TransCanada Corp. reported that its Coastal GasLink Pipeline Project has signed long-term agreements with Nadleh Whut’en First Nation and West Moberly First Nations.
The Coastal GasLink project has now secured 11 project agreements and continues to make “good progress” toward concluding deals with other First Nations along the pipeline route, TransCanada said.
Coastal GasLink is proposing to construct and operate a 670-km natural gas pipeline from the Groundbirch area near Dawson Creek, BC, to the proposed LNG Canada LNG export facility near Kitimat, BC.
The project is a key component of TransCanada’s capital growth plan, which includes more than $13 billion in proposed gas pipeline projects.
The spread between low- and high-sulfur VGO barges in the US Gulf Coast
cash market stood Wednesday at its widest point in more than six months
as cargoes of the more sour product from Northwest Europe, Scandinavia
and the Baltic states head for US shores.
High-sulfur VGO at
maximum 2% sulfur was heard traded late Tuesday at the equivalent of
cash February WTI plus $4.50/b, compared with a trade of low-sulfur VGO
at maximum 0.5% sulfur at the equivalent of $7.35/b over crude.
The
spread of $2.85 is the widest since low-sulfur VGO was also $2.85 over
the sour product July 8. It points to the balance of product recently
shipped from Europe tilting toward higher-sulfur VGO. About 10 VGO
cargoes have been dispatched to the Gulf and West Coast markets in
recent weeks from European ports, and market sources said one cargo of
VGO from Colombia also is expected in the Gulf Coast early next month.
"There
is no doubt at the moment that there are too many cargoes either in the
USG or on the way there for the market to absorb," a European
feedstocks trader said Wednesday. High-sulfur VGO is fed into a refinery hydrocracker to make gasoline and
diesel, while low-sulfur VGO goes into a fluid catalytic cracker to
produce naphtha for reforming into gasoline, according to energy
consultant RBN Energy.
Early Wednesday, high-sulfur VGO was heard
traded at March cash WTI plus $3/b, the equivalent of February cash WTI
plus $4.10/b and suggesting further weakness in sour product. No trades
were heard in low-sulfur VGO, implying that the $2.85 spread is
unchanged.
The Wednesday trade was for part of a VGO cargo aboard
the Mare Pacific and chartered by Glencore, a US feedstocks source and a
second Europe feedstocks source said. That ship was north of Havana,
Cuba, late Wednesday morning and bound for the Port of South Louisiana
at Lapace, Louisiana, according to Platts cFlow trade software. A
Glencore trader did not immediately return a message left Wednesday
morning about the Mare Pacific, which sailed from Estonia last month.
The VGO aboard the Mare Pacific had been offered at the equivalent of February crude plus $4.85/b earlier this week.
Rising
Gulf Coast cracks in gasoline and diesel were not enough to lift
high-sulfur VGO. The crack for a barrel of 87-unleaded against a barrel
of region-dominant Louisiana Light Sweet crude rose $1.67/b to $11.60/b
Tuesday. The diesel crack rose 12 points to $6.79/b. NYMEX futures in
both products were weaker Wednesday morning, however.
VGO markets
have lost support with VGO-consuming units offline at two of the
nation's 10 largest refineries, both in Texas. The ultracracker at the
451,000 b/d Marathon Galveston Bay refinery is expected to be
unavailable until March 1, and the VGO hydrotreater at the 340,000 b/d
Shell-operated refinery at Deer Park, Texas, will be down until
mid-February.
A couple of years ago RBN Energy had a post on VGO (vacuum oil gas): When VGO is traded the sulfur content is also important since lower
sulfur VGO (0.5% or less sulfur) is more valuable than 2% high sulfur
VGO.
From Science magazine’s “The Next Oil Crisis Looms Large—and Perhaps Close,” August 21, 1998:
This spring . . . the Paris-based International Energy Agency (IEA) of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) reported for the first time that the peak of world oil production is in sight.
Even taking into account the best efforts of the explorationists and the discovery of new fields in frontier areas like the Caspian Sea . . . sometime between 2010 and 2020 the gush of oil from wells around the world will peak at 80 million barrels per day, then begin a steady, inevitable decline, the report says.
In round numbers, "we're" producing about 90 million bopd. Someone said we were producing 95 million bopd in 2015. If so, 95 - 80 / 80 = almost a 20% increase.
The same scientists who predicted "Peak Oil" back in 1998 knew they would soon be out of a job, and moved on. They are now predicting future global temperatures.
**************************
Flashback
We Can't Drill Our Way to Lower Gas Prices -- President Barack Obama with best advice money can buy:
one minute sixteen seconds of fathomless ignorance
"It's tough to make predictions, especially about the future."
-- Yogi Berra
****************************** I Don't Remember Loving You
I Don't Remember Loving You, John Conlee
********************************
Overseas, Wind Energy Is All The Rage
SeekingAlpha is reporting:
GE Renewable Energy secured 1.4 GW of firm and unconditional wind turbine supply orders in the month of December, 2015
The
flurry of deal activity follows the recent launch of GE Renewable
Energy, a new business unit the company introduced in November after
completing its acquisition of Alstom's renewable energy group
The agreements call for GE's wind technology to supply more than 20 new wind projects across seven different countries
For those who have been wondering, "that ship" arrived exactly as scheduled: today, January 20th. Seeking Alpha is reporting:
The first export of U.S. crude oil in four decades
arrived in Europe early today, reaching the French port of Marseille
before sunrise after leaving from Texas nearly three weeks ago, Financial Times reports
Oil
trader Vitol is expected to unload the shipment - a mix of ultralight
oil from the Texas Eagle Ford shale formation produced by ConocoPhillips
- which will then travel by pipeline to one of two refineries the
company operates in Europe under a joint venture with the Carlyle Group
Energy
analysts say it could take a while before the volume of U.S. oil
exports expands beyond today’s trickle, as U.S. crude output is expected
to fall later this year as producers face shrinking revenues and
soaring debt due to plunging oil prices
This trainwreck is tracked over at "Doomsday: US Health Care." A reminder for newbies: "train wreck" as a synonym / euphemism for ObamaCare was coined by a prominent Democrat who championed the program. He later announced he would not run for re-election. Out of respect for his family, I won't repeat his name now.
CNN Money reports: UnitedHealth expects to lose nearly $1 billion on Obamacare. That's the CNN Money headline -- not my words -- UnitedHealth expects to lose $1 billion on ObamaCare.
UnitedHealth (UNH), which is weighing an exit from the Obamacare exchanges, reported it lost about $475 million on Obamacare-compliant plans in 2015 and expects to lose more than $500 million this year.
The insurer, the parent company of United Healthcare, ended last year with about 500,000 enrollees in Obamacare exchange plans.
It expects that number to grow towards 800,000 during the 2016 open enrollment period, which ends January 31, 2016,, before dropping again as some members get jobs, stop paying premiums or find insurance elsewhere.
(Also in 2015, it had about 150,000 enrollees who signed up outside the exchanges for individual policies that are compliant with Obamacare.)
This story will get wide exposure and much more in-depth analysis. UnitedHealth is not unique; the other insurers will see the same problem. We've discussed ad nauseum the reasons for this; not going to go through it again.
UnitedHealth, which sat out the first year of Obamacare in 2014, said itis
not looking to grow its exchange business. Instead, it has increased
prices, eliminated marketing and commissions and withdrawn its top-tier
products. In an effort to stem the losses, it is also working more
closely with providers and enrollees to manage their illnesses and care.
UnitedHealth warned in November that it might pull out of the Obamacare exchanges
altogether in 2017, citing higher-than-expected claims. In particular,
it blamed the large number of members signing up outside the open
enrollment period who were using a lot of medical services.
Some insurers argue that Americans are waiting until they get sick to
sign up and then finding a way to qualify during the so-called special
enrollment period, which is traditionally open to those who change jobs,
get married or divorced or have a baby. The Obama administration has
since said it would tighten the rules for joining Obamacare during this
period.
Because of this, it was reported that President Obama stepped in and did what the health insurers asked: no more late enrollments. The story is at USA Todaybut is being widely reported.
Bowing to pressure from insurers, federal officials on Tuesday tightened the conditions under which people can sign up for plans on the HealthCare.gov exchange outside open enrollment.
The move by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services comes after complaints by health insurers that it was too easy for people to wait until they were sick to sign up and to drop coverage after they got treatment.
Earlier Tuesday, UnitedHealth announced a 19% drop in profit and downgraded its earnings forecast citing concerns about its Obamacare enrollment and the flexibility people had to change insurance plans.
CMS announced it would eliminate six more "special enrollment period" categories, a month after dropping the one that allowed people to enroll late if they became surprised by the penalty they face for not having insurance at tax time. This year, special periods will not be allowed for people, including non-citizens who had errors in their premium tax credits and others who weren't aware of mistakes or eligibility.
"Six more special enrollment period categories..." --- incredible -- just how many special categories were there? What a trainwreck.
Disclaimer: I do not have any background or formal training in the oil and gas industry. I may be misreading things in the file report. In a long note, there will be factual and typographical errors. Do not make any decisions based on this information. If this information is important to you, go to the source.
Did you all notice this?
29669, 962, CLR, Sorenson 6-16H2, Alkali Creek, 4 sections, Three Forks Second Bench, 15 stages, 2.9 million lbs, 8/15; cum 51K 11/15;
Permit application:
a short lateral but four-section spacing: 16/21/28/33-154-94
From the geologist's narrative, some data points:
spud: January 19, 2015
again, this is referred to as the DevonianThree Forks; we've discussed this several times recently
this is a Three Forks second bench well
original plan to land approximately 80 feet below the Three Forks formation was later changed to land 64' into the Three Forks -- 22' below the Three Forks Internal 1/B2
markers came in at 2 - 10 feet higher than predicted and offset logs:
False Bakken: 10,550' TVD
Upper Bakken Shale: 10,564' TVD
Middle Bakken Member: 10,589' TVD
Lower Bakken Shale: 10,650' TVD
Three Forks Formation: 10,707' TVD
Three Forks Internal 1/B2: 10,749' TVD
gases ranged throughout the landing ranged from 147 - 2,341 units
in the target zone, gas averaged 599 units and ranged from 109 to 3,590 units
connection gasses ranged from 147 units to 3,209 units; trip gases ranged from 207 units to 6,108 units with 10 - 20' gas flare
the target zone ascended bout 41 feet throughout the lateral
in the target zone 100% of the entire lateral, 4,800 feet
out of the target zone: 0% of the time
Location of this Three Forks second bench well:
For newbies: just prior to the slump in oil prices, operators had pretty much identified, mapped, and "understood" the middle Bakken. They were just getting started on the upper bench, Three Forks, and had made minimal headway in the lower benches. There are only a handful of lower bench Three Forks wells. CLR generally drills long laterals; it is interesting this is a short lateral. At 15 stages, 3 million lbs sand/ceramic, it seems about average for a completion.
Breaking news:Venezuela requests OPEC hold an emergency meeting to discuss steps to prop up oil prices, which have fallen to their lowest since 2003, sources say - Reuters. This is hardly "news." Venezuela has been asking for "emergency meetings" for quite some time now, and has been under duress for at least a year.
From Rigzone/Reuters, John Kemp: North Dakota's Steady Production Shows Why Market Rebalancing Is Hard:
North
Dakota's oil production has been flat for more than a year, but it
hasn't fallen despite the sharp drop in prices, illustrating the
challenges of rebalancing the oil market.
Output first hit this level September 2014 and has been essentially unchanged for the last 15 months, the longest and deepest pause in growth since the shale boom began.
The reduction in actual output of around 450,000 bpd compared with the previous trend is a measure of how far lower oil prices have already gone towards rebalancing the market. But most analysts and forecasters expected the state's crude output to have fallen sharply by now rather than just to have levelled off.
Shale production was supposed to respond much faster to declining prices because it required the drilling of a large number of new wells to offset rapid decline rates from old ones. Instead, shale output has proved unexpectedly resilient, as producers have found ways to maintain output while slashing drilling and costs.
Best story of the day from The Wall Street Journal: where America's millionaires live. Although the story is about a city on the east coast, the last paragraph:
Among states, North Dakota recorded the fastest growth
in millionaires in June 2015 from a year earlier, increasing more than
10%.
There is a great graphic at the link. North Dakota was #1. Idaho, #2; Montana, #3; and, Oregon, of all things, #4. Rounding out the top five, Florida.
In other news we wake up to this:
President Obama appoints another tzar: this one to provide him updates on Flint, Michigan, lead-contaminated water.
83 Detroit, Michigan, schools closed today: "sick-out." Not related to
norovirus/Chipotle stories. President Obama will likely appoint another
tzar to provide him updates on Detroit school closing.
Bad days for Wal-Mart Americans -- Holman W. Jenkins, Jr, Wall Street Journal. I still think this story is blown out of proportion. The company is closing 102 small stores; will build 270 large stores this fiscal year. Wal-Mart says it can't turn a profit with minimum wages at $15/hour; even $11.50/hour is problematic.
Could there possibly be a worse photo of Sarah Palin out there than the one on the front page of the on-line edition of the WSJ today?