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Three (3) New Permits -- North Dakota, October 9, 2015

Active rigs:


10/9/201510/09/201410/09/201310/09/201210/09/2011
Active Rigs68192185191194

Three (3) new permits --
  • Operator: CLR
  • Fields: Chimney Butte (Dunn)
    Comments:
One (1) producing well completed:
  • 29235, 589, Statoil, Heen 26-35 8TFH, Todd, t9/15; cum --
EOG places five wells on "temporary abandon" list. It looks like all five wells are on TATD status and EOG says they will re-evaluate the wells when prices recover. It looks like the wells were drilled to total depth but no further activity. The file numbers affected: #28306, #28608, #29103, #29104, and #29105.

Heavy Oil Sands Mini-Boom In Saskatchewan -- About 500 Miles Northwest Of Williston, ND -- October 9, 2015

 From the WSJ:
EDAM, Saskatchewan—In a muddy field where rows of canola stood just three months ago, a miniature oil-sands plant is rapidly being assembled by a small crew of workers.

What is unusual about this project is the speed with which it is being built—in a matter of months—and its compact, football field-size. Oil-sands sites typically take years to build and require hundreds or thousands of acres of land. At a time when slumping crude-oil prices have shelved most new oil-sands projects in neighboring Alberta and halted drilling for all but the most productive shale-oil wells in the Bakken formation on both sides of the border, pint-size sites are proliferating in Saskatchewan’s oil patch.

About a mile away from the construction site, down a rural highway in western Saskatchewan, three other similarly sized heavy-oil projects are rising on a landscape filled with cattle pastures and duck ponds.

The miniboom along Highway 26 is upending the long-standing logic that this type of extraction needs to maximize economies of scale to provide the best return on capital.

While Saskatchewan’s oil reserves are a fraction of those in neighboring Alberta, companies developing small-scale sites in the province say they are profitable, even with crude prices at six-year lows. That is due to advances in modular construction, ample rail and pipeline takeaway capacity and an attractive regulatory environment.

Typical steam-powered oil-sands plants produce from 30,000 to 100,000 barrels a day, but smaller-scale thermal heavy oil facilities produce as few as 2,000 barrels a day. Both use a technology called steam-assisted gravity drainage, or SAGD, to tap subterranean deposits of molasses-like crude oil. Smaller operations benefit from lower construction and operating costs, faster production ramp-ups and higher prices for their crude than traditional supersize oil-sands projects. That means they can make money below the roughly $65 a barrel needed for most new larger-scale projects to break even.

Oil at $40 a barrel doesn’t scare us the way it scares oil-sands producers,” said Chad Harris, the founder and chief executive of startup firm Serafina Energy Ltd., which expects to produce 6,000 barrels a day starting in the first half of next year at its roughly 180 million-Canadian-dollar (US$134 million) plant in Edam. That facility is to be the first of several small SAGD plants that Serafina, funded by U.S. and Canadian private-equity investors, plans to own and operate.
The numbers are quite amazing. It's too bad we can't bring this oil into the US via the Keystone XL; it's exactly the kind of oil the US refineries along the Gulf Coast need.

COP Declares Quarterly Dividend In Line With Previous Dividend -- October 9, 2015; Oldest North Dakota Well Back On-Line

For investors only:
  • ConocoPhillips declares $0.74/share quarterly dividend, in line with previous.
  • Forward yield 5.27%
  • Payable Dec. 1; for shareholders of record Oct. 19; ex-div Oct. 15.
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A Devonian Monster Well

Another well has been added to the "Monster Well" list:
  • 3983, 234, Enduro Operating, North Dakota C A 3, a Devonian well, vertical, 320-acre spacing, t1/66, cum 1.37 million bbls; celebrating its 50th anniversary next January
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Oldest Active Well In North Dakota Back On Line

Two payzone well, total production, ~ 2.29 million bbls since 1951; still active; celebrated its 64th anniversary in August, a couple of months ago.
  • 35, 503/PNA, Hess, Beaver Lodge-Devonian Unit H-310, s8/51; t4/52; Madison, 216K; PNA
  • 35, 263, Hess, Beaver Lodge-Devonian Unit H-310, t3/60; Devonian, 2.07 million bbls; still active; almost 1,500 bbls monthly, 8/14; around 1,000 bbls monthly in 2015; went inactive 12/13; back on line as of 8/15;
  • Note: #35 is the oldest well in North Dakota still producing; all but two or three wells earlier than #35 were dry.  Well #2 was completed in 1923; well #1 was completed in 1916, in Ward County; it tested positive for trace oil. the Clarence Iverson well that started it all was drilled in 1951.

Proposed Wind Farm For Tioga, North Dakota -- Necessary For Pumps, Some Say -- October 9, 2015

The Dickinson Press reports.
  • $250 million
  • 150 MW
  • $1.7 million / MW
It could be worse: they could be considering a solar farm.

If approved, this will help bring ND into compliance with President Obama's Clean Power Act. This would also have huge advantages for the ND oil and gas industry.

If approved, I suppose this is the final nail in the "buffalo commons" coffin. 

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Two Items From Our Granddaughters' School District Monthly Newsletter

First, the note about the elementary school field trip to local college:
In celebration of College Week at Heritage Elementary School, third, fourth and fifth graders took the opportunity to visit GCISD's Collegiate Academy at Tarrant County College Northeast.

The elementary students were excited to walk around the campus and see areas, such as the library, science lab, and study center. A few comments from students included:

"Look! It's a giant building full of books."
"It's a vending machine where you can buy school supplies. I want one of those!"
 "I'm so going to school here one day!" (Heritage ES Principal Stacey Voigt's favorite comment of the day.)
The second note regarding academic achievement at the district's two high schools:
In a side-by-side comparison of scores on college entrance scores, AP exam results, graduation rates and other data, GCISD's two traditional high schools easily outpace average scores from around the state, while posting nearly identical numbers to one another.

Each school currently has 10 National Merit Semifinalists. Grapevine High has 28 National Merit commended students and Colleyville Heritage High has 27. Both schools average in the 1,600's for combined SAT scores.
The schools posted comparable ACT composite scores, with GHS averaging 25.1 and CHHS at 24.6, both well above the 20.9 statewide average. Across the board, CHHS and GHS easily outpace the average statewide end of course scores with very comparable numbers from each campus.
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Target Practice

Based on reports coming out of the Mideast yesterday that Russian submarine-launched cruise missiles hit Iran rather than Syria, I had to look at the map again:


I guess that's why folks want nuclear weapons -- accuracy not quite as important.

Note: the submarine is not drawn to scale, nor is the actual location known for sure. For illustrative purposes only. Do not make any invasion or defensive plans based on this graphic. If this is important to you, go to the source: wikileaks or Hillary's back-up server(s). SecState Kerry might also have a copy, but his would have a picture of a yacht instead of a submarine.

Random Look At Liberty Resources Activity In McGregor Oil Field, The Bakken, North Dakota -- October 9, 2015

Liberty Resources activity in McGregor oil field:


Note how the oil companies tie their pads together to minimize pipelines (this screen shot was taken from the file report for #29101; #29101 would be on the pad to the west [far left]):



By the way, did you see this vertical well in that screen shot at the top:
  • 3983, 234, Enduro Operating, North Dakota C A 3, a Devonian well, vertical, 320-acre spacing, t1/66, cum 1.37 million bbls; celebrating its 50th anniversary next January.

What's Driving The Recent Rally In Oil? -- October 9, 2015

Goldman Sachs continues to advise that the price of oil is likely to fall as low as $20/bbl. Recently GS said that the current rally in the price of crude oil will be short-lived. Be that as it may, what do you think has driven the recent rally?
  • strength/weakness of the dollar
  • fundamentals (US production declining)
  • Russian involvement in Syria
  • other?
See poll at sidebar.

By the way, from Jack Kemp: oil prices strengthen, shrug off GS's comments.  Oil & Gas Journal suggests it is due to Russian involvement in Syria.

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The 21st Century Is America's 

Don sent me this link to another great American energy story:
It will be the sixth new gas-fired power plant being built in Ohio and it is being developed because of plentiful natural gas from the Utica Shale.
Data points:
  • $1.1 billion
  • 1,100 MW
  • $1 million / MW (compare to solar: $2 million /MW)
  • 20 acres on a 150 acre tract 
  • solar requires 5 acres for every 25 MW (2015 data) and cannot be used for anything else; completely covered with panels; a 1,100 MW solar farm = 220 acres of farmland
From cleveland.com earlier this summer:
At least six gas-fired power plants are being built or on the drawing boards in Ohio.

All are being built by independent power companies. They hope to capitalize on Ohio's plentiful and cheap shale gas, on the decision by companies like FirstEnergy to close old coal-burning power plants rather than upgrade them or replace them with natural gas plants, and on proposed federal rules requiring power companies to cut their carbon dioxide emissions.

The latest gas project to make the news is in shale gas-rich Carroll County, where a Swiss power plant builder has begun grading parts of a 77-acre parcel about 2 miles outside of the county seat Carrollton. Carroll County Energy's 750-megawatt gas-fired power plant will have the capacity to generate enough electricity to power about 750,000 homes, on average.
More:
Ohio regulators recently told state lawmakers that they expect 4,300 megawatts of electricity to flow from new gas-fired power plants by 2019, most of it from plants owned by independent power companies.
At the same time, Ohio's old utilities are expected to close their coal plants. FirstEnergy, for example, is expected to close several old coal plants next week.
Advanced Power has chosen the internationally ranked heavy construction company Bechtel to build the Carrollton plant. About 700 temporary jobs will be created. The company expects to be generating and selling electricity by December 2017.  
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Reading Tea Leaves

EIA "energy cookie":
Health and environmental concerns related to the high sulfur content of residual fuel oil (RFO) have led to new policies and regulations that have significantly lowered expectations for future RFO use globally. As the demand for RFO declines, the need for the refining upgrades to convert residual material to lighter, cleaner products will increase. --- EIA
An opportunity for American refiners. 

Friday, October 9, 2015

Active rigs:


10/9/201510/09/201410/09/201310/09/201210/09/2011
Active Rigs68192185191194

RBN Energy: searching for signs of a natural gas production slowdown.
The CME/NYMEX Henry Hub natural gas futures price averaged $2.64/MMBtu in September, the lowest level for any September since 2001, and it continues to hover at a similar low for October so far. Rig counts are down nearly 60% since December 2014. The market is on high alert for the first sign of production declines that might encourage higher prices – believing this to be a matter of sooner or later. Yet natural gas production has been hitting all-time records. Today we look at monthly natural gas production data from the Energy Information Administration (EIA).
Last week  we outlined reports from the EIA tracking crude oil production. Each of these reports provides value in terms of market data but do not provide a clear, unambiguous picture of what is happening to supply. Rather we use the data in combination to fill the knowledge gaps, taking care to understand the methodology and risks associated with each dataset. We found that lagged wellhead production data from each state presented a risk to EIA estimates of crude volumes that the agency is now overcoming with direct surveys of producers. We have also noted the increasingly indirect relationship between production and drilling activity that is blurred by productivity improvements as well as the number of wells that are drilled but not completed, and the wells previously drilled that are now being completed. Today we'll look at comparative EIA data for natural gas production.
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Global Crude Oil Break-Even Prices 

Yesterday, this graphic popped up a couple of times --

Two abbreviations:
  • Onshore Row (should be RoW): onshore rest of world (excludes NAM shale)
  • NAM shale: North American shale
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Best News Today

SecState John Kerry and his Iranian counterpart did not win the Nobel Peace Prize for their success in bringing peace to the region. 

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Compared to What?

This is a tough one. I read a lot but I prefer not to read "new" fiction. There is so little time and so many great books that need to be read, I am afraid of wasting time on a book that is not worth the effort.

There is a new book that has received much promotion, City on Fire by Garth Risk Hallberg. It's a detective story, of sorts, I guess, that takes place in NYC in the 1970's -- with the climax of the novel taking place on July 13, 1977, the date of "the blackout."

The book sounds very, very interesting, but early reviews by "everyday" people who got advance copies all said the same thing: way too long. Most of those who started the book did not complete the book. The book is 944 pages long. One individual had read 600 pages, and was not sure if she/he could read another 200 pages and still have 150 pages left to read.

There is a great review of the book in this week's issue of The New Yorker.

From that review:
Hallberg is also a romantic about the nineteen-seventies. That may seem a strange species of nostalgia. The decade between 1972 and 1982 was the worst extended economic period since the nineteen-thirties.

There were two oil crises, the first in 1973, when the price of a barrel nearly quadrupled, and the second in 1978 - 79, when it tripled. The stock market crashed in grim slow motion. Between 1972  and 1974, the Dow Jones Industrial Average lost almost half its value, and the market di dnot get back to 1972 levels until 1982.

In 1975, unemployment jumped to 8.5 percent. The inflation rate exceeded ten percent. By late 1980, the year Ronald Reagan was elected President, the prime rate was twenty per cent.
When folks tell me today's economy is doing poorly, I generally reply, "compared to what?"