and offering workers to fill the labour market when other rich countries face greying decline. Politicians too often discuss Hispanics as almost a single-issue group, as victims or villains of immigration.
But five-sixths are legal residents and recent Latino growth has been mostly from births, not new arrivals. Hispanics are dispersing across the country and their political clout will only grow: nearly 1 million US-born Latinos reach voting age annually.
I only listen to two radio stations: a) a conservative talk radio station in English, but I can't listen to it when my wife is also listening; and, b) a Hispanic music station. I don't listen to the conservation talk station very much; haven't listened to it in the past week; mostly just the music station.
At the Dallas World Aquarium everything is in English and Spanish, and both are equally prominent. I assume that over time, the English signs will get smaller and by the end of the century, disappear altogether. Good, bad, or indifferent, that's the way it is in Texas.
On another note, tonight I will be watching one of two movies, either Lost in Translation or Grand Budapest Hotel. I need to watch a little Bill Murray. He stars in the first; has minor role in the latter. I have St Vincent in which he stars but it's not as good as it could have been. We'll see.
Dropping off our 8-y/o at soccer practice tonight I thought about Bill Murray. I think he would be a great soccer mom.
We heard this every time we visited the River Walk in San Antonio:
LaCharreada, Linda Ronstadt
Only 779 million (no typo: almost 800 million) hits:
This well came off the confidential list today; it is inactive/shut-in for operational reasons:
29187, 746, Hess, EN-Nelson-155-94-2833H-7, Alkali Creek, t4/15; cum 149K 9/19;
I've seen a fair number of Hess EN-Nelson wells recently so was curious what the area looked like. Here it is:
************************************
A Suggestion
From Yahoo!Finance:
The U.S. government has officially hit its debt ceiling. Beginning
today, the Treasury Department is taking “extraordinary measures” to
keep the government from defaulting on its debt which now exceeds $18
trillion.
A suggestion: starting exporting US oil. LOL.
I can't wait to see the "extraordinary measures the Treasury Department takes. We should start hearing about them late Friday evening, after COB.
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ABC News Launches on Roku
Tweeting now:
ABC News launches on Roku, joins other major networks reaching 10 million players - @tvnewser
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At Least It's Hard To Catch
Also tweeting now:
National Institutes of Health changes status of aid worker with Ebola virus from serious to critical condition - @NIH
For the Federal Reserve, patience may no longer be a virtue.
Surrounding
the Fed's policy meeting this week is the widespread expectation that
it will no longer use the word "patient" to describe its stance on
raising interest rates from record lows.
The big question is: What will that mean?
Many
economists say the dropping of "patience" would signal that the Fed
plans to start raising rates in June to reflect a steadily strengthening
U.S. job market. Others foresee no rate hike before September. And a
few predict no increase before year's end at the earliest.
Complicating
the decision is a surging U.S. dollar, which is keeping inflation far
below the Fed's target rate and posing a threat to U.S. corporate
profits and possibly to the economy. A rate increase could send the
dollar even higher.
This well is scheduled to come off the confidential list today. The production numbers released to date caught my attention. It will be interesting to see whether this is a middle Bakken well or a Three Forks well. CPEUSC is drilling middle Bakken wells on the northwest edge of the Bakken but I haven't checked to see if they are also drilling Three Forks wells there. I would assume they are, or will.
But look at the production from this well. On the few CPEUSC wells I checked, they are using 35 stages and 3.5 million lbs to frack long laterals.
24062, conf, Crescent Point Energy, CPEUSC Narcisse 8-5-158N-99W, Ellisville:
NDIC File No: 24062 API No: 33-105-02846-00-00 CTB No: 124062
Well Type: ON CONFIDENTIAL STATUS
Location: SWSE 8-158-99
Current Operator: CRESCENT POINT ENERGY U.S. CORP.
Current Well Name: CPEUSC NARCISSE 8-5-158N-99W
Field: ELLISVILLE
Monthly Sales Data:
Date
Oil Runs
MCF Sold
1-2015
13311
8291
12-2014
12740
4278
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Ellisville Oil Field
Ellisville oil field is a single township, 36 sections, T158N-R99W, in north-central Williams County, along the Divide County line; it is on the "edge" of the middle Bakken.
There are no 640-acre drilling units in this field. They were originally18 1280-acre units, but now there are also some 1280-acre units.
OPEC says low oil prices may hit U.S. output by late 2015
But they are watching the frackers closely, it seems:
U.S. oil output
could start to take a hit by late 2015 due to low prices, OPEC said on
Monday, suggesting the exporter group will have to wait beyond its next
meeting in June to see if its strategy to defend market share will dent
the shale oil boom.
In a monthly report, OPEC left its forecast for non-OPEC supply this
year unchanged and said output of U.S. "tight" oil, also known as shale,
might only start to be curbed towards the end of the year.
"Tight
crude producers are aware that typical oil wells in shale plays decline
60 percent annually, and that losses can only be recouped by drilling
new wells," OPEC said.
"As drilling
subsides due to high costs and a potentially sustained low oil price, a
drop in production can be expected to follow, possibly by late 2015."
**************************
Is Afghanistan The New Forward Base For US Troops In The Mideast?
The Obama administration is abandoning plans to cut the number of U.S.
forces in Afghanistan to 5,500 by year's end, bowing to military leaders
who want to keep more troops there, including many into the 2016
fighting season, U.S. officials say.
Ah, such faithful (and observant) readers. I love 'em all.
The other day I saw an article on some "waste socks" found in Williston; I can't remember which regional newspaper posted the story, but I can imagine. It appears the socks a) had been laying there for at least a year; b) they posed no threat to anyone; and, c) they were quickly and appropriately disposed.
A reader must have seen that same article. She provides this update of a radioactive waste story elsewhere:
A while ago I'd sent articles about the kitty litter fiasco:
.....some misguided employee had managed to buy organic kitty litter instead of inorganic kitty litter, and so an undetermined number of barrels with the wrong mix added to nuclear waste had been transported from Los Alamos to Carlsbad - before it was revealed that some barrels had corroded/burst/leaked.
WIPP is closed for an estimated 5 years to allow for the cleanup. Where is Los Alamos going to send their nuclear brew in the meantime? hmmm.....
So, now we have "the sky is falling" update.
In mid-January, a block of salt ceiling – an 8-foot-by-8-foot square, 2
feet thick – came crashing down at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant
nuclear waste repository.
No one was injured, and no waste containers were damaged.
But the roof collapse offered a reminder of the dangers lurking
underground at the plant, where hundreds of drums of radioactive waste,
packed with a volatile mix of materials that caused one drum to breach
last year, are stored in panels that have yet to be permanently sealed –
despite a state order to do so.
WIPP’s managers say they’re making progress but admit the going is
slow due to the radiological contamination. The New Mexico Environment
Department says WIPP is moving as quickly as it can while ensuring the
safety of workers.
The reader concludes: Sure does make it seem safer to rely on oil and gas from North Dakota's Bakken (;>).
I was not even aware there was such a thing as organic kitty litter. I guess that is the sand from the neighbor's sandbox.
An average of 13 Bcf/d of natural gas flows into the Midwest from
producing regions in Canada, the Midcontinent, the Southeast and the
Rockies. Over the past 7 years the region has been in the crosshairs of
major infrastructure and supply changes to the North American natural
gas market, starting in 2008 with the Rockies Express (REX) pipeline and
continuing today as surplus Northeast supplies reverse pipeline flows
and push into the Midcontinent. Today we begin our look at rapidly
evolving fundamentals in the Midwest by describing changing supply
sources.
This is Part 6 in our natural gas forward curve series. Part 1 provided a definition of forward curves and how they work. Part 2 and Part 3 dove
into two Northeast gas markets – Transco Zone 6 in New York and
Dominion South in Appalachia – examining how their forward curves have
been reshaped by the shale revolution and assessing the resulting
transformation of the Northeast gas market from a net demand region to a
net supply region. In Part 4, we previewed the fundamental drivers influencing Northeast forward curves for the next several years. And, finally, Part 5
dissected the timing of these fundamental changes, how they correlate
to current Northeast forward curves and what they indicate about when
regional natural gas prices may begin to recover.
The bottom line is that the Marcellus really is about to change everything.
So far the full impact of the supply growth has been somewhat contained
to the Northeast by limited takeaway capacity. But when surplus
northeast supplies begin to target outside regions, the Midwest will be
one of the first to feel the pinch, with the first wave coming as early
as this summer. Today we begin our look at what this all means for
Midwest gas prices.